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Parts of the stable were built during the Civil War as a doctor’s office. Frank Deickman, Jr. bought the property from a Mr. Nathan Rice in 1950. At one point, the stable housed as many as 80 Arabber horses. It remained an Arabber stable until 1979, when Frank sold the stable to the H&S Bakery which tore down the building to expand their business.[1]

 

[1] Roland Freeman, The Arabbers of Baltimore, (Centreville: Tidewater Publishers, 1989), 61.

Dieckman Stables

Stable View Today

THIS A PLACE HOLDER FOR ROLAND FREEMAN's IMAGE.

Image taken by Sydney Jenkins.

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