The Leisure Travel Guide for Parks and Recreation Areas.


Notice: Use of undefined constant DB_DATABASE - assumed 'DB_DATABASE' in /web/httpd/pac/prod/web/includes/php/globals.php on line 18

Notice: Use of undefined constant DB_DATABASE - assumed 'DB_DATABASE' in /web/httpd/pac/prod/web/includes/php/globals.php on line 19
Already a Member?  Sign-in  |  Not a Member?  Register Now

Maryland Parks and Recreation Areas

You're Here: Home Park Guide Worldwide Parks and Recreation Areas USA Parks and Recreation Areas Maryland Parks and Recreation Areas

There are 17 parks and recreation areas in this area.
Pages: 1 2 

Fort Washington - Fort Washington

Picturesque Fort Washington sits on high ground overlooking the Potomac River and offers a grand view of Washington and the Virginia shoreline. Today, only one silent gun stands behind the masonry wall-the last armament of the powerful fort that once guarded the water approach to our Nation's Capital. The old fort is one of the few U.S. seacoast fortifications still in its original form.

Phone: (301)763-4600   Price Range: $3 - $5   Open Season: N/A   Camping: No
Nearest Popular City: Fort Washington   Nearest Lake or River: N/A   Park Type: State Park   Activities: Biking / Bicycling, Birding, Fishing, Hiking, Wildlife Watching, Nature Walks, Interpretive Programs   Details Provided By: Fort Washington

Monocacy National Battlefield - Frederick

The battle of Monocacy on July 9, 1864 between 18,000 Confederate forces under General Jubal Early, and 5,800 Union forces under General Lew Wallace, marked the last campaign of the Confederacy to carry the war into the north. One of the objectives of this campaign was to capture Washington, D.C.

Phone: (301) 662-3515   Price Range: N/A   Open Season: N/A   Camping: No
Nearest Popular City: Frederick   Nearest Lake or River: N/A   Park Type: National Historic Site   Activities: Biking / Bicycling, Birding, Cross Country Skiing, Hiking, Auto Touring, Nature Walks, Interpretive Programs   Details Provided By: Monocacy National Battlefield

Oxon Cove Park & Oxon Hill Farm - Oxon Hill

The primary feature of Oxon Cove Park is Oxon Hill Farm which operates as an actual working farm, representative of the early 20th century. You can see a farm house, barns, a stable, feed building, livestock buildings and a visitor activity barn.

Phone: 301-839-1176   Price Range: N/A   Open Season: N/A   Camping: No
Nearest Popular City: Oxon Hill   Nearest Lake or River: N/A   Park Type: State Park   Activities: Biking / Bicycling, Hiking   Details Provided By: Oxon Cove Park & Oxon Hill Farm

Chesapeake Bay Gateways Network - Annapolis

First thoughts of the Chesapeake Bay often bring up images of crabs and oysters. But, as the largest estuary in North America, the Chesapeake Bay has touched and influenced much of the American story, early settlement, commerce, the military, transportation, recreation and more. The Bay and its surrounding 64,000 square mile watershed hold a treasure trove of historic areas, natural wonders and recreational opportunities.

Phone: 1-888-BAYWAYS   Price Range: N/A   Open Season: N/A   Camping: Yes
Nearest Popular City: Annapolis   Nearest Lake or River: N/A   Park Type: State Park   Activities: Backpacking, Biking / Bicycling, Birding, Boating and Watercraft, Fishing, Hiking, Hunting and Shooting, Kayaking, Swimming, Wildlife Watching, Auto Touring, Nature Walks, Interpretive Programs   Details Provided By: Chesapeake Bay Gateways Network

Piscataway Park - Fort Washington

The tranquil view from Mount Vernon of the Maryland shore of the Potomac is preserved as a pilot project in the use of easements to protect parklands from obtrusive urban expansion. The project began in 1952 to preserve the river view as in was during George Washington's day. Piscataway Park stretches for 6 miles from Piscataway Creek to Marshall Hall on the Potomac River.

Phone: (301) 763-4600   Price Range: $2 - $5   Open Season: N/A   Camping: No
Nearest Popular City: Fort Washington   Nearest Lake or River: N/A   Park Type: State Park   Activities: Birding, Fishing, Hiking, Wildlife Watching   Details Provided By: Piscataway Park

Fort Foote - Fort Washington

Eight miles downriver from the capital, Fort Foote was considered a powerful peace of work by its chief engineer. The long oval earthwork was constructed on Rozier's Bluff from 1863 to 1865 to strengthen the ring of fortifications that encircled Washington, D.C., during the Civil War.

Phone: 301-763-4600   Price Range: N/A   Open Season: N/A   Camping: No
Nearest Popular City: Fort Washington   Nearest Lake or River: N/A   Park Type: State Park   Activities:   Details Provided By: Fort Foote

Assateague Island - Berlin

Bands of wild horses freely roam amongst plants and native animals that have adapted to a life of sand, salt and wind. Special thickened leaves and odd shapes reveal the plant worlds successful struggle here. Ghost crabs buried in the cool beach sand and tree swallows plucking bayberries on their southward migration offer glimpses of the animal worlds connection to Assateague.

Phone: 410-641-1441   Price Range: $3 - $10   Open Season: N/A   Camping: Yes
Nearest Popular City: Berlin   Nearest Lake or River: N/A   Park Type: National Park   Activities: Biking / Bicycling, Birding, Boating and Watercraft, Fishing, Hiking, Horseback Riding, Hunting and Shooting, Kayaking, Swimming, Wildlife Watching, Nature Walks, Interpretive Programs, Star Gazing   Details Provided By: Assateague Island

Baltimore Washington Parkway - Greenbelt

Opened in 1954, the parkway is a 29-mile scenic highway that connects Baltimore, Maryland with Washington, D.C. The part of the parkway from Washington, D.C. to Fort Meade,Maryland is managed by the National Park Service.

Phone: 301-344-3948   Price Range: N/A   Open Season: N/A   Camping: No
Nearest Popular City: Greenbelt   Nearest Lake or River: N/A   Park Type: State Park   Activities:   Details Provided By: Baltimore Washington Parkway

Chesepeake and Ohio Canal - Hagerstown

The C&O Canal follows the route of the Potomac River for 184.5 miles from Washington, D.C. to Cumberland, MD. The canal operated from 1828-1924 as a transportation route, primarily hauling coal from western Maryland to the port of Georgetown in Washington, D.C. Hundreds of original structures, including locks, lockhouses, and aqueducts, serve as reminders of the canal's role as a transportation system during the Canal Era.

Phone: 301-739-4200   Price Range: $3 - $5   Open Season: N/A   Camping: Yes
Nearest Popular City: Hagerstown   Nearest Lake or River: N/A   Park Type: National Park   Activities: Backpacking, Biking / Bicycling, Birding, Boating and Watercraft, Cross Country Skiing, Fishing, Hiking, Horseback Riding, Kayaking, Rock Climbing, Wildlife Watching, Nature Walks, Interpretive Programs   Details Provided By: Chesepeake and Ohio Canal

Antietam - Sharpsburg

Established by Act of Congress on August 30, 1890, this Civil War site marks the end of General Robert E. Lee's first invasion of the North in September 1862. The battle claimed more than 23,000 men killed, wounded, and missing in one single day, September 17,1862, and led to Lincoln's issuance of the Emancipation Proclamation.

Phone: 301-432-5124   Price Range: $4 - $6   Open Season: N/A   Camping: Yes
Nearest Popular City: Sharpsburg   Nearest Lake or River: N/A   Park Type: National Historic Site   Activities: Biking / Bicycling, Fishing, Hiking, Wildlife Watching, Auto Touring   Details Provided By: Antietam

There are 17 parks and recreation areas in this area.
Pages: 1 2