• 1838 - Finksburg becomes a part of the newly created Carroll County Maryland following an act of the 1837 Maryland Legislature from portions of Baltimore County and Frederick County. The County is named after the last surviving signer of the Declaration of Independence who died in 1836 Charles Carroll of Carollton. • 1849 – Edward Remington and the Patapsco Mining Company opened
cobalt mines near Finksburg • 1855 –
Western Maryland Railroad reached Finksburg • 1856 – A. L. Hoover was
postmaster of Finksburg, earning $63.60 for the year • 1858 – Cobalt mining was unprofitable and mines were closed for financial reasons • 1866 –
Baseball was the most popular sport, the "Star" of Finksburg was the local club (team) • 1873 – The Alpha Farmers' Club of Carroll County was established • 1881 – The Finksburg Literary Society organized lecturers for Friday night meetings at the Mechanics' Hall. Admission was 5 cents. • 1888 – L. A. J. Lamotte operated a business for
canning corn • 1913 - The
Western Maryland Railroad changes the name of their Finksburg station to "Asbestos" in respect for the nearby Baltimore Roofing and Asbestos Company, to the consternation of local residents. This led to the area by the station, a half mile from town, being called Asbestos, Maryland at least into the 1930s, over a decade after the asbestos plant closed. (This area is now called "Cedarhurst".) • 1935 – Sandymount Elementary School began as a three-room stone building consolidating the smaller one room schools of Reese, Bethel, and Sandymount Finksburg, Emory School house Patapsco School house and East View School house Deer Park • 2002 – Independent K-12 school Gerstell Academy opens
Timeline information generally taken from: Warner, Nancy, Ralph Levering and Margaret Taylor Woltz.
Carroll County Maryland: A History 1837–1976. Carroll County Bicentennial Committee, 1976.
Cold Saturday was listed on the
National Register of Historic Places in 2008. The
Taylor-Manning-Leppo House was listed in 2009. == References ==