Hyattsville, Maryland
USA /
Maryland /
Hyattsville /
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/ Hyattsville
World / United States / Maryland
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www.hyattsville.org/index.html
The city was named for its founder, Christopher Clark Hyatt. He purchased his first parcel of land in the area in March 1845. He thought the proximity to the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad tracks and the telegraph lines made the area a good site for a town, and the surrounding farmlands were soon subdivided into housing lots. The name Hyattsville was being used for the settlement by 1859.
As a community inside the Capital Beltway, Hyattsville enjoys easy access to Washington and Baltimore by the West Hyattsville and Prince George's Plaza stops on the Metro subway system's Green Line or by MARC commuter rail trains on the Camden Line in the neighboring town of Riverdale Park.
The historic district of the city is home to a number of Victorian houses built in the late 1880s and Sears bungalows and Arts & Crafts houses built between the wars (late 1910s and early 1940s).
In 1992, a portion of the city was placed on the National Register of Historic Places as the Hyattsville Historic District; the district was extended in late 2004.
The city was involved in a minor controversy in April 2006. In the episode airing April 27, the Geena Davis television series Commander in Chief depicted Hyattsville as having the highest murder rate in the United States; it also indirectly depicted the town as being an urban ghetto dominated by poor minorities. The city and Prince George's County were very upset at ABC. On May 1, ABC formally apologized to both the city and county.
With over a billion dollars of ongoing construction, the City of Hyattsville is poised to become the up and coming place to live. Only 6 miles from downtown DC, inside the beltway. Check out hyattsville.wetpaint.com for more information about this great City and the community within it.
Hyattsville had a population of 17,557 in 2010.
The city was named for its founder, Christopher Clark Hyatt. He purchased his first parcel of land in the area in March 1845. He thought the proximity to the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad tracks and the telegraph lines made the area a good site for a town, and the surrounding farmlands were soon subdivided into housing lots. The name Hyattsville was being used for the settlement by 1859.
As a community inside the Capital Beltway, Hyattsville enjoys easy access to Washington and Baltimore by the West Hyattsville and Prince George's Plaza stops on the Metro subway system's Green Line or by MARC commuter rail trains on the Camden Line in the neighboring town of Riverdale Park.
The historic district of the city is home to a number of Victorian houses built in the late 1880s and Sears bungalows and Arts & Crafts houses built between the wars (late 1910s and early 1940s).
In 1992, a portion of the city was placed on the National Register of Historic Places as the Hyattsville Historic District; the district was extended in late 2004.
The city was involved in a minor controversy in April 2006. In the episode airing April 27, the Geena Davis television series Commander in Chief depicted Hyattsville as having the highest murder rate in the United States; it also indirectly depicted the town as being an urban ghetto dominated by poor minorities. The city and Prince George's County were very upset at ABC. On May 1, ABC formally apologized to both the city and county.
With over a billion dollars of ongoing construction, the City of Hyattsville is poised to become the up and coming place to live. Only 6 miles from downtown DC, inside the beltway. Check out hyattsville.wetpaint.com for more information about this great City and the community within it.
Hyattsville had a population of 17,557 in 2010.
Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyattsville,_Maryland
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 38°57'49"N 76°57'21"W
- Riverdale Park, Maryland 1.8 km
- Mount Rainier, Maryland 2 km
- Woodridge 3.1 km
- Brookland 4.3 km
- Chillum, Maryland 4.8 km
- Calverton, Maryland 12 km
- White Oak, Maryland 13 km
- Prince George's County, Maryland 21 km
- Crofton, Maryland 23 km
- Odenton, Maryland 25 km
- University Town Center 0.6 km
- The Mall at Prince Georges 0.6 km
- Belcrest Plaza Apartments 0.9 km
- Tower Plaza Apartments 0.9 km
- WTEM-AM 980 kHz 1.5 km
- University of Maryland University College 2.5 km
- Riggs Park 3.3 km
- University of Maryland Golf Course 3.5 km
- Langley Park, Maryland 3.8 km
- Adelphi, Maryland 4.4 km