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Early 'Doers'
Impressive Women
Social Organizations
Childhood Recollections
On the Stage and Field
Outdoor Pastimes
Life on the Farm
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Old Sandy Spring
Where History Happened
Crossroads Communities
Time Line
About Our Museum
Elizabeth Ellicott Lea
Enoch George Howard
Allen Bowie Davis
Edward Stabler
Thomas Moore
Phillip Evan Thomas
Caroline Hallowell Miller
Mary Bentley Thomas

Early 'Doers':  Enoch George Howard

Born a slave, Enoch George Howard (1814-95) purchased his freedom from the Griffith family of Unity in 1851, then bought freedom for his wife Harriett Ann Lee and their four children, price 25 cents each. In 1862 he purchased the Gaither farm and later two more, acquiring a total of 900 acres to become the county's largest black landowner. With no black schools in the county and education sorely needed, Howard acted. Wrote great-grandson Harold Howard, "in 1867 he petitioned the Montgomery County Government for a school to educate black students, posting collateral and a parcel of land for the school, which opened around 1880." Descendants included educators, journalists, and magistrates and leave their name in Howard Chapel Road near Unity.