Apparel
Black unisex tee shirt. Front text reads: 1859 Raid on Harpers Ferry. Back text reads: John Brown "I have only a short time to live, only one death to die, and I will die fighting for this cause." 100% Cotton.
Garnet hoodie with Maryland Heights cordinates featured on the front and the mountain's ridge lines featured on the back. Front text reads: Maryland Heights Harpers Ferry National Historical Park 39.3413°N/77.7167°W. Back text reads: Fingerprints of America Maryland Heights Harpers Ferry National Historical Park 39.3413°N/77.7167°W. 50% cotton, 50% polyester.
Woodland brown hoodie with Maryland Heights cordinates featured on the front and the mountain's ridge lines featured on the back. Front text reads: Maryland Heights Harpers Ferry National Historical Park 39.3413°N/77.7167°W. Back text reads: Fingerprints of America Maryland Heights Harpers Ferry National Historical Park 39.3413°N/77.7167°W. 50% cotton, 50% polyester.
Olive green T-shirt with Maryland Heights cordinates featured on the front and the mountain's ridge lines featured on the back. Front text reads: Maryland Heights Harpers Ferry National Historical Park 39.3413°N/77.7167°W. Back text reads: Fingerprints of America Maryland Heights Harpers Ferry National Historical Park 39.3413°N/77.7167°W. 100% cotton.
Sangria T-shirt with Maryland Heights cordinates featured on the front and the mountain's ridge lines featured on the back. Front text reads: Maryland Heights Harpers Ferry National Historical Park 39.3413°N/77.7167°W. Back text reads: Fingerprints of America Maryland Heights Harpers Ferry National Historical Park 39.3413°N/77.7167°W. 100% cotton.
Gray T-shirt featuring Mennen's ad on the front. Back is plain gray. Text reads: Mennen's Borated Talcum Toilet Powder Harpers Ferry National Historical Park. 50% cotton, 50% polyester. The faded painting on the face of Maryland Heights was an early 1900s advertisement aimed at passengers on the B&O Railroad, which was a heavily traveled rail line. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, painting advertisements on brick buildings and stone cliffs was very popular. As transportation shifted to roads and automobiles, advertisements moved to billboards and highways. Many local residents believed it to be a “desecration of nature”, so in 1963 volunteers from the Potomac Appalachian Trail Club scaled the cliff and attempted to eradicate the ad with paint remover and carbon black. Four years later, the sign was visible once again and has since been left alone.