The Johns Hopkins University 33rd Street is bisected by The Johns Hopkins University
"Homewood" campus. a notable institution of American higher education, considered to be the first modern university in the country. Founded 1876, Hopkins is particularly renowned for its student research program and
The Johns Hopkins Hospital, a teaching hospital founded 1889 and School of Medicine, established 1893, in East Baltimore, both affiliated with the university. Johns Hopkins also occupies the building further east along 33rd Street, at Loch Raven Boulevard, formerly used by all-girls
Eastern High School, founded 1844 until closed in 1986: a large, H-shaped,
red brick,
English Tudor Revival/Jacobethan styled building with
limestone trim, constructed 1936–1938, matching a similar twin structure for the also still all-female
Western High School on the westside on Gwynns Falls Parkway, built a decade earlier.
The Baltimore City College On the south side of 33rd street, between
Loch Raven Boulevard and The Alameda, is
The Baltimore City College. It is a formerly all-boys, but now coeducational (since 1979)
magnet public high school, the third oldest public secondary school in America (founded 1839 on former Courtland Street in downtown
Baltimore, and eventually relocated to the 33rd Street building, its eighth location, nicknamed "The Castle on the Hill" in 1928). City College is a massive stone structure, with a 150-foot bell tower in the
Collegiate Gothic Revival style architecture. A historic and architectural landmark and the capstone of the
Baltimore City Public Schools system, the City College boasts many famous successful
alumni and distinguished faculty. The academic campus on "Collegian Hill" replaced '''"Abbottston'"'' in 1926–1928, the 1870s
Victorian-era mansion and hilltop estate of
Horace Abbott (1806-1887), the
Canton waterfront iron works/foundry owner from the
American Civil War era of 1861–1865. When later inherited by his married daughter after his death, the mansion was known as the Gilman-Cate estate. The well known foundry which supplied material for the revolutionary new
ironclad warships of the
Union Navy, was located at Boston and Hudson Streets.
Lake Montebello 33rd Street ends at Hillen Road and Lake Montebello, an oval artificial retention pond with a surrounding decorative iron-bar fence that is part of the Baltimore City and surrounding
Baltimore County and
Anne Arundel County metropolitan public water system. The lake is fed by underground conduits from
Loch Raven Reservoir, several miles north and the adjacent Montebello Water Filtration Plant, of Italianate style in dark red brick and green tile roofs built 1913. == Former Landmarks ==