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Glenmont, Maryland

Coordinates: 39°04′11″N 77°02′48″W / 39.06972°N 77.04667°W / 39.06972; -77.04667
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Glenmont, Maryland
A photograph of the entrance to "Glenmont Arcade," located in the Glenmont Shopping Center, on October 2, 2018.
The Glenmont Arcade in October 2018.
Location of Glenmont in the U.S. state of Maryland
Location of Glenmont in the State of Maryland
Coordinates: 39°04′11″N 77°02′48″W / 39.06972°N 77.04667°W / 39.06972; -77.04667[1]
Country United States
State Maryland
County Montgomery
Area
 • Total
2.82 sq mi (7.31 km2)
 • Land2.80 sq mi (7.25 km2)
 • Water0.02 sq mi (0.06 km2)
Elevation390 ft (120 m)
Population
 (2020)
 • Total
16,710
 • Density5,967.86/sq mi (2,304.09/km2)
GNIS feature ID2583632[1]

Glenmont is an unincorporated community and census-designated place in Montgomery County, Maryland, United States. The United States Census Bureau had combined Glenmont with nearby Wheaton to create the census-designated place of Wheaton-Glenmont, from 2000 to 2010. It had a population of 16,710 in 2020.[3]

Geography

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Due to its unincorporated nature, the boundaries are difficult to precisely define, but the center of the community is located at the intersection of Randolph Road and Georgia Avenue (Maryland State Highway 97).

History

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Historic homes

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The Hermitage

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The Hermitage, around 1952.

A brick Colonial manor house, named the Hermitage, was built by John Bowie, Jr., in 1750. Bowie's father, John Bowie, Sr., was a Scottish immigrant who arrived in America around 1705. John Bowie, Jr. purchased the land for 25 cents per acre, and on it he built the Hermitage for his sixteen-year-old son, Allen Bowie, Jr. The property itself was located around where Georgian Forest Park is today. Two years later, John died, and Allen moved to the property. In June 1774, Allen was part of a now-famous meeting at Hungerford's Tavern in today's Rockville where those in attendance fiercely criticized Great Britain and decided they should stop trading with it. During the American Revolution, Allen Bowie commanded a company of troops, which he funded himself.[4]

Allen's son, Washington Bowie, was born in the Hermitage on August 12, 1776. Washington Bowie, nicknamed the merchant prince, later built a mansion at 3124 Q Street NW in Georgetown, which is today called the Bowie-Sevier House. Allen's other son, John, inherited the Hermitage after his father died. John was a doctor, and he fought in the War of 1812.[4]

John Bowie died in 1825, unmarried and without any heirs, and the Hermitage was held in a trust for several Bowie family members. A farmer named J.P. Dodge bought the Hermitage and approximately 160 acres of land in 1865. Dodge owned the house for 35 years until his death in 1900, when his daughters Jacie Dodge and Mrs. Elwood Matthews inherited the Hermitage.[4]

Southwick Briggs, a floriculturist, bought the Hermitage and 125 acres of land from Matthews in 1914. Briggs spent a lot of money decorating and updating the Hermitage and planting flowers on its land. Briggs and his wife died after ten years of living in the Hermitage, and the property was bought by the Kauffman-Goldnamer Company of Washington. The Hermitage was still standing in 1952, a three-story brick house, painted yellow, with a large front porch and a rear flagstone terrace.[4]

Hermitage II

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Hermitage II, around 1952.

The Hermitage II was a historic house, built of hand-hewn lumber and handmade nails. It was built by William C. Peerce, sometime between 1816 and 1820. It was located around where Layhill Road meets Hathaway Drive today. Peerce owned 1,066 acres of land surrounding the house. He also owned about sixty enslaved people, who lived in several quarters around the property. Edward Palmer bought the Hermitage II and about 180 acres of land in 1905. Francis P. Welsh, a farmer, bought the house from Palmer in 1920. A Washington businessman named Max Walten bought the Hermitage II in 1928.[4]

Champayne Farmhouse

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The Champayne Farmhouse was built by John R. Champayne around 1860, at what is now 14201 Layhill Road. The house was built on a 114-acre plot of land that Champayne had bought from James Henry Boyd. Champayne put the title of the property in the name of his wife, Ell Champayne (née Beall), because he wanted it to be protected from being acquired by his own family. When talking to his father-in-law, Champayne once said that his own family "would take it as quick as hell would scorch a feather". At the time Champayne acquired the land, it had been completely covered by a pine forest. Champayne cleared the land, built a home, a blacksmith shop, a stable, a corn house, and a few other buildings on the land. Ell's family provided most of the wood for the outbuildings and the fencing. George Bonifant, a neighboring farmer, was impressed with all the improvements that Champayne had added to the land. Ell died in 1874, and title of the land was transferred to a trust.[5]

By 1880, a second story had been added to the house, it had apple and peach trees, and there was a dairy, a wheelwright shop, and a paint shop on the land. That year, the trustee sold the property to Sarah R. Nicholson for $1,827.20. The Nicholson family owned the property for many years to come.[5]

By the 1990s, Champayne Farmhouse was being rented out, but the outbuildings were all in very bad condition and collapsing.[5] In 2005, much of the land surrounding the Champayne Farmhouse was redeveloped and residential homes were built. The Champayne Farmhouse still stands today.

Naming of the area

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In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the area contained a few houses and small farms lining the Washington–Brookeville Turnpike, as Georgia Avenue was then called. The Hardy family farm was located between current-day Randolph Road and Parker Avenue and stayed in the family for generations.[6] In 1898, Mary Hardy gave the name Glenmont to the area's post office at what is now Georgia Avenue and Randolph Road.[6] Annie Lofler was appointed the new postmaster of Glenmont in 1900.[7] Although the post office was closed in 1901, the name for the area stuck,[6] albeit occasionally misspelled as Glenmount.[8][9][10]

Glenmont School

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Glenmont's first school opened in 1926.[11] Built at a cost of $50,000, the Glenmont School had 136 students enrolled in its first school year.[12] Miss Ruth Burroughs was the first principal.[11] The Glenmont School was located at 12210 Georgia Avenue (then called Brookeville Turnpike), on the site of land to which the Glenmont Fire Station relocated to in 2016.[13] The brick schoolhouse had four classrooms, two special department rooms, and an auditorium.[11] It was built after the consolidation and closure of schools in Aspen Hill, Layhill, and Wheaton.[11] The Glenmont School served students who lived in Glenmont, Aspen Hill, Layhill, and Wheaton.[11] The Cissel-Saxon Post of the American Legion donated an American flag to the Glenmont School in 1928.[14] Major E. Brooke Lee donated a memorial flag pole, which was dedicated in the memory of Paul Latene Hull, who was killed in action in France during World War I.[15][16]

A school extension designed by V.T.H. Bien was built in 1946, adding office space and a large space used as a gymnasium and cafeteria.[13]

Additional extensions were constructed in 1953, and 1956.[13] Demolition of the original structure compromised the integrity of the overall structure.[13] In 2002, the Maryland Historical Trust (MHT) decided that the school was not eligible for inclusion in the National Register of Historic Places, because according to the MHT's judgment, the school was not an important example of post-World War II suburban development, Glenmont was not a significant part of Montgomery County's suburbanization history at the time, and the design of the building was fairly typical for the time.[13]

Residential development, 1940s–1960s

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Glenmont remained largely undeveloped until after World War II, when suburbanization began with the construction of subdivisions in Glenmont. The State Roads Commission began plans to widen Georgia Avenue in 1948.[17][18][19] Commercial and residential development began transforming the rural area known as Glenmont in 1949, with two major developments, Glenmont Village[20] and Glenmont Forest.[21]

In 1947, the Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission built the 189-foot (58 m) tall Glenmont Water Tower, a multi‐columned elevated water tank with a capacity of 500,000 U.S. gallons (1,900,000 L).[22] The water allowed for residential growth in and around Glenmont.[23]

Georgia Avenue Baptist Church was built in 1956, and an education wing was added in 1962.[23]

The Americana Glenmont, a residential apartment complex, was built by developer Carl M. Freeman in 1961 and 1965.[23] The complex was designed with modern architecture and a natural, park-like setting.[23] It was later renamed Glenmont Forest.[23]

Glenmont Shopping Center

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Glenmont Shopping Center is located on the northeast corner of Randolph Road and Georgia Avenue.[24]

In 1952, Edward C. Baltz, Thornton W. Owen, David S. Moore, and Edward L. Strohecker Sr., announced a plan to construct a shopping center and 1,000 homes on 250 acres at Georgia Avenue, Layhill Road, and Randolph Road.[25] The Glenmont Land and Development Corporation began construction of the shopping center in 1956.[26] The center was not constructed in one building campaign. It was expanded as the developers were able to bring in new businesses. In its original construction, each store had a large plate glass display windows held in by tubular aluminum, known as an "open design." One portion of the shopping area, known as the "Arcade", included a 24-lane bowling alley. The alley was named for Alphone "Tuffy" Leeman, who played for the New York Giants in the 1930s and 1940s. By 1957, the shopping center included the bowling alley, a dry cleaner, a hardware store, and a restaurant. A Grand Union supermarket opened in 1959.[27] By 1962, the shopping center included a hairstylist, barber shop, shoe service, insurance agency, Glenmont Inn Restaurant, a Chinese restaurant, a hardware store, a saving a loan association, a High's Dairy Store, a glass and mirror store, a bicycle store, a People's Drug Store, and a post office.[22]

The Glenmont Shopping Center fell into some disrepair in the early 1990s. Residents of the Glenmont area have repeatedly asked the county and store owners to make safety improvements to the parking lot and to upgrade the facades of the stores.[28] One of the largest obstacles in widespread renovation to the Glenmont Shopping Center is that it is actually divided into 15 different parcels of land that are owned by 12 different property owners.[29] With stable rents, low vacancy rates, and low cost of ownership, the property owners have little motivation for large, coordinated improvements of the shopping center.[29]

Transportation

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Eastbound Randolph Rd just before it passes under Georgia Ave

Glenmont is a suburban crossroads of three major roads, Georgia Avenue (Maryland Route 97), Layhill Road (Maryland Route 182), and Randolph Road.

The Glenmont Metro station serves the area.[30] This underground station, which opened in 1998, is at the east end of the Red Line, and has two large parking garages. From Glenmont, the Red Line heads south through downtown Silver Spring and to the District of Columbia before re-entering Montgomery County at Bethesda, traveling through Rockville, and ending at Shady Grove.[31]

Government

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The Kensington Volunteer Fire Department has a fire station at the intersection of Randolph Road and Georgia Avenue.[32] The station was designed by architect Ted Englehardy as a large Colonial Revival wing-and-gable building. the exterior of the building is of brick construction and contains an exterior chimney and clock tower.

Montgomery County Police District 4 headquarters is also located at the intersection.[33] The police station was designed by Bagley, Soule & Associates of Chevy Chase in 1958. The construction was completed in 1959. The building has several additions, which reflect a change from the original Colonial Revival design. The complex features traditional details including denticulated cornices, brick laid in American bond course, molded brick surrounds, and double hung sash windows.

The Maryland-National Capital Park Police has its headquarters in an old elementary school on Layhill Road.

Civic associations

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In October 2008, the Greater Glenmont Civic Association[34] was founded to address crime rates in Glenmont and to encourage the Montgomery County government to revitalize the Glenmont area, just as the county had done in the neighboring Wheaton and Silver Spring areas. According to Greater Glenmont Civic Association documents, crime decreased in the Glenmont area by about 15% as of June 2010. The Greater Glenmont Civic Association won several awards and grants for its activities.[35] The group became defunct in 2014.[36][37]

Glenmont Exchange was incorporated in 2013 to promote community in the area.[38]

Glenmont Forest Neighbors Civic Association (GFNCA) was created in 2008 to serve the approximately 900 households in the community. The northern boundary is Randolph Road, southern boundary is Henderson and the western boundary is Kendall with Georgia Avenue to the east. This award-winning organization has been able to improve the infrastructure in the community including sidewalks, curbs, street lighting, paving and other traffic and pedestrian safety measures. Quality of life improvements include multiple Little Free Libraries and a new park at the intersection of Georgia and Randolph.

Housing

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Glenmont has seven multifamily rental apartment buildings, namely Privacy World, Winexburg Manor, Glenmont Forest, Woodberry Park, The Glen, Westerly Park, and The Oakfield.[39]p. 14 The rest of the area consists of single-family homes and some townhouses. Most of the housing west of Georgia Avenue is older and smaller; east of Georgia Avenue, the homes are newer and larger. However, there are a few sites west of Georgia Avenue where homeowners have demolished small, older homes and built larger, newer homes in their place. About 62 percent of the area's housing units are owner-occupied, although this is less than the countywide homeownership rate of 75 percent.

Glenmont Village is a residential subdivision of single family homes on the west side of the center of Glenmont. Financed by the Minneapolis-based Investors Diversified Solutions, Inc.,[40] the homes were built in 1949 and 1950.[41] Glenmont Village originally included 30 blocks and approximately 350 buildings. Two-bedroom houses originally sold for $8,890 each.[42] Glenmont Village advertised the two-bedroom Cape Cod-style houses as "modern bungalows". The houses featured full basements, gas heat, hot water, and an expandable attic level with a full-width dormer in the rear. There were four basic varieties of houses. Over the years, the houses have been customized.[43]

Demographics

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Historical population
CensusPop.Note
201013,529
202016,71023.5%
source:[44]
2010–2020[3]

According to the United States Decennial Bureau's for 2020, Glenmont had a population of 16,710.[45] The population was 4,025 White, 4,247 African American, 137 American Indian and Alaska Native, 2,489 Asian American, 137 Pacific Islander, 3,621 from another race, and 2,184 of multiple races. 5,728 of the population was Hispanic or Latino.[45]

Of Glenmont's residents age 25 or older, 22.2% have earned a graduate or professional degree; 43.3% of the population has a bachelor's degree or higher; 85% has a high school diploma or higher.[45]

3.8% of Glenmont's adults are civilian veterans.[45]

Glenmont's mean family income was $118,095, and its median family income was $94,991. [45] 7.4% of Glenmont's residents' income is below the poverty level.[45]

Of Glenmont's residents who are employed, 51.6% drive alone to work, 12.4% carpool to work, 19.8% use public transportation, 0.6% walk, 0.9% use other means, and 14.8% work at home.[45] Of Glenmont's employed residents, 60.2% work for a private employer, 19.2% are employed by the government, and 9.7% are self-employed.[45] Of Glenmont's residents who are employed, 4,519 work in management, business, sciences, or arts; 1,607 work in service occupations; 1,555 work in sales; 917 work in construction or maintenance, and 643 work in transportation.[45]

Of Glenmont's population, 51% were born in the U.S; and 48% were born outside the U.S. [45] Of Glenmont's residents, 51.2% naturalized U.S. citizens, and 48.8% are not U.S. citizens.[45] Most frequently reported ancestries were 7.4% Subsaharan Africa, 5.1% Irish, 4.4% German, 3.7% English, and 1.9% Polish, 1.7% Italian,[45]

Education

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John F. Kennedy High School main entrance

Public schools in Glenmont are operated by the Montgomery County Public Schools. Glenmont's high school students may attend John F. Kennedy High School, Wheaton High School or another school in the Downcounty Consortium. Glenmont's middle school students attend Argyle, Col. E. Brooke Lee, and A. Mario Loiederman. Glenmont's elementary school students attend Georgian Forest, Weller Road, Glenallan, or Arcola. Barrie School is a private school teaching students in kindergarten through twelfth grade.[46]

Glenmont Elementary School was originally constructed at the intersection of Randolph Road and Georgia Avenue in 1935. It was originally built as a two-story, 9,600-square-foot (892 m2) building. A 4,000-square-foot (372 m2) addition with a gymnasium and office space designed by V.T.H. Bien was built in 1946. Another addition was built in the 1950s. The school's grounds included a play area and a large grassy field. The original school was demolished in 1980, and another nearby school now uses the name.[47]

Terrain

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The area consists of modest rolling hills broken by small streams, all of them fed mainly by run-off from storm drainage, although the community contains at least one natural spring still producing aquifer-fed water. All streams to the east side of Glenmont are part of the Anacostia River watershed; they flow into the Northwest Branch of the Anacostia, which empties into the Potomac. Streams to the west of Glenmont generally reach the Potomac River by way of Rock Creek, with Georgia Avenue serving as a rough dividing line between the two drainage areas.

Parks

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The Glenmont Greenway Urban Park in August 2013.

There are three public parks located in or near the center of Glenmont: Glenfield Local Park, Saddlebrook Local Park, and Glenmont Greenway Urban Park. Glenfield Local Park is 11.3 acres (4.6 hectares) in area and features a diamond/rectangular field overlay, a playground, two tennis courts, a picnic shelter, and a petanque court. Saddlebrook Local Park, 14.86 acres (6.01 ha) in area, includes a rectangular field, playground, and a basketball court. Glenmont Greenway Urban Park encompasses c. 3 acres (1.2 ha) of land, and includes an 8-foot (2.4-metre)-wide asphalt trail, and sitting areas. The land is owned by WMATA, but operated and maintained by the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission (M‐NCPPC) as parkland.[48]

In addition to these three parks, there are 11 parks located within the vicinity of Glenmont, totaling over 1,100 acres (450 hectares) of land. Chief among these are Brookside Gardens and Wheaton Regional Park, both managed by Montgomery Parks, a division of the M-NCPPC.

In March 2021, the Glenmont Pavilion opened. It is a 1,598-square-foot (148 m2) playground located next to the Glenmont Fire Station.[49]

Points of interest

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References

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  1. ^ a b c U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Glenmont, Maryland
  2. ^ "2020 U.S. Gazetteer Files". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved April 26, 2022.
  3. ^ a b "QuickFacts: Glenmont CDP, Maryland". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved August 17, 2021.
  4. ^ a b c d e Farquhar, Roger Brooke (1952). Historic Montgomery County, Maryland: Old Homes and History. Baltimore, Maryland: Monumental Printing Company. pp. 186–188.
  5. ^ a b c "John R. Champayne Farmhouse". Maryland Historical Trust. November 25, 1996.
  6. ^ a b c Palmer, Laura-Leigh. Images of America: Wheaton. Arcadia Publishing. p. 8. ISBN 978-0-7385-6804-1.
  7. ^ "New Postmasters Appointed". The Washington Post. February 2, 1900. p. 9.
  8. ^ "Montgomery County Opens Nature Center in Wheaton Park to the Public". The Washington Post. May 11, 1961. p. C22.
  9. ^ Willard, Hal. "Delegates Stir Up the Dust in Montgomery". The Washington Post. April 24, 1956. p. 24.
  10. ^ "Mrs. Werner Talks On Zoning Plans". The Washington Post. October 15, 1955. p. 26.
  11. ^ a b c d e "Glenmont School Dedication Held". The Baltimore Sun. December 7, 1926. p. 24.
  12. ^ "News of the Suburbs". The Washington Post. October 17, 1926. p. M14.
  13. ^ a b c d e Bruder, Anne E. (January 3, 2002). "NR-Eligibility Review Form: Glenmont Elementary School". Maryland Historical Trust.
  14. ^ "In the Capital Suburbs". The Washington Post. January 15, 1928.
  15. ^ "In Capital Suburbs". The Washington Post. January 22, 1928. p. M10.
  16. ^ "Suburban". The Washington Post. January 23, 1928. p. 2.
  17. ^ "Bid Submitted For 1st Section Of Super-Road". The Washington Post. September 14, 1950. p. 8.
  18. ^ "Low Bid Is Preferred For Georgia Ave. Job". The Washington Post. November 1, 1950. p. 18.
  19. ^ "Bids Are Advertised On Divided Highway". The Washington Post. December 29, 1950. p. 8.
  20. ^ Harness, Conrad P. "Low Cost Home Sales Boom Here: One Project Attracts Over 6000". The Washington Post. August 28, 1949. p. R4.
  21. ^ "More Examples of Low-Cost Housing Pictured". The Washington Post. January 30, 1949. p. R2.
  22. ^ a b Bruder, Anne E. "Glenmont Commercial and Civic District". Maryland Historical Trust, Maryland Inventory of Historic Properties Form. Maryland State Archives. October 9, 2010. Retrieved May 29, 2013.
  23. ^ a b c d e Powers, Lindsay A. (December 12, 2012). "Glenmont Sites Marked for Historic Preservation". The Gazette (Montgomery County, Maryland).
  24. ^ Kyriakos, Marianne (October 9, 1993). "Where We Live: Glenmont's Future Riding On Red Line, Residents Say". The Washington Post. p. E1.
  25. ^ "Washingtonians Plan 1000 Homes Near Glenmont". The Washington Post. October 10, 1952. p. 39.
  26. ^ "NR-Eligibility Review Form: Glenmont Commercial and Civic District". Maryland Historical Trust. November 16, 2001.
  27. ^ "Grand Union To Open New Store in Md." The Washington Post. January 18, 1959. p. C13.
  28. ^ Herchenroeder, Karl. "Residents discuss future of Glenmont Shopping Center Archived April 3, 2013, at the Wayback Machine". The Gazette. Post Community Media, LLC. July 21, 2010.
  29. ^ a b "Land Assemblage Strategies for the Glenmont Shopping Center". The Urban Institute. July 15–16, 2014. via Glenmont Exchange.
  30. ^ "Metro – Rail – Glenmont". Wmata.com. Archived from the original on July 5, 2014. Retrieved June 6, 2010.
  31. ^ "Metro – Rail – Maps – Rail/Google Map". Wmata.com. Archived from the original on June 3, 2010. Retrieved June 6, 2010.
  32. ^ "Welcome to Kensington Volunteer Fire Dept Inc". Kvfd.org. Retrieved June 6, 2010.
  33. ^ "MC Department of Police: 4th District". Montgomerycountymd.gov. January 8, 2010. Retrieved June 6, 2010.
  34. ^ "Greater Glenmont Civic Association". Archived from the original on May 29, 2010.
  35. ^ Parcher, Amber (January 20, 2010). "Glenmont Civic Association pins hopes on federal grant". Retrieved June 11, 2010.
  36. ^ "The Greater Glenmont Civic Association". Department of Assessments and Taxation Business Services. State of Maryland. Archived from the original on December 21, 2014. Retrieved December 21, 2014.
  37. ^ "The Greater Glenmont Civil Association". Guidestar. Retrieved December 21, 2014.
  38. ^ "About the Exchange". Glenmont Exchange, Inc. 2013. Archived from the original Archived December 25, 2015, at the Wayback Machine on December 25, 2015.
  39. ^ "Glenmont Sector Plan: Approved and Adopted". Montgomery County Planning Department. December 2013.
  40. ^ Harness, Conrad P. (March 5, 1950). "2106-Unit Project 8 Miles From D.C." The Washington Post. p. F1.
  41. ^ "50 More Bungalows Set for Glenmont". The Washington Post. January 22, 1950. p. R3.
  42. ^ Harness, Conrad P. (March 26, 1950). "New Housing Projects Under Way Here Aimed at $50 to $80 Weekly Salaries: Low Cost Housing Projects Started". The Washington Post. p. R1.
  43. ^ "Survey Number M:31-20". Archived from the original on June 19, 2010. Retrieved June 5, 2013.
  44. ^ "Census of Population and Housing". U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved March 19, 2007.
  45. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Explore Census Data". data.census.gov. Retrieved February 9, 2024.
  46. ^ "2010 Census – Census Block Map: Glenmont CDP, MD" ( Archived June 22, 2015, at the Wayback Machine). U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved on June 22, 2015.
  47. ^ "Glenmont Elementary School". Maryland Historical Trust. January 3, 2002.
  48. ^ "Glenmont Sector Plan" (PDF). Montgomery Planning. Montgomery County, Maryland. Retrieved May 29, 2013.
  49. ^ "Glenmont Pavilion at Glenmont Forest Community Park". Retrieved May 30, 2023.
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