Hagerstown, Maryland Hagerstown, Maryland City of Hagerstown Downtown Hagerstown's southbound Potomac Street in November 2007.

Downtown Hagerstown's southbound Potomac Street in November 2007.

Official seal of Hagerstown, Maryland Location in Maryland and in Washington County Location in Maryland and in Washington County Hagerstown is positioned in Maryland Hagerstown - Hagerstown Hagerstown / he rzta n/ is a town/city in Washington County, Maryland, United States.

It is the governmental center of county of Washington County, and the biggest city in a region known as Western Maryland (Washington, Allegany, and Garrett counties, plus Frederick County). The populace of Hagerstown town/city proper at the 2010 census was 39,662, and the populace of the Hagerstown-Martinsburg Metropolitan Area (extending into West Virginia) was 269,140.

Hagerstown rates as Maryland's sixth biggest incorporated city. Hagerstown has a distinct topography, formed by contemporary ridges running from northeast to southwest through the center of town.

Hagerstown anchors the Hagerstown-Martinsburg, MD-WV Metropolitan Statistical Area, which lies just northwest of the Washington-Baltimore-Northern Virginia, DC-MD-VA-WV Combined Travel Destination in the heart of the Great Appalachian Valley.

Greater Hagerstown is the fastest-growing urbane region in the state of Maryland and among the quickest burgeoning in the United States. Even with its semi-rural Western Maryland setting, Hagerstown is a center of transit and commerce.

Interstates 81 and 70, CSX, Norfolk Southern, and the Winchester and Western barns s, and Hagerstown Regional Airport form an extensive transit network for the city.

Hagerstown is also the chief commercial and industrialized hub for a greater Tri-State Area that includes much of Western Maryland as well as momentous portions of South Central Pennsylvania and the Eastern Panhandle of West Virginia.

Hagerstown has often been referred to as, and is nicknamed, the Hub City. A person born in Hagerstown is officially called a Hagerstonian.

The Hager House and Museum in Hagerstown City Park was once home to the city's founder, Jonathan Hager.

Burnside's Bridge, a site of heavy combat in the Battle of Antietam, which occurred south of Hagerstown.

Fourteen years later, Jonathan Hager became known as the "Father of Washington County" after his accomplishments helped Hagerstown turn into the governmental center of county of newly created Washington County which Hager also helped problematic from neighboring Frederick County, Maryland.

The City Council changed the community's name to Hager's-Town in 1813 because the name had attained prominent usage, and in the following year, the Maryland State Legislature officially endorsed the changing of the town's name. Hagerstown's strategic locale at the border between the North and the South made the town/city a major staging region and supply center for four primary campaigns amid the Civil War.

In 1861, General Robert Patterson's troops used Hagerstown as a base to attack Virginia troops in the Shenandoah Valley.

Throughout the Civil War, private physicians and people of Hagerstown gave assistance or aid to men from both the North and South in a number of locations, including the Franklin Hotel, Washington House, Lyceum, Hagerstown Male Academy, Key-Mar College, and a number of private residences. Following the war, in 1872 Maryland and Virginia cooperated to re-inter Confederate dead from their impromptu graves to cemeteries in Hagerstown, Frederick and Shepherdstown, West Virginia.

Hagerstown's nickname of the "Hub City" came from the large number of barns s (and roads) that served the city.

Hagerstown was the center of the Western Maryland Railway and an meaningful city on the Pennsylvania, Norfolk and Western, Baltimore and Ohio, and Hagerstown and Frederick Railroads.

Hagerstown was formerly served by the Hagerstown & Frederick Railway, an interurban street car system, from 1896 to 1947.

The weathervane known as "Little Heiskell," a motif of the town/city of Hagerstown, Maryland.

One of the most recognizable symbols of Hagerstown is the weathervane known as "Little Heiskell." Little Heiskell was at one time the mascot of North Hagerstown High School.

Hagerstown's first airplane manufacturing came in World War I with the Maryland Pressed Steel Company building the Bellanca CD biplane in hopes of securing government contracts.

From 1931 to 1984, Fairchild Aircraft was based in Hagerstown and was by far the area's most prominent employer.

The importance of the business to the town/city and the nation as a whole earned Hagerstown its former nickname "Home of the Flying Boxcar." Fairchild moved to Hagerstown from Farmingdale, New York, in 1931 after Sherman Fairchild purchased a majority stock interest in Kreider-Reisner Aircraft Company of Hagerstown in 1929.

At its height in World War II, Fairchild working directly and indirectly up to 80% of Hagerstown's workforce or roughly 10,000 citizens .

In the postwar era, Fairchild continued to produce airplane in Hagerstown such as C-123 Provider, Fairchild F-27 and Fairchild Hiller FH-227, FH-1100, C-26 Metroliner, UC-26 Metroliner, Fairchild Republic A-10 Thunderbolt II, and the Fairchild T-46 jet trainer.

Passenger terminal at Hagerstown Regional Airport-Richard A.

All manufacturing ceased in Hagerstown in 1984 and the business moved elsewhere.

Among the ones on display are: 1939 F24/UC-61 - C, 1945 C-82 - A, 1943 PT-19 - A, and the 1953 C-119. The exhibition is positioned near Hagerstown Regional Airport in the airport's former terminal.

Hagerstown is positioned at 39 38 34 N 77 43 12 W (39.642771, -77.719954). It is south of the Mason Dixon line and north of the Potomac River and between the Blue Ridge and Allegheny Mountains in a part of the Great Appalachian Valley known regionally as Cumberland Valley and locally as Hagerstown Valley.

Hagerstown, by driving distance, is approximately 70 miles (110 km) northwest of Washington, D.C., 72 miles (116 km) west-northwest of Baltimore, Maryland, and 74 miles (119 km) southwest of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

According to the United States Enumeration Bureau, the town/city has a total region of 11.80 square miles (30.56 km2), of which, 11.79 square miles (30.54 km2) is territory and 0.01 square miles (0.03 km2) is water. Major waterways inside Hagerstown include Hamilton Run and Antietam Creek that are tributaries of the Potomac River.

Natural landscape around Hagerstown consists of low, rolling hills with elevations of 500 feet (150 m) to 800 feet (240 m) above sea level and rich, fertile territory that is well-suited and utilized for dairy farming, cornfields, and fruit orchards typical of Mid-Atlantic agriculture.

Hagerstown is situated in the transition between the humid subtropical climate zone and the humid continental climate zone (Koppen Dfa), with hot, humid summers and cool to moderately cold winters.

Climate data for Hagerstown, Maryland (Washington County Airport), 1981 2010 normals Updated 1 July 2008 census estimates reflect Hagerstown having 39,728 citizens , an increase of 8.3% from the year 2000.

The current town/city executive or Mayor of Hagerstown is Robert "Bob" Bruchey(R) who has served the town/city since November 2016.

The representative body of Hagerstown is known as the City Council.

Serafini (R) represents Hagerstown in the Maryland Senate while John P.

Donoghue (D) stands for the Hagerstown region in the Maryland House of Delegates.

John Delaney (D) serves Maryland's 6th congressional precinct which includes Hagerstown in the U.S.

Once primarily an industrialized community, Hagerstown's economy depended heavily on barns transit and manufacturing, prominently of airplane , trucks, automobiles, textiles, and furniture. Today, the town/city has a diversified, stable company surrounding with undivided service companies in various fields as well as continued strength in manufacturing and transit in barns s and highways.

Hagerstown has 2 primary shopping malls: Hagerstown Premium Outlets, a 100+ store supply mall which attracts visitors from Washington and Baltimore as well as close-by counties.

A street corner on Broadway near downtown Hagerstown.

The Maryland Transit Administration operates the Route 991 commuter bus on weekdays to close-by Frederick, Maryland and the Shady Grove Metro Station, where riders can transfer to reach Washington, D.C..

Miller Cabs and Turner Vans service the Hagerstown region but are usually available only upon request.

Henson Field, is positioned approximately 5 miles (8.0 km) due north of Hagerstown off U.S.

The airport is commercially serviced by Allegiant Air with flights to and from Orlando Sanford International Airport and Cape - Air with flights to and from Baltimore-Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport. Alternatively, Washington Dulles International Airport, Washington National Airport, Baltimore-Washington Airport, and Harrisburg International Airport offer more extensive flight destinations and are all inside 60 miles (97 km) to 75 miles (121 km) of Hagerstown.

Even with being at the crossroads of CSX, Norfolk Southern, and the Winchester and Western barns s, there is no passenger rail service in Hagerstown.

Electricity inside the town/city is distributed at cost by Hagerstown Light Department, a municipal electric utility. Outside the town/city limits, electricity is provided by Potomac Edison, a division of First - Energy, an Ohio-based power company.

The city's waterworks is provided by City of Hagerstown Water & Sewer Department with enhance drainage at Antietam Drainage Basin. Landline phone service in Hagerstown is provided by Verizon.

Hagerstown's locale at the center of the Western Maryland region makes it an ideal starting point for touring, especially with respect to the Civil War.

Gettysburg, Monocacy, and Harpers Ferry battlefields are all positioned inside a 30-minute drive of Hagerstown.

Fort Frederick State Park, which features a restored fort used in the French and Indian War, is west of the town/city in close-by Big Pool, Maryland.

Hagerstown is also home to the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park Headquarters.

Funk Farm, Garden Hill, Good-Hartle Farm, Hager House, Hagerstown Armory, Hagerstown Charity School, Hagerstown City Park Historic District, Hagerstown Commercial Core Historic District, Hagerstown Historic District, Houses At 16-22 East Lee Street, Lantz-Zeigler House, Lehman's Mill Historic District, Long Meadows, Maryland Theatre, Henry Mc - Cauley Farm, Oak Hill Historic District, Old Forge Farm, Old Washington County Library, Paradise Manor, Potomac-Broadway Historic District, Price-Miller House, Rockland Farm, Rockledge, Rohrer House, South Prospect Street Historic District, Trovinger Mill, Valentia, Washington County Courthouse, Western Maryland Railway Station, Western Maryland Railway Steam Locomotive No.

Washington County Museum of Fine Arts in Hagerstown City Park.

Within the city, there are various parks including Hagerstown City Park, which is home to the Washington County Museum of Fine Arts, Mansion House Art Gallery, Western Maryland 202 Locomotive Display and Museum, and the Hager House and Museum (once home of Jonathan Hager, founder of Hagerstown). Outside of the Park, Hagerstown Roundhouse Museum showcases exhibits of Hagerstown's early barns history.

Discovery Station, positioned downtown, is a hands-on science and technology exhibition featuring exhibits in various arcades and display areas, including the Hagerstown Aviation Museum.

Hagerstown is home to the Maryland Theatre, a symphony home that plays host to the Maryland Symphony Orchestra and the annual Miss Maryland USA Beauty Pageants.

The town/city also has the Washington County Playhouse, which does dinner theater performances.

The new Academy Theatre Banquet & Conference Center, positioned downtown, homes the improve theater group Potomac Playmakers. And the Barbara Ingram School for the Arts is a magnet school ted art students, positioned in downtown Hagerstown's arts and entertainment precinct on South Potomac Street.

Walking path through willows in Hagerstown City Park.

Downtown Hagerstown recently has appreciateed a resurgence and now hosts a several prominent annual affairs.

Is an alternative festival that features live reggae and modern music and entertainment held at various times throughout the year. The town/city draws thousands every year around May June to the Western Maryland Blues Fest, which showcases blues artists from around the country.

The prominent Augustoberfest jubilates Hagerstown's German heritage. And the annual Alsatia Mummers' Halloween Parade happens to be the biggest eveningtime parade on the East Coast. Fairgrounds Park features recreational facilities such as the Hagerstown Ice & Sports Complex and hosts various affairs throughout the year like the annual Hagerstown Hispanic Festival held in mid-September. Hagerstown is home to the Hagerstown Suns minor-league baseball team.

To the west of the town/city lies Hagerstown Speedway, a nationally known dirt-track racing venue.

Another experienced racing track, Mason-Dixon Dragway, is positioned just southeast of Hagerstown.

Hagerstown Magazine, monthly lifestyle periodical for Washington County and encircling communities.

Hagerstown shares a radio market, the 166th biggest in the United States, with Chambersburg, Pennsylvania and Waynesboro, Pennsylvania. The following box contains all of the airways broadcasts in the area: Radio stations in the Hagerstown Chambersburg Waynesboro market Hagerstown is the base for four tv stations and shares a Designated Market Area, the ninth biggest in the United States, with Washington, D.C. Hagerstown used to have one high school called Hagerstown High School.

Hagerstown High went on to turn into North Hagerstown High School (North High) and South Hagerstown High School (South High).

Public high schools (Administered by Washington County Public Schools) North Hagerstown High School South Hagerstown High School In addition, many Hagerstown students attend the following: Hagerstown Community College, 2-year enhance community college.

Kaplan University, Hagerstown Campus, formerly known as Kaplan College and Hagerstown Business College.

Mount Saint Mary's University, Hagerstown Campus, offers Masters of Business Administration (MBA) degrees.

University System of Maryland at Hagerstown, a county-wide college studies center of the University System of Maryland offering various bachelor's, master's and doctoral degree programs in connection with other state universities and universities in Maryland.

Vinayaka Missions America University, India-based college with campuses throughout the world recently establishing its first American ground in Hagerstown.

See People from Hagerstown.

Indiana Hagerstown, Indiana, U.S.

Main article: Hagerstown Metropolitan Area Washington County, Maryland The Primary Cities are Hagerstown, MD and Martinsburg, WV.

The 2008 estimate is 263,753, making Greater Hagerstown the 169th biggest urbane region in the United States.

The expansion rate from 2000-2008 is +18.4%, the 48th highest among urbane areas in the entire nation and the highest in Maryland (and in West Virginia). The expansion is mostly due to the influx of citizens from Washington, D.C.

Hagerstown - Definitions from Dictionary.com Ray Smith Bass, State of Maryland Geological Survey, Cambrian and Ordovician Deposits of Maryland (1919) at 99.

Laws Made and Passed by the General Assembly of the State of Maryland, at a Session Begun and Held at the City of Annapolis, on Monday, the Sixth Day of December, Eighteen Hundred and Thirteen, and Ending Monday, the Thirty First Day of January, in the Year of Our Lord, Eighteen Hundred and Fourteen.

"Hagerstown Herald and Torch Light".

The Crossroads of the Civil War - Hagerstown, Hagerstown-Washington County Convention & Visitor's Bureau, Civil War, Retrieved 2007.

Washington Confederate Cemetery, Hagerstown, Maryland, Western Maryland Historical Library, Retrieved 2014.

"Station Name: MD HAGERSTOWN WASHINGTON CO AP".

Geographic Area: Hagerstown city, Maryland".

Geographic Area: Hagerstown city, Maryland".

Geographic Area: Hagerstown city, Maryland".

Tom Riford, Hagerstown region called a Retail Mecca, The Herald-Mail ONLINE, Published Thursday January 6, 2005, Retrieved 2007.

Jeannie Flitner, New Service to Baltimore Takes off From Hagerstown, Your4 - State.com, Published Tuesday 24 March 2009, Retrieved Tuesday 24 March 2009.

Hagerstown Light Department Electric & Gas, Hagerstown EDC - Utilities, Hagerstown-Washington County Economic Development Commission.

Water & Sewer, Hagerstown EDC - Utilities, Hagerstown-Washington County Economic Development Commission.

Andrew Schotz, Downtown Hagerstown theater, banquet center takes center stage, The Herald-Mail.

City of Hagerstown, MD.

Kaitlin Mc - Carthy, First Ever Hispanic Festival Takes Off In Washington County, Your4 - State.com, Published Sunday 16 September 2007, Retrieved November 2007.

Media related to Hagerstown, Maryland at Wikimedia Commons Geographic data related to Hagerstown, Maryland at Open - Street - Map City of Hagerstown website Hagerstown Downtown Directory Archive of Maryland Online Encyclopedia Hagerstown Hagerstown at DMOZ Clear Spring West Hagerstown East Smithsburg Municipalities and communities of Washington County, Maryland, United States

Categories:
Hagerstown, Maryland - County seats in Maryland - Populated places established in 1762 - Cities in Washington County, Maryland - 1762 establishments in Maryland - Cities in Maryland - Cities in the Baltimore Washington urbane area