Baltimore: Admiral Fell Inn (August 1997)


My spouse and I stayed at the Admiral Fell Inn for one night in early August 1997.

Situated on Baltimore's historic waterfront in the heart of Fell's Point, the Admiral Fell Inn is a boutique hotel offering timeless charm and modern amenities. This historic landmark is found in a location convenient to all of Baltimore’s major attractions. Fell’s Point itself is worth a trip, with its charming shops, boutiques, galleries, pubs, and restaurants. The lively and colorful district, founded in 1726 as the oldest waterfront community in Baltimore, is known for its old world charm and retains the feel of a European village with brick sidewalks and Belgian block streets. The Inn is also near Johns Hopkins Hospital and Johns Hopkins University and just steps from Baltimore's best dining, entertainment, and nightlife.

Comprised of seven adjoining buildings, some of which date to the 18th century, the Admiral Fell Inn retains its quaint charm and cozy ambiance yet offers modern amenities and the elegance of a luxury hotel. The architectural roots of this newly renovated and expanded 80-room Inn date back to the late 1770s. Today, comfortable guest rooms are furnished with custom-crafted Federal-style furnishings.

Over the years, the historic Maryland hotel has served as a ship chandlery, a theater, a boarding house for sailors and later, and in 1929 was converted into the Seaman’s YMCA.

Historic Fell's Point is Baltimore's original deep-water seaport. The neighborhood takes its name from the Fell family, early settlers who emigrated from Lancaster, England. Hence the neighborhood's quaint British street names such as Thames, Lancaster, Shakespeare, and Fleet.

In the 18th and 19th centuries, shipyards dotted the waterfront neighborhood. Full-rigged ships carried Maryland grain and tobacco to the West Indies and Europe, returning with exotic imports. Throughout its history, Fell's Point has been a port of entry and a home for immigrants arriving on ships from Europe, Eastern Europe, and Scandinavia. Although it was incorporated into Baltimore Town in 1773, Fell's Point has always maintained its unique character and independence.

By 1900, the bustling port of Fell’s Point was a rough waterfront neighborhood filled with warehouses, saloons, and brothels. The central building of what is now the landmark Admiral Fell Inn was opened on December 3, 1900. The property, then known as The Anchorage, was built by the Port Mission Women's Auxiliary as a place "to maintain under Christian influence a boarding house for seamen, a home away from home, a social and recreational center where the seafarer might find a safe refuge while in port." Guests had to be deloused in order to stay. That was still preferable being shanghaied; the building was a safe haven for merchant seamen who were grateful to stay in one of the inn's 28 rooms.

The Port Mission encouraged seamen to join a church and stay in the safe boarding house, which first started in a smaller location and then moved to the corner of South Broadway and Thames Street to accommodate more sailors. As more space was needed, the buildings beside The Anchorage were connected to it. Continuing in this tradition, the YMCA ran the facility as a Seamen's Branch from 1929 to 1955. After that followed a series of tenants and periods of vacancy during which time the buildings fell into disrepair. The most recent tenant, a vinegar factory, closed in the mid-1970s.

In 1985, after a total renovation, the original Anchorage buildings were reopened as the Admiral Fell Inn, a bed-and-breakfast with 38 rooms. In 1996, the waterfront inn finished an expansion into adjoining buildings for a total of 80 rooms and a new rooftop meeting and banquet facility. The inn's respect for the building's original architecture, historic integrity, and ambience earned its charter membership with the National Trust for Historic Preservation's Historic Hotels of America program. Today, Federal period furnishings in the bedchambers and throughout the Maryland hotel's public areas reflect Fell's Point's past. Each sleeping room is unique in shape and design and is named for an individual who contributed to Baltimore's rich history.

A pet-friendly hotel, the Admiral Fell Inn features 80 guestrooms and suites, each uniquely furnished and decorated in traditional European style, and all offering a myriad of comforts to ensure a cozy stay. Each of these Baltimore accommodations afford views of the lovely courtyard, tugboats in the harbor, and the quiet elegance of Shakespeare Street. The hotel offers three dinign options; Tavern at the Admiral, Tapas Adela, and Anastasia.