The town was founded by
Swedish mariners and fishermen from
Fort Casimir who settled the area in 1694. They called their settlement
Head of Elk, as it was the
head of navigation of the
Elk River. The town saw several actions during the
American Revolutionary War. On August 25, 1777, Sir
William Howe's Anglo-German army (13,000 British soldiers and 5,000 Germans) landed on the Elk River and marched 11 miles north to Head of Elk. Howe soon advanced to the short and victorious campaign of the Brandywine, and thence to the
capture of Philadelphia. On March 8, 1781, the
Marquis de Lafayette embarked his troops there to attempt a capture of
Benedict Arnold. Returning on April 9, he began his overland march to Virginia.
George Washington and
Rochambeau with their combined forces stopped in Elkton on September 6–7, 1781, on their way to
Yorktown. In 1787, the town was incorporated as Elkton. By 1880, the population was 1,752. The landmark historic home,
Holly Hall, was built by
James Sewall in the 1810s and quickly became a regional seat for important dignitaries and local politics. When northern states began to pass more restrictive
marriage laws in the early 20th century, Maryland did not. As a result, a number of Maryland towns near borders with other states became known as places to get married quickly and without many restrictions, or "
Gretna Greens". Elkton, being the northeastern most county seat in Maryland (and thus closer to Philadelphia, New York, and New England), was particularly popular. It was a notorious Gretna Green for years; in its heyday, in the 1920s and 1930s, it was "the elopement capital of the East Coast" and thousands of marriages were performed there each year. While some of the marriages obtained in Elkton were of celebrities or celebrities-to-be (
Cornel Wilde,
Joan Fontaine,
Debbie Reynolds,
Martha Raye,
John and
Martha Mitchell,
Willie Mays, and
Pat Robertson all got married in Elkton), The year before the Maryland Legislature enacted a 48-hour waiting period, the marriage bureau in the town of about 3,300 people issued 16,054 licenses. That number slumped to 4,532 in 1939. Still, the marrying ministers found all sorts of loopholes that allowed the business to continue for decades. The waiting period could be lifted, for instance, if the "mother was expecting", or if a young man was preparing to go off to war. In 1942, Elkton had about 14,000 marriages. In time,
Las Vegas became the new "American Gretna Green", although hundreds of people still came to Elkton. But an era faded in the northeastern Maryland county seat when the last commercial wedding chapel closed in 2017. On December 8, 1963,
Pan Am Flight 214 was struck by
lightning and crashed near Elkton, taking 81 lives. The crash was listed in the 2005
Guinness World Records as the "Worst Lightning Strike Death Toll." A small memorial marks the site of the crash, the worst loss of life accident in Maryland. The Boeing 707 had gone down in a cornfield on the eastern edge of the town, and in 1994 a granite memorial was placed at Delancy Road and Wheelhouse Drive. Today the area is a housing development. ==Geography==