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===19th century=== The town was originally incorporated in 1922 and is named after the Brentwood estate built in 1817 by [[Robert Brent]] in [[Northeast (Washington, D.C.)|Northeast Washington, D.C.]]<ref name="mml">{{Cite web |date=May 10, 2008 |title=Brentwood, Maryland History |url=http://www.mdmunicipal.org/cities/index.cfm?townname=Brentwood&page=home |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080928110801/http://www.mdmunicipal.org/cities/index.cfm?townname=Brentwood&page=home |archive-date=September 28, 2008 |access-date=May 14, 2009 |website=Brentwood, Maryland |publisher=Maryland Municipal League}}</ref> The town was developed beginning in the 1890s around the Highland Station of the Washington Branch of the [[Baltimore and Ohio Railroad]] and the [[Columbia and Maryland Railway]]. Brentwood was created by Wallace A. Bartlett, a [[American Civil War|Civil War]] veteran, former foreman for the [[United States Government Printing Office|Government Printing Office]], [[United States Patent and Trademark Office|Patent Office]] examiner, and inventor originally from [[Warsaw, New York]]. Captain Bartlett lived in [[Washington, D.C.]], until 1887, when he purchased {{convert|206|acre|km2}} of farmland from Benjamin Holliday, which abutted the Highland subdivision. Bartlett built a farmhouse for his family on the land and, with two partners J. Lee Adams and Samuel J. Mills, formed the Holladay Land and Improvement Company.<ref name="sha">{{Cite web |date=May 10, 2008 |title=Community Summary Sheet, Prince George's County |url=http://www.sha.maryland.gov/oppen/pg_co.pdf |website=Brentwood, Maryland |publisher=Maryland State Highway Administration, 1999}}</ref><ref>''The Neighborhoods of Prince George's County''. Upper Marlboro: Community Renewal Program, 1974.</ref><ref name="Denny">Denny, George D., Jr. ''Proud Past, Promising Future: Cities and Towns in Prince George's County''. Brentwood, Maryland: Tuxedo Press, 1997.</ref> Captain Bartlett died in 1908.<ref name="mml" /> In 1891, the Company platted a residential subdivision called "Holladay Company's Addition to Highland" on {{convert|80|acre|m2}} of the Bartlett Farm. The lots were approximately {{convert|40|ft|m}} by {{convert|100|ft|m}} and were arranged around an irregular grid of streets. The lots in the northern part of the subdivision, which eventually would become North Brentwood, were smaller and were subject to flooding from a [[mill race]]. These lots were less expensive, and Bartlett encouraged their purchase by African-American families with whom he was indirectly associated from his command of [[U.S. Colored Troops]] in the Civil War. The more expensive lots to the south were purchased by white working-class families, many of whom were employed as federal government clerks. Seven additional houses were built by 1896. In 1899 Bartlett purchased the Fenwick family farm which was located to the west of the Holladay Company's Addition to Highland. With two new partners, J. Baker and Dr. Sigmund A. Czarra, Bartlett began the Brentwood Company. The {{convert|95|acre|m2|adj=on}} area was surveyed and platted in 1899.<ref name="Pearl">Pearl, Susan G. Historical Survey: Brentwood, Maryland. Upper Marlboro: M-NCPPC, 1992.</ref> The Holladay Addition homes represented a typical cross-section of housing styles popular in the late-19th century, including I-houses, vernacular houses with Queen Anne detailing, four-squares, and front-gable houses.<ref name="Pearl" />
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