http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bal-groundrent-history,0,1566335.story?coll=bal-local-headlines
From the Baltimore Sun
A history of Maryland ground rents
Sun Reporter
December 10, 2006
Ground rent -- Maryland's arcane system in which thousands of
homeowners lease the land under their houses -- is as much a part of
Baltimore's history as crabs.
The system dates to 1632, when King Charles I of England gave Cecilius
Calvert -- otherwise known as the second Lord Baltimore -- all the land
in what is now Maryland.
Calvert collected rents from the colonists who built on his land, and
he also paid rents to the king each Easter at Windsor Castle. He
promised King Charles I two American Indian arrowheads and a fifth of
any gold and silver found in the colony, though no gold and silver were
ever found.
Shortly after the American Revolution, Maryland's legislature spread
the wealth, empowering any landholder to demand rent. Some took cash,
others trade.
In Fells Point, for instance, precursors to ground rents were paid in
tobacco. One owner accepted a single red rose, in keeping with the
flower's history of tribute.
Ground rents played a pivotal role as Baltimore grew into an industrial
powerhouse in the early 20th century, spurring development of miles of
affordable red-brick and white-marble-stepped rowhouses.
Developers knew that working-class families could more easily afford to
buy a home if they didn't need to pay for the land. So they leased
these families the ground at minimal cost and drew on the rent payments
to boost their profits and help build even more new blocks of homes.
As the city's housing needs grew, particularly with returning GIs after
World War II, the ground rent system seemed to serve everyone's
interests. Developers and investors pointed to ground rent as a key
enabler of affordable housing in the city.
There have been critics along the way, however.
"It is customary in Baltimore to wag our heads complacently over the
ground rent system," begins a nonbylined column written by "our social
trends correspondent" in the March 18, 1941, edition of The Evening Sun.
The writer goes on to accuse developers of "profiteering" by buying
cheap parcels of land and boosting the value more than 1,000 percent
overnight simply by creating ground rents. At that time, ground rents
were valued by dividing the annual fee by six and multiplying by 100. A
$60 ground rent, for example, was worth $1,000.
Also, the writer said, the homes built on these tiny lots were
"congenitally substandard," so jammed and narrow that daylight couldn't
find its way in.
The writer predicted that many of these homes would wind up as a
"pesthole," slums that would be abandoned, leaving taxpayers to foot
the bill for tearing them down.
Nearly two decades later, Ann Miller of Baltimore wrote a letter to the
editor of The Evening Sun urging support for a state bill to "put an
end to the ground-rent racket" and the "handful of profiteers who hold
thousands of our neighbors in bondage."
The bill, filed by Del. Joseph A. Acker in 1959, sought to phase out
ground rents by requiring that they be sold along with the homes.
Miller said she hoped lawmakers would show the "courage" to support
Acker's bill when the "influence peddlers and lobbyists corner them in
Annapolis."
Nearly a half-century later, new ground rents are being created when
some houses are sold.
Copyright © 2006, The Baltimore Sun