Highlights

The Emerson Bromo Seltzer Tower is a landmark that helps define Baltimore's skyline. At the time of its construction in 1911 at Eutaw and Lombard streets it was the tallest building downtown. The clock tower's designer, Joseph Evans Sperry, modeled it after the Palazzo Vecchio in Florence, Italy. It was later built by Captain Isaac Emerson, inventor of the Bromo Seltzer headache remedy. In addition to its size, the structure has several other distinctive features. A 51-foot rotating illuminated blue replica of a Bromo-Seltzer bottle once topped the structure; the ornament was removed in 1936. The tower's clocks, which appear on all four sides, are still operational. Rather than displaying th...
The Emerson Bromo Seltzer Tower is a landmark that helps define Baltimore's skyline. At the time of its construction in 1911 at Eutaw and Lombard streets it was the tallest building downtown. The clock tower's designer, Joseph Evans Sperry, modeled it after the Palazzo Vecchio in Florence, Italy. It was later built by Captain Isaac Emerson, inventor of the Bromo Seltzer headache remedy. In addition to its size, the structure has several other distinctive features. A 51-foot rotating illuminated blue replica of a Bromo-Seltzer bottle once topped the structure; the ornament was removed in 1936. The tower's clocks, which appear on all four sides, are still operational. Rather than displaying the numbers, the words BROMO SELTZER circle the clock's face. The City of Baltimore owns the building and is renovating parts of it into work space for local artists. The building is on the National Register of Historic Places.
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The Seven Wonders of Maryland
Sun reporterThere are wonderful things to see and learn about everywhere you turn in Maryland. From Antietam National Battlefield to the Thomas Point Shoal Lighthouse. From the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad to the Appalachian Trail.Even the Patterson Park Pagoda is...Tags: Bodies of Water, Chesapeake Bay, Tourism and Leisure, Christianity, Oriole Park at Camden Yards
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A dramatic rebirth
Sun Architecture CriticThe show begins long before the curtain rises. That's all one needs to know to appreciate the dramatic transformation of Baltimore's Hippodrome Theatre, which reopens Tuesday after a $62 million restoration and modernization. The architects and artisans...Tags: Music Theater, Renovation, Lobbying, Clear Channel Communications Inc., Benny Goodman
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Waiting game is only one O's play
Sun StaffThe Orioles yesterday continued their open-ended series against the surreal. While players gathered inside Camden Yards for an impromptu workout, Baltimore City Fire Department officials instructed the team to postpone last night's game against the...Tags: National Government, Edison International, Texas Rangers, Major League Baseball, Oriole Park at Camden Yards
Sep 23, 2007
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Feb 8, 2004
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Jul 21, 2001
|Story| Baltimore Sun

