Category Archives: Calvert County
Chesapeake Beach Railway Trail Opens
Good news out of Chesapeake Beach. The latest segment of the rail trail, for which citizen activist/Councilman/Mayor Bruce Wahl tirelessly advocated since 1989, is now open. We focused on this project when it finally broke ground last September and now we are happy to show how beautifully it has turned out.
Although the official ribbon cutting will not occur until later this summer, an elated Mayor Wahl made the announcement at Town Council, and the good folks of Chesapeake Beach lost no time getting some exercise and enjoyment with this new recreation facility.
Calvert Takes the Plunge !
Terry will be journeying to Prince Frederick tomorrow to participate in the official opening of a long-awaited, greatly anticipated, $20 million indoor aquatic center.
The multi purpose facility will accommodate the four Calvert County high school swim teams with its regulation 50 meter pool, diving area, spectator seating and scoreboard.
The 41,000-square-foot structure features a recreational pool designed for children, a therapy pool for exercising, and nine-person hot tub. The center also includes two conference rooms that will be available for community use and water safety training.
Don’t expect Terry to be among the first to plunge. He isn’t packing his Speedo, just his ceremonial scissors for a ribbon he is very eager to see cut. Maryland needs more natatoriums for the burgeoning interest in competitive swimming, and Calvert’s new addition looks like a beaut.
Hooray!! Another Rail Trail for Maryland
Whenever I get discouraged about how long the South Shore Trail has taken to reach even the engineering stage, I talk with someone like Beth Strommen, who reminds me that Baltimore’s Gwynns Falls Trail was fourteen years in the making. But this heartening story tops even that example of tenacity.
In Chesapeake Beach, just over the Anne Arundel County line, citizen activist, city council member and now Mayor Bruce Wahl has been working since 1989 — that’s right, twenty years — to build an all purpose recreational trail on the abandoned rightaway of the railroad that connected the resort community with Washington DC many years ago. He’s had to deal with budget cuts, easements, environmental issues and myriad governments (including the feds, and we know how that can go) to bring this dream to fruition.
This month, the Chesapeake Beach Railway Trail received its final approval and is going out to bid. Construction will begin later this fall on the segment that connects several residential neighborhoods with downtown.
The rail trails of Maryland are among the most appealing in the country. This winding path around the bayfront town will be a community enhancement, visitor attraction and one more recreation asset for our state.
Congratulations to Mayor Wahl for seeing this part through. Here’s hoping his vision will extend to Anne Arundel County some day.


