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Blue Elk Vineyard

Blue Elk Vineyard is located in North East, Maryland at Bohemia Overlook, a waterfront venue.

Daly's Fresh Seafood

Southern Maryland fresh seafood sold wholesale or retail. On the Maryland Crab and Oyster Trail.

Golden Eye Seafood

Seafood Wholesaler in Southern Maryland. On the Maryland Crab and Oyster Trail.

Lindy's Seafood

A wholesale crab company specializing in live crabs, fresh Maryland crab meat, and oysters. We’ve been in operation over 40 years. On the Maryland Crab and Oyster Trail.

S. DiPaula & Sons Seafood, Inc.

Baltimore’s oldest crabhouse, established in 1897. On the Maryland's Crab and Oyster Trail.

Hat Trick Charters

Enjoy a relaxing day on the beautiful Chesapeake Bay. Max charter size is 6 people.

Denton Steamboat Wharf

At this wharf, captured Underground Railroad agent Hugh Hazlett and seven freedom seekers boarded the steamer Kent for return to Cambridge from which they fled. The freedom seekers were re-enslaved and Hazlett was convicted and sent to prison for 44 years. A National Park Service National Underground Railroad Network to Freedom site.

Richard Potter Home Site

In this post Civil War residence in 1866, Richard Potter wrote the narrative describing his kidnapping, “The Narrative of the Experience, Adventures and Escape of Richard Potter.” As a free black youth, Potter was kidnapped from Greensboro, Maryland and sold into slavery in Delaware. A National Park Service Network to Freedom site.

Frederick Douglass Driving Tour of Talbot County

Born into slavery, Frederick Douglass escaped to became a leading abolitionist. A self-guided driving tour gives visitors an overview of Douglass’s early life at 14 sites. His speeches inspired many to work on the Underground Railroad. Information and tour brochure available from the Talbot County Visitors Center. A National Park Service Network to Freedom site.

Joseph Cornish Escape from Gilpin's Point

Enslaved Joseph Cornish escaped on a vessel on the Choptank River from Gilpin's Point. He stopped in Philadelphia and told his story to William Still. Still offered him food and rest and sent him to New York and then Canada. A National Park Service Network to Freedom site.

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