The Frederick County Guide Spring 2016 | Page 27

also created a community, with houses for his employees and an “English School” so that the children could receive a well-rounded education including French, English and German, writing, math and music. Certainly he added to the area’s population with trained craftspeople; by 1790 he reported that he was employing between 400 and 500 individuals. In 1790, however, weather conditions took their toll on the business. A strong wind caused the collapse of houses and nearby mills. His company also suffered from a devastating fire. High shipping costs and changing fashions were other contributors to the downward spiral, and the company closed in 1794, 10 years after it opened. While this is not a “rags to riches” story, Amelung’s pieces are revered for their unparalleled classical elegance. The cut wares made at the New Bremen Glass Manufactory are among the finest in this country. Examples of New Bremen glasswork are in the collections of the Smithsonian Institution, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Winterthur Museum and the Corning Museum of Glass. They can also be seen at the Historical Society of Frederick County in Downtown Frederick. + See examples of these and other local industries at the Historical Society’s Museum of Frederick County History, 24 E. Church St., Frederick. For more information call 301-663-1188, ext. 107. Top: The Amelung House and Glassworks is a historic structure located in Urbana in Frederick County. It is a two-story late-Georgian brick home on a stone foundation built about 1785. The property once had the New Bremen Glassworks built by Johann Friedrich Amelung. No above-ground evidence of the factory remains. The Amelung House and Glassworks was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973. Left, top and bottom: Fine examples of New Bremen glasswork may be seen at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Corning Museum of Glass, the Winterthur Museum, the Smithsonian Institution and the Historical Society of Frederick County. SPRING 2016 | FREDERICK COUNTY GUIDE 27