Cecil County once had many thriving villages, most with a cluster of homes, a few shopkeepers and tradesmen, a schoolhouse, a physician, and almost everything one needed for daily life. While most of these places continued into the 21st century as residential communities, they no longer bustle with enterprising activity the way they did in the past.
Pleasant Hill, one of those villages, got its name because it was situated on top of a hill, 392 feet above sea level in the county’s northeastern corner.
Growth for the hamlet came about slowly. When M. G. Scarborough bought a tract of land from Charles Morrison to erect a small store, there were only three or four houses and a little old schoolhouse. He was doing this “with the expectations of catching a few pennies from the school children,” the Cecil Whig joked. Around 1887 he gave a half-acre to the Free Methodist Church.
By 1897, “The Hill” was fast, assuming the appearance of an ordinary country town the Cecil Whig observed. With things booming, everyone stayed busy throughout the day while “in the evening (country fashion) [they] gather at the store to discuss the happenings. Matt, “the pioneer store-keeper,” was doing a thriving business, adding stock daily.
But Henry Henderson, having opened a new store at the upper crossroads, provided competition. He was “within hollering distance of Matt’s location, where he will compete for the millions that circulate around the neighborhood.” Matt had erected a new porch in front of his store to show his stock of goods.
The 125 people calling “the Hill” home had daily stage connections to Elkton and Blake in 1902. Tradesmen included a painter, papermaker, two general stores, carpenter, stonemason, bookmaker, wagonmaker, shoemaker, and millwright,
A post office opened here on May 23, 1891, and Robert W. Scarborough was the postmaster. After it closed on Aug 15, 1908, mail was sent to Childs.
A thriving hamlet needs a school, and Pleasant Hill had one prior to the Civil War. In 1888 the Board of Education built a new schoolhouse for young scholars residing in the area. This new center of learning was built in October of that year by Matthew G. Scarborough for $739. After the school closed on May 29, 1958, it was sold to the Rev. Robert Hall for $2,600, who established the Gospel Tabernacle in the building once alterations were done.
During the Great Depression, a force of men from the relief rolls erected a fire observation tower at the edge of Pleasant Hill on an adjacent hilltop called Egg Hill. The fire tower operated by the Maryland Forestry Department enabled the lookout on duty to check for developing forest fires in the northeastern quadrant of Cecil County.
Today the crossroads that come together on this Cecil County hilltop bustle with traffic. At one of these busy intersections, the popular Pleasant Hill Store buzzes with activity as customers stop by this country store.
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