Burkittsville, Maryland

USA / Maryland / Burkittsville /
 town, cinema

www.burkittsville.com/

A small town founded in 1824. Burkittsville gained notoriety with the 1999 release of the film The Blair Witch Project, which attracted fans of the cult film, and provided a spike to local commerce. Contrary to popular belief, the majority of the film was not filmed in Burkittsville, and the events depicted in the film and the legend of the Blair Witch itself were entirely fabricated by the producers themselves.

The first settlers in this area cleared their farm land and raised their families along two Indian trails that crossed here. Joshua Harley, one of these pioneers and a veteran of the American Revolution, started the settlement’s first dry goods store. In 1824 Harley’s store became Harley’s post office. Henry Burkitt moved here from Pennsylvania about 1825 and laid out a town along the east-west trail, subdividing larger tracts bought from his neighbors. In 1829, Burkitt donated property on Cemetery Hill to the Reformed Germans, who built a church on it. The Resurrection German Reformed Church, originally called “Union Church,” was shared by the Lutherans until they built St. Paul’s next door. The cemetery behind these churches was known as “Union Cemetery,” because both congregations buried their dead there. Burkitt died before he finished his town, but the village grew and became known as Henry Burkitt’s Town. Joshua Harley, the community’s first store keeper and postmaster had been forgotten. At the time of the Battle of South Mountain, Burkittsville had approximately 50 houses and 200 inhabitants.

www.hmdb.org/marker.asp?marker=2051
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Coordinates:   39°23'28"N   77°37'28"W
This article was last modified 12 years ago