Baltimore Sun

THE ‘SECRET’ BENEATH

Federal Hill’s tunnels continue to fascinate Baltimorea­ns, visitors

- By Colin Campbell

Preservati­on of Federal Hill and Fell’s Point, “it’s a romantic idea, sort of like ‘Raiders of the Lost Ark.’”

The Baltimore Sun investigat­ed the origin and uses of Federal Hill’s tunnel network by reviewing historical documents and news accounts, and interviewi­ng nearby neighbors, contractor­s who have worked on the hill, and an archaeolog­ist who explored some of them in the

early 1990s.

‘A series of shafts and off-shoots’

Federal Hill long served as a repository of sand, clay, silica and iron ore, and industrial mine shafts and tunnels pock

TUNNELS , marked the hill for years before the city designated it as a park in 1880, according to “Baltimore Subterrane­an,” a 1954 report by researcher George Wetzel.

Shaum Glass Works, a company once headquarte­red on the north side of the hill, used the sand for glassmakin­g — one of several industries that drew materials both from the hill’s surface and from undergroun­d, the researcher wrote, citing an1846 article in The Sun.

“So extensive were the mining excavation­s under the Hill, that in Feb. 1840 it was feared the Hill would be dug down before a park could be establishe­d there,” Wetzel wrote.

Louise F. Akerson has personally explored the hill’s belly.

The former archaeolog­ical curator for the Baltimore City Life Museums ventured into a 19th-century commercial sand mine in July 1992, after constructi­on workers shoring up the north side of the hill discovered a void in the hill that turned out to be the mine’s entrance — leading to some cavernous rooms as much as 11 feet high.

“The tunnel was divided into a series of shafts and off-shoots of varying heights,” she wrote afterward in an article for the Journal of the Archaeolog­ical Society of Maryland.

In the depths of the hill, Akerson and the constructi­on workers who discovered the tunnel unearthed a trove of artifacts, including a wooden pipe, a pocket knife and wick material, a piece of a chamber pot, a fully intact beer bottle, and “a shard of Rockingham glazed ceramic which was probably manufactur­ed in Baltimore by the Bennett Pottery Company around 1850,” Akerson wrote.

Their most fascinatin­g finding was a name, “Zimmerman,” hand-carved into the wall of a tunnel, with “Balto” scrawled underneath it. Other names on the wall had faded and could not be read clearly.

There was still soot on the walls above the mine’s old candle notches.

More than 25 years later, the archaeolog­ist remembers being awestruck by the various artifacts.

“Just imagine the person who made it or handled it,” she said in an interview. “It just boggles the mind. Seeing the initials on the wall was the same feeling. This is somebody who lived 100 years ago that put their initials in the sand.”

A military ‘escape route’?

At least one theory surroundin­g Federal Hill’s tunnels is steeped in Baltimore’s wartime history.

After a major cave-in of Clement Street renewed public interest in the tunnels in 1951, Donald Stewart, who lived on Warren Avenue, spread the legend: Military tunnels built between Federal Hill and Camden Station during the War of 1812 had been discovered, enlarged and reinforced by Union soldiers occupying the hill during the Civil War five decades later, he said.

“The Union Army rebuilt the tunnels for troops to march through from their trains at Camden Station to either Federal Hill or to boats, and they were used largely by wounded soldiers and others coming from the South,” Stewart told The Baltimore Sun in an interview at the time.

The existence of such a tunnel has never been verified.

But Union troops did discover the mines during their occupation, the researcher Wetzel wrote, citing the autobiogra­phy of the fort’s commander, Gen. Benjamin Butler. A Union captain who found a tunnel on the night Butler arrived in Baltimore in May 1861 breathless­ly reported it to the general, anxious it had been dug by infiltrati­ng Confederat­es seeking to blow up their fort on the hill.

“Together they entered it and found only the tools of a sand miner,” Wetzel wrote.

An old cannon was found in a network of undergroun­d rooms at the northwest corner of the hill during a sewer project in the 1900s. But Wetzel — skeptical about the tunnels’ military origin — concluded that it had most likely toppled from its bastion atop the hill during an1864 landslide into an existing sand mine below.

Jim Hall, a former city planner who lives on Grindall Street, is certain the Union forces dug at least one military tunnel. He said the two houses next door to his collapsed into it sometime in the 19th century.

Much of that tunnel has been filled by the city after many cave-ins over the years, but it once ran from Federal Hill toward where Digital Harbor High School now stands, Hall said.

“This is a tunnel. This isn’t a mine,” Hall said. “This is getting somebody somewhere. Now, why? ... It would have been very important to the military to have an escape route.”

Bill Houck, part of an Allied Contractor­s crew shoring up the eastern side of the hill last month, said he had found military artifacts and other items inside the hill during a utility project on its north side in the 1970s.

“We found some musket balls, a rustedup gun and some other relics, pottery and things like that,” Houck said.

The mystery of the unknown and romantic notions of urban archaeolog­y stoke Baltimorea­ns’ perpetual interest in the tunnels, said Gleason, the preservati­on society president.

Unlike the far larger Howard Street and Baltimore & Potomac train tunnels under the city, the passages within Federal Hill are “the stuff of legend,” he said. “That’s part of the attraction.”

An undergroun­d parking garage proposed inside Federal Hill at one point was a non-starter, said Sandy Apgar, chair emeritus of the South Harbor Renaissanc­e, a nonprofit that helps preserve and improve Federal Hill. Apgar, who has lived on Warren Avenue for nine years, envisions a more exciting way to transform the inside of the hill: fortifying the tunnels and opening them for tours, “as a small urban equivalent of Luray Caverns.”

“Some of us would like to see access to them,” he said. “Why not? We’re always looking, obviously, for revenue-generating opportunit­ies, because the support to do what we’ve done is mainly private.”

The notion of an adventure inside one of Baltimore’s most historic landmarks would be a strong draw, Apgar said.

“The tunnels have their own magic,” he said.

 ?? RK&K/HANDOUT ?? Constructi­on workers inside a tunnel beneath Federal Hill in the 1990s.
RK&K/HANDOUT Constructi­on workers inside a tunnel beneath Federal Hill in the 1990s.
 ?? JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Baltimore's Federal Hill has several historic tunnels hidden beneath its park-like setting.
JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN Baltimore's Federal Hill has several historic tunnels hidden beneath its park-like setting.
 ?? RK&K/HANDOUT ?? A constructi­on worker inside a tunnel beneath Federal Hill in the 1990s.
RK&K/HANDOUT A constructi­on worker inside a tunnel beneath Federal Hill in the 1990s.
 ?? ULYSSES MUÑOZ/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Former city planner Jim Hall identified this spot as one of the tunnel entrances that has since been sealed up.
ULYSSES MUÑOZ/BALTIMORE SUN Former city planner Jim Hall identified this spot as one of the tunnel entrances that has since been sealed up.

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