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Baltimore -  1 bedroom - 1 bath - spacious, clean & sunny unit! - Brick Building - Hardwood Floors - Modern Kitchen - Spacious Living Room - Large Bedroom w/ Double Sliding Door Closet - Updated Bathroom - Off Street Parking - access to commuter rail, bus, shops & restaurants View Listings -->


 
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Baltimore Foreclosures

 

Home Foreclosure

As applied to residential mortgage loans the foreclosure process is a bank or other secured creditor selling or retrieving a parcel of real property. "Mortgage" or "deed of trust" is when after the owner is defaults to comply the agreement between the lender and the borrower. Default in payment is the common violation of the mortgage, a promissory note is allowed but with a charge on the property. It is typically said that "the lender has foreclosed its mortgage or charge" when all the process is complete and the lender can sell the property and can keep the interests to pay off its mortgage at any legal costs.

 


The Congress of Baltimore will make a sternly worded statement if the banks of Baltimore won't volunteer to save more homeowners from foreclosures, threatened by one of the senior house democrat in the Baltimore. If the number of loan modifications remains low Congress will encourage legislation that would let bankruptcy  judges write down a person's monthly mortgage payment.

 



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About Abell

 
Abell is a predominantly residential community, which corresponds to a structural grid street pattern established in the area during the first quarter of the twentieth century. However, remnants of earlier diagonal roads are still in the neighborhood of - today's Merryman Lane, and the truncated Vineyard Lane, both of which are located in the northeastern part of the region.

The Abell neighborhood, such as Abell Avenue, received its name from the Abell family, longtime owners of the Baltimore Sun newspaper. The Abell family owned a large summer estate known as Guilford, which was located near the bottom of today's Abell community.

Most of the residential structures in Abell are row houses of medium-and large size. Barclay Street in the northern eastern part of the late nineteenth century, a number of interesting individuals lframe structures that remain from the former Victorian-era village of Waverly. Scattered throughout the Community has a number of small apartment buildings. Mixed residential and commercial uses are prevalent along Greenmount Avenue. Since the 1950s, the south-eastern parts of the section is devoted to light industrial and educational use.

Early in its development of the "Teens and 1920's, Abell was known for its well-built houses and a number of amenities such as plumbing, and indoor plumbing sanitary provisions. Daylight houses, which made it possible to light all the rooms, the Edward J. Storck built mainly in the northern blocks. areas to the south was to develop the bay window, porch-front row houses. These new units were advertised as it is the area of Guilford, so take advantage of their proximity to wealthier neighborhood to the north.

The community belongs to the original Abell "Huntington" tract is 136 acres in order to Tobias Stanboro in 1688. Early Huntington subdivision was to have been a number of attractive country seats, including a few in the Abell neighborhood. 1889 part of the land near 29th Street and Greenmount Avenue used in a baseball park - the first oriole Park. But it was abandoned two years later because it was considered too far away from the City. terrapin Park was established in 1914 north of 29th Street at Greenmount Avenue Ballpark for the Federal League Baltimore Orioles and the area became known as the oriole Park. life revolved around the many local children of the dramatic presence of baseball in their community. 1937 of a new scoreboard, as long as three and a half story building as wide and four houses were built and billed as the largest scoreboard in the world, its ability to show any significant activity using the game was a marvel of the time electricity . If the 6-alarm fire destroyed the wood night stands, and buildings in 1944, 1,500 people were forced to flee the neighborhood. The intense heat melted asphalt, and tar on the 29th Street nearby roofs. The Orioles moved into the twenty-year-old Municipal Stadium and the Baltimore Barclay Street was cut through the old oriole Park site. For years, the land was free, and use it as a playground. During the mid-1950s, commercial structures, and the store is built along the eastern part, and Barclay (Barclay School, initially, then the Middle) School, # 54 , was built to the west in 1959.

An important landmark was originally part of the local community still exists early Waverly Abell. The Huntington Baptist Church, at the northwest corner of 31st Street and Barclay Avenue, established in 1836 a little Sabbath school in convalescent soldiers. Throughout the early 1800 the man Ft. Mchenry were moved to a larger and healthier atmosphere Abell is a region near the junction of old and New York on the way, to escape the risk of malaria. Sometimes convalescing soldiers from the barracks to be Baptist to participate in services in homes and neighborhood. A Sabbath school was established nearby in the old barracks building in 1836. Alternate visiting ministers preached sermons a week for the soldiers and some civilians. 1846 James Wilson, a major landowner in the area erected a small chapel, which he called on the Huntington Baptist Church. The congregation grew steadily, until it was necessary for the new building in 1873. Modeled after the Talmage's Tabernacle in Brooklyn, it was covered with corrugated iron plates. In service for fifty-year-old corporal landmark in 1922 and was replaced by the current church.
 

 


 




 


 



 

 

 
 


 

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