For more than 40 years, Baltimore has had a prominent civic space that honors Theodore Roosevelt McKeldin, the former Baltimore mayor and Maryland governor who is credited with launching the effort to revitalize the Inner Harbor.
In 1982, city leaders dedicated McKeldin Square, a large fountain and public space that architect Thomas Todd designed for the intersection of Pratt and Light streets.ย A plaque on the site honors McKeldin as the man whose vision โinspired the redevelopment of the Inner Harbor.โ
In 2017, McKeldin Fountain was replaced by a public green space and the area was renamed McKeldin Plaza. Designed by Philadelphia landscape architect David Rubin, it contains several markers that bear the plazaโs name and information about McKeldin, who lived from 1900 to 1974.
The plazaโs largest feature is a semi-circular memorial with McKeldinโs name and the years he served as Mayor of Baltimore (1943 to 1947 and 1963 to 1967) and as Governor of Maryland (1951 to 1959).
One of the markers shows an aerial view of what the area looked like before the Harborplace pavilions were constructed, back when it was a working port. It also contains an excerpt from the 1963 speech McKeldin gave at the beginning of his second term as mayor, in which he called for the revitalization of the Inner Harbor:
โEnvision with meโฆa new Inner Harbor area, where the imagination of Man can take advantage of a rare gift of nature to produce an enthralling panorama of office buildings, parks, high-rise apartments, and marinas. In this, we have a very special opportunity, for few other cities in the world have been blessed, as has ours, with such a potentially beautiful harbor area within the very heart of downtownโฆToo visionary this?…Too dreamlike?…Certainly not.โ
Over the years, the space has been the setting for a wide range of gatherings, from victory rallies when the Orioles and Ravens made the playoffs to demonstrations and protests associated with the Occupy Baltimore encampment that was there between October and December of 2011. It is an officially-designated Free Speech Zone. Through it all, the space has continued to be city-owned, and the name of Theodore McKeldin has always been attached to it.
Part of the Harborplace footprint
McKeldin Plaza, about one acre in size, figures prominently in MCB Real Estateโs recently-unveiled plan to reimagine Harborplace as a $500 million mixed-use development. MCBโs plan calls for the land now known as McKeldin Plaza to become part of the footprint of an enlarged Harborplace redevelopment site, along with several lanes of traffic that separate the plaza from the 3.2-acre parcel now occupied by the two Harborplace pavilions that are targeted for demolition to make way for the new project. The total amount of land controlled by the developer in the projectโs expanded footprint would be 4.5 acres, up from 3.2 acres.
According to the MCB website that provides details about the plan โ ourharborplace.com — McKeldin Plaza will be redesigned as a landscaped public space providing access to four new buildings along the shoreline, rising in height from 10 to 32 stories.
This redesigned public space will include a retail pavilion, a 2000-seat amphitheater and areas for seating and gathering.ย According to the website, it will be called The Park at Freedomโs Port โ a nod to the areaโs history as one of the countryโs largest populations of free Black people before the Civil War. The designs by MCBโs landscape architect, Unknown Studio, show no trace of the semi-circular memorial to McKeldin that serves as a focal point for the plaza today.
Freedomโs Port
Freedomโs Port was the name of a community of Black residents who lived in Baltimore before the Civil War and who were mostly free. The community was located where Harborplace is now. Some of its members had previously been enslaved and migrated to Baltimore after they were freed by their enslavers. Others were โfree-bornโ Black people. Still others were runaways or โautonomous urban slaves.โ All were forging and defending their freedom in a state below the Mason-Dixon line.
In 1860, Baltimore had a Black population of about 27,000, considered the largest black urban population in the country, and many lived in Freedomโs Port. Author Christopher Phillips wrote about the community in his 1997 book, Freedomโs Port: The African American Community of Baltimore, 1790-1860. Itโs considered the first book-length study of an urban Black population in the antebellum Upper South.ย
MCB managing partner P. David Bramble said he learned about Freedomโs Port from his design team, which researched the siteโs history as part of its work. Bramble said in a community engagement meeting in September that he wasnโt aware that Americaโs largest freed slave population lived where Harborplace is now, and heโd like more people to know about that part of the areaโs history.
โI never learned that,โ he told the audience. โIโve lived in Baltimore my entire life and I never heard that before.โ
But what about McKeldin? How will the proposed redevelopment of Harborplace honor the memory of Theodore McKeldin and his role in rejuvenating Baltimoreโs Inner Harbor? Why does a private developer have a say in rebranding a public gathering space?
There are few examples of recent cases in which the city has agreed to remove memorials or monuments honoring historic figures, other than Mayor Catherine Pughโs 2017 decision to take down four city monuments associated with the Confederacy.
In this instance, the developer is seeking to expand its lease of city property so it can assume control of McKeldin Plaza and connect it to the land underneath Harborplace that it already controls, making it one large space. Unlike the case with Pugh and the Confederate statues, MCB’s goal is to increase the amount of public space uninterrupted by vehicular traffic.
And there is precedent of sorts: In 1970, the city moved noted sculptor Hans Schulerโs 1917 statue of Revolutionary War Major General Sam Smith from โSam Smith Parkโ at the corner of Pratt and Light streets, where it had been since 1953, to its current location atop Federal Hill, to make way for infrastructure work related to the Inner Harborโs renewal. It was the second move for the Sam Smith statue, which started out in Wyman Park Dell.ย ย
According to MCB, McKeldin Plaza will still be public parkland. But along with a long-term lease for the land, MCB is seeking authority to โprogramโ what happens on the land and to decide what the area will be called.
City officials say they support the plan to lease additional city land to MCB to support its project. Before it can take effect however, city voters must approve a City Charter amendment permitting the developer to lease additional city land, just as voters supported the Rouse Companyโs request to lease city land for the construction of Harborplace in a 1978 referendum. City Council legislation was recently introduced to authorize a public referendum on the matter in November of 2024.
Honoring McKeldin
Bramble said he fully intends to find another way to honor McKeldin in MCBโs redevelopment of Harborplace. He said he canโt point to specific plans yet, but he pledged to find a solution. He noted that McKeldinโs 1963 challenge to rejuvenate the Inner Harbor is featured on the ourharborplace.com website, and he said he believes MCBโs plans are consistent with McKeldinโs vision.
โWe have to come up with a way to honor him,โ he said after a Nov. 6 community meeting. โWeโre going to work with the family to figure that out. If you think about it, honestly, heโs the one who got the money in the first place to buy the land [for Harborplace]. We have to figure that out. We donโt have an answer yet, but we will absolutely figure that out.โย
Courtney McKeldin consulted
Courtney McKeldin, the daughter-in-law of Theodore McKeldin and a spokesperson for the McKeldin family, said she recently talked to Bramble about his plans to redevelop Harborplace and incorporate McKeldin Plaza.
A longtime public servant like her father-in-law, Courtney McKeldin was the first woman named to Baltimoreโs zoning board, and she served on the board for a record 21 years (1972 to 1982 and 2000 to 2014) before stepping down in 2014. She said she takes Bramble at his word when he says he will find a way to honor McKeldin.
โDavid Bramble assures me, in a phone conversation last week, that Mayor McKeldin was extremely important to the development of the Inner Harbor and he has no plans to remove the McKeldin name from the park he is proposing,โ she said in an email message.
โI am counting on him to keep his word so, for now, the McKeldin family is pleased that he recognizes that Governor/Mayor McKeldin first initiated transforming the harbor for the benefit of the residents of Baltimore and its environs and tourists alike,โ she added.
A โhumane, comfortableโ space
Claire Agre, a partner of Unknown Studio, said her firmโs design for The Park at Freedomโs Port calls for it to be less formal than the squares of Mount Vernon Place, or Preston Gardens.
โIt shouldnโt be a neo-Classical space,โ she said. โIt should be very humane, comfortable — a space where people can wander and linger.โ
Introducing more plantings and pathways will transform the plaza from the way it is today, she said.
โAdding topography, adding organic, curvilinear pathwaysโฆenlarges the experience of the park,โ she said. โIt actually physically enlarges the park, too, because the topography gives you literally more terrain and surface to explore, versus a flat plaza where you can see it all [at once]. Itโs both a kind of experiential and also real expansion of that site, making the most of the site. Lots of places for people to wander and linger and feel relaxed, versus a kind of civic plaza. โ
The Park at Freedomโs Port is also intended to offer a different experience than Rash Field Park or other green spaces along the waterโs edge, she said.
โWe always thought of The Park at Freedomโs Port as being kind of a quieter respite,โ she said. โYouโre at the busiest corner in town. Weโve just calmed that down. Weโve greened it up and now we have this surprising oasis right at the waterโs edge. So itโs not meant to be overprogrammed. It can host program, but itโs meant to be a green oasis right in downtown, with that connection to the waterfront.โ

In terms of programming, Agre said, MCBโs team is in the early stages of determining what visitors will learn about the areaโs history when they are in the park. She said itโs not envisioned to be part of the National Park system, but the designers want it to offer information about the areaโs history.
โThat will be an interpretive strategy, probably some combination of programming and signage.,โ she said. โBut weโre in vision plan right now, so all we know is we want a serene, flexible spaceโฆso that we can incorporate those programs. It shouldnโt be just a sign. It needs to be more than that. โ
It can also be a space for rallies and other events, she said.
โThe idea of increasing capacity for everyday use is simultaneous to the idea of increasing capacity for specific uses.โ
Shadow studies and a museum
Some residents have questioned how much the public space will be affected by shadows cast by the building known as 303 Light Street, with residential towers rising 32 and 25 stories. Agre said the team has done shadow studies and is comfortable that shadows from the towers wonโt adversely affect the redesigned open space.
โTheyโll get shade occasionally, in the late winter,โ she said. โIn the shoulder seasons, youโre getting plenty of sunlight. We did test the sun shade over the park, because that was a concern.โ
During the community meeting about the developersโ plans on Nov. 6, a resident asked whether MCB could save a part of the Harborplace pavilions for a museum, โone little sectionโ where โpeople could walk in and outโ and learn what was on the land from 1980 into the 2020s, and how it worked.
Bramble said he didnโt think it would be possible to keep any fragment of the pavilions in their current location. โPractically,โ he said, โthat would be very, very, very hard and super expensive.โ
But he didnโt rule out the idea of salvaging or re-creating part of the pavilions for reuse somewhere on the site to commemorate Harborplaceโs history.
The concept of a museum or interpretive center โisnโt a bad idea,โ he said. โItโs done sometimes with historic buildings. Youโll keep a piece of a historic building and build around it. This concept, as weโve outlined it, doesnโt really allow for that exactly. But that doesnโt mean we canโt come up with something, as weโre thinking about thisโฆItโs something we should think about.โ

Sounds like this local developer is continuing the give and take of dialog about the development of this important space. Having attended/ participated in 2 of the Public Engagement opportunities, I am both reassured and pleased by his continuing openess .