Mondawmin, Baltimore
Mondawmin is a neighborhood located in the Western district of Baltimore, Maryland, United States. The neighborhood is surrounded by Druid Hill Park, the Whitelock Community, and Lower Park Heights. Included within its boundaries are Frederick Douglass High School, and Mondawmin Mall. The Baltimore Metro Subway serves the neighborhood, with a station at Mondawmin Mall that is also a hub for many bus routes.
Location
The neighborhood is bounded by Longwood Street and Hilton Parkway to the west, Liberty Heights Avenue and Druid Park Drive to the north, Druid Hill Park and Fulton Avenue to the east, and North Avenue to the south. It occupies part or all of the zip codes 21215, 21216, and 21217.Description
Mondawmin is a historically African American community composed of young professionals, retirees, and working people. The neighborhood clusters around Mondawmin Mall, an urban shopping mall, and features schools ranging from elementary to four-year college, green space on wide boulevards and small streets, small businesses, churches and neighborhood associations.Highlights
- Mondawmin Mall, a shopping center featuring a full-service grocery store, and over 100 stores and shops
- Mondawmin Transit Hub: The second-largest transit hub in Baltimore City, with access to Metro Subway and more than nine bus routes
- Bon Secours Liberty Village, a comprehensive health care center with residential complex for senior citizens
Nearby professional and college institutions include Urban Medical Institute, Coppin State University, and one of two campuses of Baltimore City Community College. The neighborhood is five minutes by car from the nearest light rail station; the area is also served by the Maryland Transit Administration's Mondawmin Shuttle Bug bus.
Housing stock
Most of the neighborhood's residential areas consist of brick rowhouses. Those built before World War II have large front porches and in some cases Victorian styling. Those built after the war tend to be two-story brick structures on wider lots than generally found in the inner city. A few single dwellings near the Walbrook neighborhood reflect their origins as summer homes built in the early 20th century.History
The area was estate countryside in the 19th century, characterized by large homes built by prominent city residents on the hilly countryside several hundred feet above the Inner Harbor area. Mondawmin takes its name from the estate owned by Dr. Patrick Macaulay, physician, city councilman, B&O Railroad director and patron of the arts. Tradition relates that Henry Wadsworth Longfellow visited Dr. Macaulay, who asked him what to name his home, then surrounded by corn fields. The poet allegedly looked around and replied, "Why not Mondamin, after the Indian corn god?"Southern Mondawmin has a long history of stable homeownership. Many residents moved into the community in the late forties and early fifties as the area developed as the cultural and education center for African Americans. Robert W. Coleman, one of the community's residents, established the first school for the blind for African Americans, at a time when public facilities and schools were segregated.
Schools
Schools that people living in Mondawmim attend, but are not necessarily geographically within the boundaries of the Mondawmin neighborhood.- Coppin State University
- Baltimore City Community College
- Frederick Douglass High School
- Bard High School Early College
- William H. Lemmel Middle School
- Gwynns Falls Elementary
- Robert W. Coleman Elementary
- William S. Baer Elementary
- Mathew Henson Elementary School
- Carver High School
- Walbrook High School
- George G. Kelson Elementary/Middle School
- Westside Elementary School
Library Branch
- Enoch Pratt Free Library - Penn North