Oh say, can you extend the Inner Harbor promenade to Fort McHenry?

rA BLUE-SKY BLUEPRINT FOR BALTIMORE
By GERALD NEILY

Fort McHenry is on a peninsula, but it might as well be an island. Baltimore’s most important and enduring tourist attraction, the birthplace of our national anthem, is also its most isolated. When befuddled tourists discover they can’t get there by following the Inner Harbor waterfront promenade, many just give up.
 
But extending the promenade to Fort McHenry should be much easier than anyone has imagined. Unlike some of the more out-there proposals for spiffing up the city (gondolas over the Inner Harbor, knocking down the Jones Falls Expressway, turning a century-old derelict railroad bridge into the centerpiece of walking trail to a developer’s upscale develoment) this promenade idea would face few political or physical impediments, isn’t horribly expensive and could actually happen quickly. 
It should be planned now, in fact, to complement the new $14 million visitors center which recently began construction.
fort-mchenry-1

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Anti-tax teabaggers mount a very moist protest at Baltimore’s Inner Harbor

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Story and photos by FERN SHEN
There wasn’t a lot of tea, or even tea shtick, yesterday at the Baltimore version of the nationwide anti-Obama “tea party” protest, which drew about 150 people here despite a torrential downpour.

Unlike an earlier Annapolis event, where protesters threw empty boxes marked “tea”‘ off a skipjack and into the water, and a Washington D.C. protest, in which teabags were chucked onto the White House lawn, Baltimore did not seem to be the site of any Oolong-hurling. Perhaps the city police boat, idling right by the Inner Harbor amphitheater, had something to do with that.

Organizers promised that teabags would be tucked in along with the petition to President Barack Obama being passed around for people to sign. But while the Baltimore teabagging remained mostly metaphorical, that didn’t stop protesters from slapping their point home vigorously. Read the rest of this entry »

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The John Waters interview:

At his first art show in Baltimore since 2002, Waters talks with the Brew about art, the suburbs and “haunted asses”

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