Emmitsburg
Municipal Government

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Evidence found of Emmitsburg’s
centennial celebration
BY
JAMES RADA JR.
News Editor
jrada@thedispatch.us
EMMITSBURG,
Md. – Emmitsburg was founded twice.
That might be the conclusion someone 100 or even 50 years from now
might reach when looking back on the town’s history. Emmitsburg
had a grand bicentennial celebration in 1957, but its centennial
celebration was not 100 years before that in 1857, but only 71 years
earlier in 1886, according to evidence discovered by The Dispatch.
Mike Hillman of the Greater Emmitsburg Area Historical Society has led
the charge for years that Emmitsburg’s proper founding date was
1785. However, while he could show evidence that the town wasn’t
founded in 1757, he couldn’t show that the town had ever
celebrated any other date.
“I’ve always been troubled, in spite of the fact that we
had all the facts, that I couldn’t come across any reference to a
centennial celebration,” Hillman said. “Finding this has
sealed my case.”
The lack of evidence to the contrary led to a contentious battle in
town that ended with the Emmitsburg town commissioners removing the
founding date of 1757 from its seal in 2006 and using instead its 1825
incorporation date.
The first piece of evidence was discovered in the files of the Catoctin
Clarion. The Nov. 3, 1880 Catoctin Clarion notes “Emmittsburg
will celebrate its centennial in 1886.” Then by checking 1886
editions of the Emmitsburg Chronicle, advertisements and articles were
found about the town’s centennial, which was part of the
town’s annual Fourth of July celebration. The June 19, 1886
Emmitsburg Chronicle noted, “Every citizen of this village should
take an interested part in the demonstration, and by concert of action
make it a united Centennial one.”
“I was always looking at 1885 because that’s 100 years from
when the deeds were dated,” Hillman said. “I never
researched 1886 for a centennial, but that’s probably when the
first house was built.”
Though the Emmitsburg Chronicle also used a 1786 date for the founding
of Emmitsburg, language used in a November 1880 series made it sound as
if the town’s founding fathers were only changing the name of the
town, not creating a new one. The Greater Emmitsburg Area Historical
Society believes that a meeting to name the town, not rename it, took
place on March 5, 1785 and resulted in an agreement between the town
lot purchasers and Samuel and William Emmit.
The first known use of the name “Emmitsburg” appears in an
Aug. 12, 1785 deed, five months after the meeting and decision to
create a town, where Samuel conveyed 35 acres to his son William,
“wherein the lots of a new town of Emmitsburg are laid out.”
Hillman said that many of the documents that could have helped end the
controversy long ago were lost in the 1863 fire that burned much of the
town.
“This is the closest thing to having the letter of agreement
(signed by the original residents),” Hillman said.
“Hopefully, it will allow us to start using a founding date
rather than skirting the issue.”
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