thumb|right|300px|The [[Inner Harbor viewed from the Baltimore Aquarium]]

thumb|right|300px|Liberty Reservoir

thumb|right|Volunteers at a community cleanup of Herbert Run, a tributary of the Patapsco River running through [[Arbutus, Maryland]]

The Patapsco River ( ) mainstem is a river in central Maryland that flows into Chesapeake Bay. The river's tidal portion forms the harbor for the city of Baltimore. With its South Branch, the Patapsco forms the northern border of Howard County, Maryland. The name "Patapsco" is derived from the Algonquian pota-psk-ut, which translates to "backwater" or "tide covered with froth".

History

Captain John Smith was the first European to explore the river, noting it on his 1612 map as the Bolus River. The "Red river", named after the clay color, is considered the "old Bolus", as other branches were also labeled Bolus on maps.

The origin of the indigenous-derived modern name is unclear. The name first appears in land records from the 1650s, and is additionally labeled in a map of George Alsop created in 1660. Modern etymological research suggests that the name originates from Algonquian-speaking peoples as "pota-psk-ut", meaning "at the jutting ledge of rock" or "at the rocky point or corner." This was thus a reference to a location near the river, which settlers adapted for the river itself. This location is surmised to be the White Rocks, an outcropping of rocks opposite to where Rock Creek feeds into the Patapsco at Pasadena.

As the river was not navigable beyond Elkridge, it was not a significant path of commerce; in 1723, only one ship was listed as serving the northern branch, and four others operating around the mouth.

The first land record regarding Parr's Springs, the source of the South Branch, dates from 1744, when John Parr laid out a tract he called Parr's Range. During the Civil War, Parr's Spring was a stop for the Army of the Potomac's Brig. Gen. David M. Gregg's cavalry, on 29 June 1863, while en route to Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Parr's Spring was dug to form a pond in the 1950s, filled by seven spring heads that form the headwaters of the South Branch of the Patapsco River.

Beginning in the 1770s, the Patapsco River became the center of Maryland industrialization. Milling and manufacturing operations abounded along the river throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, generally powered by small dams. The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad's original main line was constructed in 1829 west along the Patapsco Valley; the nation's first railroad, the route remains, though much altered. Many railroad bridges were built in the valley, including the Thomas Viaduct, which is still in use, and the Patterson Viaduct, now in ruins. The 1907 hydropower Bloede's Dam powered flour mills.

An 1868 flood washed away 14 houses and killed 39 people around Ellicott City. A 1923 flood topped bridges. In 1952, an wall of water swept the shops of Ellicott City. A 1956 flood severely damaged the Bartigis Brothers plant. In 1972, rainfall from the remnants of Hurricane Agnes damaged Ellicott City and the Old Main Line. Two died in the July 2016 Maryland flood that ravaged Main Street in Ellicott City, followed two years later by a May 2018 Maryland flood that took the life of a rescuer.

The mouth of the Patapsco River forms Baltimore Harbor, the site of the Battle of Baltimore during the War of 1812. This is where Francis Scott Key, aboard the British , wrote "The Star-Spangled Banner", a poem later set to music as the national anthem of the United States. Today, a red, white, and blue buoy marks where the ship was anchored.

Bloede's Dam, a hydroelectric dam built in 1906, was on the Patapsco River within Patapsco Valley State Park, a nearly complete barrier to anadromous fish passage. Although a fish ladder was installed in 1992, it blocked five of six native fish species trying to run upstream to spawn. Efforts to remove Bloede's Dam began in the 1980s when nine drowning deaths occurred, and also to restore fish passage to a large portion of the Patapsco River watershed. Dam demolition began on 12 September 2018, opening the fishery and creating a rocky rapid for kayaking. Two dams upstream of Bloede's Dam, Simkins and Union, were removed in 2010. The removal of Bloede's Dam leaves Daniels Dam, upstream, as the last remaining dam along the mainstem Patapsco River.

Course

The

The Patapsco River mainstem begins at the confluence of the North and South Branches, near Marriottsville, about west of downtown Baltimore. Through most of its length, the Patapsco is a minor river flowing mostly through a narrow valley. Patapsco Valley State Park extends along of the Patapsco and its branches, encompassing in five areas. The river cuts a gorge 100 to 200 feet (35–70 m) deep within the park, with rocky cliffs and tributary waterfalls.

The last , form a large tidal estuary inlet of Chesapeake Bay. Two lobes of the harbor deviate from the "mainstem" harbor: the Middle Branch Patapsco River, into which the Gwynns Falls flows; and the Northwest Branch Patapsco River, into which the Jones Falls flows. The inner part of this estuary provides the harbor of Baltimore. Thoms Cove is further down the main harbor. The Patapsco estuary is south of the Back River and north of the Magothy River.

Tributaries

The Patapsco has a watershed (including the water surface) of . The Piney Run Reservoir on the South Branch of the Patapsco is polluted by excess levels of phosphorus and sediment.

Environmental nonprofit organizations, such as The Friends of Patapsco Valley & Heritage Greenway, Inc. (PHG), lead clean-up efforts by the residents of surrounding communities. From 2006 to 2012, PHG volunteers participated in 183 stream clean-ups, removing 264 tons of trash from the streams of the Patapsco Valley watershed.

Recreation

Recreational swimming is possible in areas of the Patapsco River, sometimes involving rope swings, inner tubing, and wading. The river also serves as a venue for rafting.

The Patapsco is also great for fishing. The MD DNR stocks parts of Patapsco State Park in the early spring and offers some pretty decent trout fishing. The Northern Snakehead has also made the Patapsco their home. They can be found from historic Ellicott City to the harbor.

Crossings

This is a list of all crossings of the main stem of the Patapsco River, as well as its two downstream short branches, the Middle Branch and Northwest Branch. Listings start downstream and continue upstream to the sources of the rivers.

{| class=wikitable

!Image

! Crossing

! Carries

! Location

!Opened

!Notes

|-

! colspan="6" |Anne Arundel County – Baltimore County

|- style="background-color: #d3d3d2;"

|200x200px|alt=

|Francis Scott Key Bridge

|

|Baltimore

|1977–2024

|Collapsed after being struck by a container ship on 26 March 2024

|-

|200x200px|alt=

|Baltimore Harbor Tunnel

|

|Baltimore

|1957

|$4.00 toll

|-

|200x200px|alt=

|Fort McHenry Tunnel

|

|Baltimore

|1985

|Crosses Northwest Branch only; $4.00 toll

|-

| rowspan="4" |alt=|200x200px

|Hanover Bridge

|

|Baltimore

|

|Crosses Middle Branch only

|-

|Spring Garden Swing Bridge

|Western Maryland Railway

|Baltimore

|1904

|Crosses Middle Branch only

|-

|Ridgleys Cove interchange

|

|Baltimore

|

|Crosses Middle Branch only

|-

|Light rail bridge

|Baltimore Light RailLink

|Baltimore

|

|Crosses Middle Branch only

|-

|

|Hanover and Potee Street Bridges

|

|Baltimore

|1973

|Hanover Street Bridge reconstructed in 2005

|-

|

|Curtis Bay Branch Railroad bridge

|B&O Curtis Bay Branch

|Baltimore

|

|

|-

|

|Patapsco Avenue bridge

|Patapsco Avenue

|Brooklyn, Baltimore

|1961

|

|-

|

|I-895 bridge near South West Area Park

|

|Baltimore Highlands

|1958

|Refurbished in 2019

|-

|

|Central Light Rail bridge

|Baltimore Light Rail

|Baltimore Highlands

|1908

|Previously used for the Baltimore and Annapolis Railroad

|-

|

|Old Annapolis Road bridge

|

|Baltimore Highlands

|

|

|-

|

|BW Parkway bridge

|

|Baltimore Highlands

|1948

|Refurbished in 1985

|-

|

|Hammonds Ferry Road bridge

|Hammonds Ferry Road

|Linthicum<br />Lansdowne

|1961

|

|-

|

|Baltimore Beltway bridge

|

|Linthicum<br />Lansdowne

|1958

|Refurbished in 1982

|-

|

|Northeast Corridor bridge

|Amtrak Northeast Corridor

|Linthicum<br />Halethorpe

|

|

|-

|

|I-195 bridge

|

|Elkridge<br />Halethorpe

|1988

|

|-

! colspan="6" |Howard County – Baltimore County

|-

|

|I-895 bridge

|

|Elkridge<br />Relay

|1973

|On/off ramp bridges flank US 1 bridge to north and south

|-

|

|Patapsco River Bridge

|

|Elkridge<br />Relay

|1915

|Concrete arch bridge refurbished in 1952

|-

|alt=|200x200px

|Thomas Viaduct

|B&O Capital Subdivision

|Elkridge<br />Relay

|1835

|World's largest multiple arched bridge. Named after Philip E. Thomas.

|-

|

|I-95 bridge

|

|Elkridge<br />Relay

|1968

|

|-

|

|Gun Road bridge

|Gun Road

|Relay

|

|Patapsco Valley State Park access only

|-

|alt=|199x199px

|Patapsco Swinging Bridge

|Swinging Bridge Trail

|Ilchester

|2006

|Pedestrian bridge connecting River Road to Grist Mill Trail

|-

|alt=|199x199px

|Patterson Viaduct

|Grist Mill Trail

|Ilchester

|2006

|Former rail bridge opened 1829, destroyed 1868, and rebuilt 1869; new footbridge built on abutments of prior rail bridge

|-

|alt=|200x200px

|Ilchester Bridge

|Old Main Line Subdivision

|Ilchester

|1903

|

|-

|alt=|199x199px

|Ilchester Road bridge

|Ilchester Road

|Ilchester

|

|Known as Heartbeat Bridge in local folklore.

|-

|alt=|200x200px

|Main Street Bridge

|

|Ellicott City<br />Oella

|1914

|

|-

|

|Baltimore National Pike Bridge

|

|Ellicott City<br />Catonsville

|1936

|Reconstructed using original arches in 2014

|-

|

|I-70 bridge

|

|Ellicott City<br />Catonsville

|1966

|

|-

|

|Hollifield Bridge

|Old Frederick Road

|Daniels

|1934

|

|-

|200x200px

|Daniels bridge

|Old Main Line Subdivision

|Daniels

|

|

|-

|

|Eureka bridge

|Old Main Line Subdivision

|Mt. Airy

|

|

|-

|

|MD 125 bridge

|

|Woodstock

|1981

|

|-

! colspan="6" |Patapsco River North Branch-South Branch confluence

|-

|}

See also

  • Patapsco Vallis, a valley on Mars named after the river in Maryland
  • Bloede's Dam
  • List of Maryland rivers
  • List of parks in the Baltimore–Washington metropolitan area
  • Liberty Reservoir

References

  • Chesapeake Bay Program Watershed Profile: Patapsco/Back River
  • Patapsco Valley State Park
  • Maryland DNR's Surf Your Watershed : Patapsco/Back River
  • American Rivers, a nonprofit conservation organization
  • Maryland Port Administration
  • Blue Water Baltimore, formed in 2010 from a merger of the Gwynns Falls, Jones Falls, Herring Run, and Baltimore Harbor Watershed associations, and the Baltimore Harbor Waterkeeper
  • Patapsco Heritage Greenway
  • Patapsco River Rock Building