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Glen Burnie, Maryland

Glen Burnie, Maryland
Census-designated place
Welcome to Glen Burnie 2.jpg
Nickname(s): "Chrome City"
Location of Glen Burnie, Maryland
Location of Glen Burnie, Maryland
Coordinates: 39°9′36″N 76°36′38″W / 39.16000°N 76.61056°W / 39.16000; -76.61056Coordinates: 39°9′36″N 76°36′38″W / 39.16000°N 76.61056°W / 39.16000; -76.61056
Country United States
State  Maryland
County Anne Arundel
Founded 1812
Area
 • Total 18.0 sq mi (46.7 km2)
 • Land 17.3 sq mi (44.9 km2)
 • Water 0.7 sq mi (1.8 km2)
Elevation 52 ft (16 m)
Population (2010)
 • Total 67,639
 • Density 3,905/sq mi (1,507.7/km2)
Time zone Eastern (EST) (UTC-5)
 • Summer (DST) EDT (UTC-4)
ZIP codes 21060-21062
Area code(s) 410
FIPS code 24-32650
GNIS feature ID 0590311

Glen Burnie is a census-designated place (CDP) in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, United States. It is a suburb of Baltimore. The population of Glen Burnie was 67,639 at the 2010 census.

In 1812, Elias Glenn, a district attorney, established a county seat near what is currently known as Brooklyn Park. He named his property "Glennsburne".

The name was changed to "Glennsbourne Farm", and eventually "Glenburnie", as the property was passed through Glenn's descendants. Records also show the name as "Tracey's Station" and "Myrtle", after local postmaster Samuel Sewell Tracey and one of Tracey's boarders, before the final decision was made.

In 1854, William Wilkins Glenn, Elias Glenn's grandson, incorporated the Curtis Creek Mining, Furnace and Manufacturing Company into his family's property. The business flourished during the 19th century, and with it came several thousand acres of land in northern Anne Arundel County.

Upon the death of William Wilkins Glenn, his son, brother and nephew began to manage the family's business affairs, and Glenburnie became an official state subdivision in 1888. The Glenn family contracted George T. Melvin and Henry S. Mancha to lay out and promote the town. It would not be until 1930 that postmaster Louis J. DeAlba decided two words were better than one, and gave the town a final name change to the current Glen Burnie.

Among the earliest Glen Burnie schools was First Avenue Elementary, built in 1899. The oldest area church is St. Alban's Episcopal, which was built in 1904, with many of its bricks dating back to Marley Chapel, an early Maryland parish from the 1730s. Crain Highway, one of Glen Burnie's main thoroughfares (named after State Senator Robert Crain), opened in 1927 and Ritchie Highway (Maryland Route 2, named for ex-Governor Albert C. Ritchie) followed in 1939. Ritchie Highway carried nearly all Baltimore-area traffic headed for Annapolis and the Chesapeake Bay Bridge until an alternate bypass road, Interstate 97, opened in the 1980s.


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