Silver Spring, Maryland Silver Spring, Maryland AFI Silver, Veteran's Plaza and the civic building, Downtown Silver Spring from the Metro station, Acorn Park, Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Station AFI Silver, Veteran's Plaza and the civic building, Downtown Silver Spring from the Metro station, Acorn Park, Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Station Location of Silver Spring, Maryland Location of Silver Spring, Maryland Silver Spring is an unincorporated improve and census-designated place (CDP) in Montgomery County, Maryland, United States.

It had a populace of 76,716 as stated to 2013 estimates by the United States Enumeration Bureau, making it the fourth most crowded place in Maryland, after Baltimore, Columbia, and Germantown. The urbanized, earliest, and southernmost part of Silver Spring is a primary company core that lies at the north apex of Washington, D.C.

The populace density of this CBD region of Silver Spring was 15,600 per square mile all inside 360 acres (1.5 km2) and approximately 2.5 square miles (6 km2) in the CBD/downtown area. The improve has recently undergone a momentous renaissance, with the addition of primary retail, residentiary, and office developments.

Silver Spring takes its name from a mica-flecked spring identified there in 1840 by Francis Preston Blair, who later bought much of the encircling land.

Acorn Park, tucked away in an region of south Silver Spring away from the chief downtown area, is believed to be the site of the initial spring. The boundaries of the Silver Spring CDP (in dark orange) as of 2010 As an unincorporated area, Silver Spring's boundaries are not officially defined.

As of the 2010 Enumeration the United States Enumeration Bureau defines Silver Spring as a census-designated place with a total region of 7.92 square miles (20.5 km2), all land; however, it does contain various creeks and small lakes.

The United States Geological Survey locates the center of Silver Spring at 38 59 26 N 77 1 35 W, prominently some distance from the Enumeration Bureau's datum.

By another definition, Silver Spring is positioned at 39 0 15 N 77 1 8 W (39.004242, -77.019004). The definitions used by the Silver Spring Urban Planning District, the United States Postal Service, the Greater Silver Spring Chamber of Commerce, etc., are all different, each defining it for its own purposes.

Residents of a large swath of South-Eastern Montgomery County have Silver Spring mailing addresses.

This region extends roughly from the Washington, D.C., Prince George's County, Maryland and Howard County, Maryland lines to the west,north and east, and Rock Creek Park and Plyers Mill Road to the west and north-west.

These boundaries make Silver Spring larger in region than any town/city in Maryland except for Baltimore.

Some notable landmarks are the world command posts of Discovery Communications, the AFI Silver Theatre, the NOAA headquarters, the world command posts of the Seventh-day Adventist Church and the nationwide headquarters of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community.

Downtown Silver Spring in February 2005, as seen from downtown Bethesda Acorn Park, site of the "silver spring" Rock Creek Park passes along the west side of Silver Spring, and offers hiking trails, picnic grounds, and bicycling on weekends, when its chief road, Beach Drive, is mostly closed to motor vehicles.

Sligo Creek Park follows Sligo Creek through Silver Spring; it offers hiking trails, tennis courts, playgrounds and bicycling.

Acorn Park in the downtown region of Silver Spring is believed to be the site of the eponymous "silver spring".

Brookside Gardens is a 50-acre (20 ha) park inside Wheaton Regional Park, in "greater" Silver Spring.

This park is part of Silver Spring and extends farther inside Montgomery County.

Note that the Rachel Carson Greenway Trail is titled after Rachel Carson, author of Silent Spring and former resident of Silver Spring.

Note: territory area of Silver Spring CDP Note:

As of the 2010 census, there were 71,452 citizens , 28,837 homeholds, and 15,684 families residing in the Silver Spring CDP.

Metropolitan area, Silver Spring is home to many citizens of Ethiopian ancestry.

The Blair, Lee, and Jalloh and Barrie families, three politically active families of the time, are irrefutably tied to Silver Spring's history.

In 1840, Francis Preston Blair, who later helped organize the undivided American Republican Party, along with his daughter, Elizabeth, identified a spring flowing with chips of mica (the now-dry spring is still visible at Acorn Park).

Two years later, he instead of a twenty-room mansion he dubbed Silver Spring on a 250-acre (one-square-kilometer) nation homestead situated just outside Washington, D.C.

(The home stood until 1954.) By 1854, Blair's son, Montgomery Blair, who became Postmaster General under Abraham Lincoln and represented Dred Scott before the United States Supreme Court, assembled the Falkland home in the area.

During the American Civil War, Abraham Lincoln visited the Silver Spring mansion multiple times.

Blair's grandchildren. In 1864, Confederate Army General Jubal Early occupied Silver Spring before to the Battle of Fort Stevens.

To Point of Rocks, Maryland, through Silver Spring. The first suburban evolution appeared in 1887 when Selina Wilson divided part of her farm on current-day Colesville Road (U.S.

Brooke Lee, who is known as the father of undivided Silver Spring for his visionary attitude toward developing the region. The Silver Spring Armory in 1917, constructed by E.

The early 20th century set the pace for downtown Silver Spring's growth.

Suburban evolution continued in 1922 when Woodside Development Corporation created Woodside Park, a neighborhood of 1-acre (4,000 m2) plot home sites assembled on the former Noyes estate in 1923. In 1924, Washington street car service on Georgia Avenue (present-day Maryland Route 97) athwart B&O's Metropolitan Branch was temporarily suspended so that an underpass could be built.

Takoma-Silver Spring High School, assembled in 1924, was the first high school for Silver Spring.

In 1935, when a new high school was assembled at Wayne Avenue and Sligo Creek Parkway, it was retitled Montgomery Blair High School.

The former high school building became a combined middle school and elementary school, housing Silver Spring International Middle School and Sligo Creek Elementary School.) The Silver Spring Shopping Center (built by developer Albert Small) and the Silver Theatre (designed by noted theater architect John Eberson) were instead of in 1938, at the request of developer William Alexander Julian.

The Silver Spring Shopping Center was unique because it was one of the nation's first retail spaces that featured a street-front parking lot.

By the 1950s, Silver Spring was the second busiest retail market between Baltimore and Richmond, with the Hecht Company, J.C.

In 1954, after standing for over a century, the Blair mansion "Silver Spring" was razed and replaced with the Blair Station Post office.

In 1960, Wheaton Plaza (later known as Westfield Wheaton), a shopping center a several miles north of downtown Silver Spring opened, and captured much of the town's business.

Helped breathe life into the region starting in 1978 with the opening of the Silver Spring station.

The Red Line heads south to downtown DC from Silver Spring, running at undertaking before descending into Union Station.

By the mid-1990s, the Red Line continued north from the downtown Silver Spring core, entering a tunnel just past the Silver Spring station and running underground to three more stations, Forest Glen, Wheaton and Glenmont.

In the late 1980s and early 1990s, developers considered a shopping mall and office universal called Silver Triangle, with possible anchor stores Nordstrom, Macy's, and JC Penney, but no final agreement was reached.

Shortly after that, in the mid-1990s, developers considered building a mega-mall and entertainment complex called the American Dream (similar to the Mall of America) in downtown Silver Spring, but the revitalization plan fell through before any assembly began because the developers were unable to secure funding.

However, one bright spot for downtown was that the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) merged its command posts in a series of 4 new high-rise office buildings near the Silver Spring Metro station in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

Another notable occurrence in Silver Spring amid the 1990s was a 1996 train collision on the Silver Spring section of the Metropolitan line.

On February 16 of that year, amid the Friday-evening rush hour, a MARC commuter train bound for Washington Union Station collided with the Amtrak Capitol Limited train and erupted in flames on a snow-swept stretch of track in Silver Spring, leaving eleven citizens dead.

At the beginning of the 21st century, downtown Silver Spring began to see the results of redevelopment.

Several town/city blocks near City Place Mall were completely reconstructed to accommodate a new outside shopping plaza called "Downtown Silver Spring." In addition to these chains, Downtown Silver Spring is home to a wide range of family-owned restaurants representing its vast ethnic range.

As downtown Silver Spring revived, its 160-year history was jubilated in a PBS documentary entitled Silver Spring: Story of an American Suburb, released in 2002. In 2003, Discovery Communications instead of the assembly of its command posts and relocated to downtown Silver Spring from close-by Bethesda.

The same year also brought the reopening of the Silver Theatre, as AFI Silver, under the auspices of the American Film Institute.

The restoration of the old B&O Passenger Station was undertaken between 2000 and 2002, as recorded in the documentary film Next Stop: Silver Spring. In 2005 Downtown Silver Spring was awarded the Rudy Bruner Award for Urban Excellence silver medal. Beginning in 2004, the downtown redevelopment was marketed locally with the "silver sprung" advertising campaign, which declared on buses and in print ads that Silver Spring had "sprung" and was ready for business. In June 2007, The New York Times noted that downtown was "enjoying a renaissance, a result of enhance involvement and private investment that is turning it into an arts and entertainment center". In 2007, the downtown Silver Spring region gained consideration when an amateur photographer was prohibited from taking photographs in what appeared to be a enhance street.

The people argued that the Downtown Silver Spring development, partially assembled with enhance cash, was still enhance property.

The business further stated that other activities permitted in enhance spaces, such as organizing protests or distributing campaign literature, were still prohibited. In response, Montgomery County Attorney Leon Rodriguez said that the street in question, Ellsworth Drive, "constitutes a enhance forum" and that the First Amendment's protection of no-charge speech applies there.

In 2008, assembly of the long-planned Intercounty Connector (ICC), which crosses the upper reaches of Silver Spring, got under way.

In July 2010, the Silver Spring Civic Building and Veterans Plaza opened in downtown Silver Spring.

American Film Institute Silver Theater Downtown Silver Spring hosts a several entertainment, musical, and ethnic festivals, the most notable of which are the Silverdocs documentary film festival held each June and hosted by Discovery Communications and the American Film Institute, as well as the annual Thanksgiving Day Parade (Saturday before Thanksgiving) for Montgomery County.

The Silver Spring Jazz Festival has turn into the biggest event of the year drawing 20,000 citizens to the no-charge festival held on the second Saturday in September.

Featuring small-town jazz artists and a battle of high school bands, the Silver Spring Jazz Festival has featured such jazz greats as Wynton Marsalis, Arturo Sandoval, Sergio Mendes, Aaron Neville and such bands as the Mingus Big Band and the Fred Wesley Group.

The venue joins the American Film Institute and Discovery Communications as cornerstones of the downtown Silver Spring's arts and entertainment district.

Downtown Silver Spring is also home to the Cultural Arts Center, Montgomery College.

Dining in Silver Spring is also extremely varied, including American, African, Burmese, Ethiopian, Moroccan, Italian, Mexican, Salvadoran, Jamaican, Vietnamese, Lebanese, Thai, Chinese, Indian, and fusion restaurants, as well as many nationwide and county-wide chains.

Silver Spring has many churches, Jewish churchs, temples, and other theological institutions, including the World Headquarters of the Seventh-day Adventist Church.

Silver Spring serves as the major urban region in Montgomery County and its revitalization has ushered in an eclectic mix of citizens and ideas, evident in the fact that the flagship high school (Montgomery Blair High School) has no majority group with each primary ethnic and ethnic group claiming a momentous percentage.

Silver Spring hosts the American Film Institute Silver Theatre and Culture Center, on Colesville Road.

Gandhi Brigade, a youth evolution media project, began in Silver Spring out of the Long Branch neighborhood.

Docs in Progress, a non-profit media arts center devoted to the promotion of documentary filmmaking is positioned at the "Documentary House" in downtown Silver Spring.

Silver Spring Stage, an all-volunteer improve theater, performs in Woodmoor, approximately 3 miles (4.8 km) north up Colesville Road from the downtown area.

Downtown Silver Spring is also home to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), an agency of the United States Department of Commerce that includes the National Weather Service; the American Nurses Association; and various real estate development, biotechnology, and media and communications companies.

The primary roads in Silver Spring are mostly 3- to 5-lane highways.

ICC interchanges in the Silver Spring region include Georgia Avenue, Layhill Road (MD-182), New Hampshire Avenue, Columbia Pike (US-29) and Briggs Chaney Road. Silver Spring is serviced by the Brunswick Line of the MARC Train, Metrorail Red Line, Metrobus, Ride On, and the no-charge Van - Go.

The bus terminal at the Silver Spring Rail Station is the busiest in the entire Washington Metro Area, and provides connections between a several transit services, including those mentioned above.

Sarbanes Transit Center which will further grew the station to facilitate the burgeoning demand for enhance transportation, due to the increase in populace in the Silver Spring area.

The Purple Line light rail, being studied by the Maryland Transit Administration (MTA) is prepared to service this station, connecting Silver Spring with Bethesda to the west and then running east to the University of Maryland-College Park and then southeast to the New Carrollton Metro station.

In addition to the Silver Spring station, the Washington Metrorail's Forest Glen station is also positioned in Silver Spring and the MARC train also stops at the close-by Kensington station.

Cupola at Montgomery Blair High School Silver Spring is served by a county-wide enhance school system, Montgomery County Public Schools.

Of the enhance high schools in the region, before to 2010, Montgomery Blair High School was the only one inside the census-designated place of Silver Spring. It is nationally recognized for its Communication Arts Program and its Science, Mathematics, and Computer Science Magnet Program, the latter of which perennially produces a large number of finalists and semi-finalists in such academic competitions as the Intel Science Talent Search.

Notable private schools in the region include The Siena School, the Yeshiva of Greater Washington, the Torah School of Greater Washington, the Nora School, and The Barrie School.

A portion of the Montgomery College Takoma Park/Silver Spring ground is positioned inside the Silver Spring boundary, with the rest of the ground located in Takoma Park.

(The chief campus is in the governmental center of county of Rockville.) Next to to the White Oak neighborhood in the outer reaches of Silver Spring is the ground of the National Labor College.

Howard University also has its School of Continuing Education in Silver Spring (its chief campus is positioned nearby in Washington, D.C.).

Formerly Sanz School, Medtech Institute is positioned in Silver Spring and offers training in healthcare, but most prominently English as a Second Language.

Silver Spring is served by at least five enhance libraries: Silver Spring Library positioned in downtown Silver Spring.

Silver Spring Library started operation in 1931 and is one of the most heavily used in the Montgomery County System.

It was relocated in June 2015 to Wayne Avenue and Fenton Street as part of the Downtown Silver Spring redevelopment plan.

The following companies/agencies/organizations have their command posts based in the Silver Spring CBD: The Silver Spring Saints Youth Football Organization has been a mainstay of youth sports in the town since 1951.

Located in Silver Spring, Maryland, the Silver Spring Saints play home games at St.

Silver Spring is also home to a several MCSL swim teams, including Parkland, Robin Hood, Calverton, Franklin Knolls, Daleview, Oakview, Forest Knolls, Kemp Mill, Long Branch, Stonegate, Glenwood, Rock Creek, and Northwest Branch, Stonegate, Hillandale, and West Hillandale.

Silver Spring and Takoma Park together host Silver Spring-Takoma Thunderbolts a college wooden-bat baseball team playing in the Cal Ripken, Sr.

The Potomac Athletic Club Rugby team has a youth rugby organization based in Silver Spring.

The region newspapers are the Washington Post, the Washington Times and The Montgomery Sentinel.

Several online outlets also cover small-town Silver Spring news, including The Voice and Silver Spring Patch.

The Washington Hispanic has its offices in Silver Spring. Sam Lytton, a former slave who had been released from standardized and established the improve of Lyttonsville, now a part of Silver Spring Silver Spring Library Montgomery County Public Schools "Geographic Comparison Table, 2010 Enumeration Redistricting Data Summary File, Maryland: By Place".

"Silver Spring Regional Center - Downtown Silver Spring".

Celebrate Silver Spring Foundation.

"Best Natural Areas - Northwest Branch Stream Valley Park".

"CENSUS OF POPULATION AND HOUSING (1790-2000)".

"DC's "Little Ethiopia" has moved to Silver Spring and Alexandria".

"Silver Spring Then & Again".

"Abe Lincoln in Silver Spring".

Silver Spring Voice.

"Jewish Washington: Scrapbook of an American Community | Real Estate Boom".

"Silver Spring Shopping Center Opens Today: Comprises 19 Stores, Gas Station, Movie".

"Silver Spring: Story of an American Suburb (2002)".

"Next Stop: Silver Spring".

"Next Stop: Silver Spring - Trailer".

Line Blurs in Silver Spring", Washington Post, June 21, 2007 Ruben Castaneda, "County Opinion Rejects Photo Limits", Washington Post, July 31, 2007 Sarbanes Transit Center in Silver Spring".

"Purple Line Part I: To build or not to build a $2.4 billion light rail line".

"2010 CENSUS - CENSUS BLOCK MAP: Four Corners CDP, MD" (Archive).

"CENSUS 2000 BLOCK MAP: SILVER SPRING CDP" (Archive).

"Negotiations for Arts Center at New Silver Spring Library Fall Through".

"Jazz festival expected to bring thousands to Silver Spring Saturday".

Salisbury, Bill (2015-12-14).

Vernon, Cheril (July 22, 2007), "'Queen of Romance' still going strong", Palestine Herald-Press, retrieved August 8, 2007 Silver Spring Timeline.

Retrieved August 6, 2003 from "Silver Spring history".

And Silver Spring Historical Society.

Historic Silver Spring.

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Silver Spring, Maryland.

Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Silver Spring.

Why Is It Named Silver Spring? The Silver Spring Regional Center The Silver Spring Voice The Silver Spring Gazette journal "Silver Spring: Story of an American Suburb" "Next Stop: Silver Spring" "Silver Spring Stories" produced by students of "Docs in Progress" Silver Spring Downtown District Silver Spring Historical Society Downtown Silver Spring South Silver Spring Neighborhood Association Greater Silver Spring Chamber of Commerce Silver Spring Municipalities and communities of Montgomery County, Maryland, United States

Categories:
Silver Spring, Maryland - 1887 establishments in Maryland - Census-designated places in Maryland - Census-designated places in Montgomery County, Maryland - Unincorporated communities in Montgomery County, Maryland