spires, temples built of native stone, charming villas,
towered edifices, and comfortable homes, evincing
educated tastes and refined ideas. The placid
Potomac, forming the southern boundary of the city,
is apparently land-locked, and presents the appear-
ance of a modest lake, upon whose bosom is mirrored
the beauty of its leafy shores; while ^the swifter
waters of Will's Creek come purling into the very
heart of the town, cool and fresh, from the sombre
shades of the wondrous "Narrows." Southward the
waters of the two streams tumble over a dam of
solid masonry, and skirt the base of " Nobley" Moun-
tain, until they disappear from view at the edge of
the city, some half mile lower down the channel.
Eastward is a series of bluffs, some three hundred
feet in height, known as " Shriver's Hill," " M cKaig's
Hill," and "Fort Hill." The sides of these hills are
dotted with dwellings, and cultivated fields, in many
places, while the gorges between have been converted
into streets and roads. On the south, and on the
opposite side of the river, in West Virginia, Nobley
Mountains rise in their self-asserting grandeur, and
with the rich bottom lands lying at their feet, form a
picture worthy to be transferred to canvas, if a brush
can be found to do them justice. On a knob, around
which the river sweeps with a graceful curve, stands
the beautiful villa of Capt. Roger Perry, of the navy,
forming one of the most prominent and attractive
pictures of the panorama of the city. Cumberland is
divided into two parts by the waters of Will's Creek.
That portion lying east of the Creek comprises ihe
greater part of the business houses, hotels, mills,
Page:History of Cumberland, Maryland 2.djvu/520
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HISTORY OF CUMBERLAND.