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Imagine your surprise as you
drive up Liberty Heights Avenue, peering ahead and seeing the sign "Granada
Path" with the intention of making the turn, when you stop to see that
this is not a street at all but rather a sidewalk! Such is the case
in many areas within outer Baltimore Neighborhoods dating from the early
20th Century. Before the onslaught of the automobile, it was popular
to create pathways used by pedestrians to reach different areas of the
neighborhood. As a result, the paths tended to make the neighborhoods
more livable.
Paths of Roland Park
No place in Baltimore has more pathways
than Roland Park. Designer Olmstead placed a number of paths across
the hilly development, particularly the Nothwest end, and all have survived
to the present day. These paths, once designated but unmarked, have
since been given wooden placards denoting their name as part of a 1991
Centennial Celebration of the Roland Park development. Most of these
signs thankfully survive intact with no vandalism.
Locally, the paths are
popular retreats
among those exercising, as well as those who simply need a shortcut
between
streets, as they were intended for anyway, though users can no longer
take them as a means of shortening their walk to the streetcar as they
could when they were first constructed.
Following is a map of
the Roland Park Paths:
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PATHS OF ROLAND PARK:
A - Shipton
B - Climbing
C - Tintern
D - Litchfield
E - Laurel
F - Squirrel
G - Hilltop
H - Briar
I - Tulip
J - Long Lane
K - Sunset
L - Lookout
M - Upland Road
N - Hepburn
O - Rye
P - Vanbiber
Q - Kittery Lane
(not shown, just Northwest of "E") - St.
Margarets
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Briar Path, spanning Longwood
and Beechdale Roads is among the longest of the Roland Park Paths.
The overhanging foliage provides a pleasant retreat on a hot day.
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Some of the Roland Park
Paths would certainly not pass ADA guidelines if constructed today.
Such is the case with Hilltop Path, a "T" shaped thorofare connecting Beechdale
and St Johns Roads with Indian Lane.
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"L" shaped Laurel Path is
the Northernmost of a three path segment in West Roland Park that constantly
mounts and drops hills.
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Short but scenic is Litchfield
Path connecting Deepdene Road and Blackberry Lane, with its abundant flowering
foliage and ferns.
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For a short stretch, Long
Lane becomes a path as it crosses Club Road, then resumes its alley width.
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Rye Path bridges Somerset
Road and University Parkway, East of Keswick Road, and is a mix of Downhills
and stairways.
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Another steep path is Shipton,
which connects steep Merrymount Road with Tintern Path below.
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Even without steps, the
grades of many of the paths can still be a challenge, such as Squirrel
Path, shown here.
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Rather unspectacular is
St. Margaret's Path, connecting Englewood Road and Springhouse Path (actually
a Street). Were it not for the sign, this would easily be mistaken
for a driveway.
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Sunset Path, which connects
the intersection of Goodwood and Club Roads with Hillside Road below, while
passing between the Baltimore Country Club and the Rusty Rocks Garden,
boasts an impressive stone surface.
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Aside from it's steps at
either end, Tulip Path is actually passable by autos.
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Signs for the Roland Park
Paths consist of Brass letters placed on a wooded signboard mounted from
a wooden staff.
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WEST ARLINGTON PATHS:
Though not as elaborate as the paths
of Roland Park, two paths were also constructed in the West Arlington area
of the City, just West of Liberty Heights Avenue. These paths each
run for three blocks, and both bisect the same long block along Liberty
Heights North of Granada.

Overgrown with tree clippings
is lonely Granada Path in West Arlington.
And others.........................................
Some paths were once streets
that have since been converted to pathways. Such is case with narrow
Poplin Avenue in Mount Washington, which once led across the Western Run
to a small community.
Other paths do exist, and
will be documented as time permits!
GOT A PATH I AM MISSING? CONTACT ME!
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