Marker #12 Bank, Leslie Friend Store, Military Honors

Leslie Friend built the largest department store in the county in the 1890’s where the First United Bank now stands. Leslie also helped charter and build the First National Bank of Friendsville in 1902, now the Friend Family Association Heritage Museum (both buildings pictured above). Friendsville became a bustling hub for the farmers and families in the surrounding countryside and an important center of commerce.

Business was booming with the railroad bringing salesmen as well as merchandise for the local stores to sell. Barrels made at Kendall were shipped out and poles for mine supports were sent to the mines in Pennsylvania. Records show lumber and coal were shipped to WV, VA, PA, DE, NY and Ohio.

A train load of barrels made in Krug (Kendall) were used for storage of numerous commodities. A. Knapp and Company, Krug, Maryland

The department store was noted for its “stitch Gothic’ ornamentation and classic 19th century architecture. The store failed during the Great Depression and from 1930-1963 the building was partitioned and one side used as a Post Office. The building was eventually torn down around 1970. Ornamentation was saved and is on display at the Friend Family Association
Heritage Museum. Some ornamental parts of the store were used to build a new altar at the Methodist Church on Water Street.

Leslie Friend Department Store
Gothic Stitch Architecture
The gable ornamentation of the Lesle Friend Store can be seen at the Friend Family Association Heritage Museum and Genalogical Library
Leslie Friend Department Store (Post Office)

Military Honors
“For a small town, Friendsville has a long and impressive record of service to our country. Available records show five Revolutionary War veterans buried in the area, two from the War of 1812, 63 from the Civil War, 2 from the Spanish American War, 47 from WW I, 141 from WW II, 31 for the Korean War, 17 from Vietnam and 4 from the Iraq War. The VFW post 10077 places 375 flags on graves in the Friendsville area.”
Marilyn Moors

Friendsville Veterans Memorial Project
The U.S. suffered over 47,000 killed in action plus another 11,000 noncombat deaths; over 150,000 were wounded and 10,000 missing. Six of these were from Friendsville, Maryland. For the town with a population then of 650, it ranks as the highest causalty rate for the state of Maryland and the second in the nation.

This site and the memorial to be built in Friendsville is a tribute to these men whose life was cut short, the suffering of their friends and family, and the impact it made on America.

 

Maryland Vietnam Memorials
Links and information for additional Vietnam Memorials in Maryland and beyond.