Quick Search
Listing Number

Advanced Search

Pasadena Real Estate
Maryland, MD
(Parts of 21122, 21123)

Hancock’s Resolution
Fort Carroll
Black Hole Creek


Pasadena is a family oriented community located on the Chesapeake Bay between Baltimore and Annapolis and east of Fort Meade. Pasadena is called home for many that live in the many prestigious planned communities such as Farmington Village and Old Saybrooke. Pasadena features some of the most elegant waterfront homes on Chesapeake Bay. The community's beautiful public parks and many marinas, moorings and water-oriented activities make enjoying recreation and the outdoors a must. Pasadena is also home to some of the finest public schools in Maryland. The city also boasts well-organized adult and youth community sports programs feeding all levels of the public school system. The Marley Station mall provides residents with plenty of shopping opportunities. Pasadena is close to the major thoroughfares and public transportation allowing residents to enjoy the suburban setting and still have easy access to work in Baltimore, Washington or Annapolis.


For more information on specific,
property types please visit:

Properties for sale in Pasadena, MD

 

For more information & real estate
listings for each local community,
please visit:


What Makes Pasadena Unique?

  • Hancock’s Resolution -  the family home of our branch of the Hancock family, was occupied continuously by five generations for 180 years.  The house was built by Stephen Hancock, about 1784-85, the fourth generation of the family in Maryland, and a veteran of the 6th Company 3rd Regiment during the Revolutionary War from August 1780 to March 3, 1783.  The house has been restored thanks to the work of many dedicated volunteers, businesses, local and state government, along with family members and the Pasadena Business Association.   
  • Fort Carroll -  is a 3.4 acre artificial island and abandoned fort in the middle of the Patapsco River, just south of Baltimore, Maryland. The fort was used in the 1800's. The hexagonal structure was designed by then Brevet-Colonel Robert E. Lee and named for Charles Carroll of Carrollton, a signer of the Declaration of Independence. Construction of the fort began in 1848, under Lee's supervision, by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Fort Carroll was important for the defense of Baltimore — before the fort was created, the only military defensive structure between Baltimore and the Chesapeake Bay was Fort McHenry. In addition, a lighthouse, now abandoned, was built on the ramparts to aid navigation into Baltimore Harbor. 

If you have any questions or need more information regarding any town, please feel free to E-mail us.