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Moving - Cheverly, Maryland

Are you planning on relocating into or out of Cheverly, MD?  Are you looking for a local mover to make that move easy for you and your family?  Movers USA, a full service moving company, can help make your move a pleasure.  Our moving consultants are fully versed in all phases of the moving process.  Call Movers USA or click here for a free estimate.

Meanwhile, enjoy a brief history of Cheverly, MD.

A Brief History of Cheverly, Maryland

In August 1814, the British, marching on Washington to burn the Capitol and White House, headed for Bladensburg, the first fordable point in the Anacostia, and it was here that the Battle of Bladensburg was fought on August 24. According to tradition two springs located within the present day boundaries of Cheverly were used by the British during this campaign and both were designated in 1988 as Prince George's Historic Sites.

Mt. Hope , the plantation house which still stands on a ridge in the center of Cheverly is at No. 1 Cheverly Circle. It was built by Fielder Magruder about 1839 and expanded in the 1860's. This 12-room ante bellum home is on our town seal and was added to the National Register of Historic Places in November 1978. It was carefully restored by Cheverly's founder and first resident Robert Marshall. He called it Crestlawn and lived there from 1919 to 1929.

With the exhaustion of tobacco land by the middle of the 19th century and the death of the slave-based agrarian economy of the area after the Civil War, a general agricultural depression and abandoned farmland became characteristic of Prince George's County during the rest of the century. Many fields began to grow up with weeds and then with locust and scrub pine. Although prosperous farmers like Fielder Magruder could continue to survive with general farming, the old days of the ante bellum plantation were no more. Also affecting his property during this period was the coming of the railroad. The Baltimore and Potomac (now Penn Central) track passed through all three of the original land grants. It provided one of Robert Marshall's original selling points for Cheverly, "10 cents and 12 minutes to downtown Washington, D.C."