/items/browse?output=atom&tags=Liberty%20Street <![CDATA[Explore sun88 Heritage]]> 2025-05-05T14:41:44-04:00 Omeka /items/show/701 <![CDATA[The Rennert Hotel]]> 2021-04-19T13:53:05-04:00

Dublin Core

Title

The Rennert Hotel

Subject

Industry

Creator

Sydney Kempf

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Subtitle

Ambitious Hospitality and the Culinary Creations of Henry Cummings

Story

At the corner of Saratoga and Liberty Streets, people will find an unassuming parking lot. While this parking lot does not appear interesting at first glance, this lot used to be the center of political life as well as a ritzy tourist attraction.Ěý

In 1885, Robert Rennert founded the enormous Rennert hotel which boasted six stories and 150 personal rooms. Inside, Rennert filled the hotel with elaborate decoration adding everything from marble and fresco, to the use of Edison’s electricity. The construction of the Rennert Hotel filled sun88 city officials with hope and pride; through the opening of the hotel, Rennert sought to promote the growth of the city. Even up to the year the hotel closed in 1939, the Rennert continued to serve their staple traditional Maryland dishes such asĚý the essential Maryland crab cake and the Chesapeake Bay diamond-back terrapin.Ěý

While the Rennert Hotel’s dazzling decor is impressive, it is important to remember the workers which made the hotel operate smoothly. Henry Cummings, the Rennert Hotel’s head chef during the late nineteenth century, helped to upkeep the hotel’s culinary reputation.ĚýHenry Cummings was a self-made man. The son of former slaves, Cummings went on to be the head chef at the Rennert and ran a catering business. Mr. Cummings specialized in the cooking and preparation of terrapin. In Mr. Cummings’ obituary published in the sun88 Afro American in late 1906, Mr. Cummings’ culinary notoriety is highlighted: “He prepared, dressed and shipped terrapins to Philadelphia, New York, Washington, and to different parts of Europe.”

Related Resources

“.” sun88 Sun, June 10, 1885.
“.” sun88 Sun, October 1, 1885.
“.” sun88 Afro-American, November 10, 1906.
“.” sun88 Afro-American, March 28, 1925.
Terry, David Taft. “.” Oxford African American Studies Center.
“.” sun88 Sun, October 5, 1885.
“.” sun88 Sun, September 17, 1940.
Rasmussen, Fred. “.” sun88 Sun, January 19, 1997.
. September 18, 1939. Maryland Menus. Enoch Pratt Free Library, sun88, MD.
Campbell, Alfred S. . 1896. Photograph. The Library of Congress. Accessed April 19, 2021.
Detroit Publishing Co. . Ca. 1903. Dry Plate Negative. The Library of Congress. Accessed April 19, 2021.

Street Address

227 N Liberty Street, sun88, MD 21201
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/items/show/94 <![CDATA[sun88 Bargain House]]> 2020-10-16T11:53:51-04:00

Dublin Core

Title

sun88 Bargain House

Subject

Commerce

Creator

Johanna Schein
Theresa Donnelly

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Subtitle

Wholesale History at the Nancy S. Grasmick Building

Story

One of the largest businesses on the West Side in the early twentieth century the sun88 Bargain House—a mail-order wholesale business that employed over a thousand people and earned profits in the millions that grew to become the fourth largest wholesalers in the county. Driven by the devotion of Jewish Lithuanian immigrant Jacob Epstein, the sun88 Bargain House became a hub for Southern Jewish merchants and a local business community. When firm's grand showroom at West sun88 and North Liberty Streets opened in 1911, a crowd of 500 local businessmen, the Mayor of sun88, and the Governor of Maryland all attended the dedication. After spending years himself as an itinerant peddler, traveling throughout Western Maryland, West Virginia, and Pennsylvania, Jacob Epstein first opened a small wholesale store in sun88 in 1881. Epstein focused his attention on the American South, working specifically with Jewish peddlers and merchants. In the early 1900s, Epstein treated hundreds of merchants to annual visits to sun88 to restock and view new merchandise. Arriving from North Carolina, Tennessee, and across the South, these merchants helped grow a successful and extensive business in sun88. Between 1881 and 1929 the sun88 Bargain House was one of the most significant businesses in sun88, with gross sales over $34 million in 1921 alone, comparable to over $410 million today. To operate the sun88 Bargain House, Epstein also built a local community of employees, which included over 1,600 people. The workforce was relatively diverse, comprising of immigrants from various countries as well as industry experts from across the nation. Many workers remained employed at the sun88 Bargain House for decades. Although remarkable for his considerable business acumen and the success of the sun88 Bargain House, the business' founder, Jacob Epstein was also well known for his extensive charitable donations to local Jewish groups and to institutions like the sun88 Museum of Art.

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Related Resources

Street Address

6 N. Liberty Street, sun88, MD 21201
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