Cross Street Market

A modern example of “If it ain’t broke don’t fix it,” perhaps?

The South Baltimore Peninsula’s Cross Street Market is certainly not what it used to be. However, that is to be expected for a place dating back to the 19th Century. Time marches on and things do change. Once a place to shop for produce, fresh meats, and seafood, you could also grab a snack during your shopping run. And, it still is like that – sort of. Well, not really…

Cross Street Market before and after
Before 2018 the Cross Street Market was colorful and bustling.
AFTER( April, 2022), nearly three years after the reopening.
cross street market facade of years ago
Older entrance of the Cross Street Market on Charles Street.

Once, the Cross Street Market was a place where you could get farm-fresh produce, meats, and seafood from several different stalls. You could buy food from local vendors from every culture in Baltimore, and you could grab a bite to eat as you ran your errands. It was a thriving, bustling place where people loved to shop in an almost “open air” market environment – albeit with walls, a roof and HVAC. The key element that we loved was the “open” feeling of the place. The crowds. The culture. The history.

As recent as a few years ago the list of merchants included more than 20 unique businesses, all being part of a thriving open-space market. Some are listed here. Do you remember any of them?

cross stree market facade
Entrance facade of the Cross Street Market prior to 2018.
  • Baltimore’s Best BBQ – Rotisserie chicken and barbeque
  • Big Jim’s Deli – Best overstuffed sandwiches in the market
  • Buttercream Dreams Bakery – Bakery
  • Cheese Galore & More – Cheeses
  • Cross 10 Grocery – Grocery
  • Cross Street Cafe – Famous for Bruce Lee’s chicken wings
  • Cross Street Seafood – Freshest fish and crabs 
  • Cross Street Tobacco – Fine premium cigars
  • Fenwick’s Choice Meats – Choice meats, lottery, custom steaks
  • Kwon’s Fresh Produce – Fresh produce & fruit salad
  • Mondawmin Chicken – Fried chicken & fish (the best, this writer shopped here often)
  • Mr. Sausage – yup, fresh sausages
  • Nick’s Inner Harbor Seafood – “Baltimore’s Best” seafood market & raw bar 
  • Pop Tacos – tacos
  • Rosie’s Posies Flowers and Gifts – Gifts & Flowers
  • Steve’s Lunch – Breakfast, lunch, snacks, UTZ potato chips
  • The Flower Shop
  • The Pretzel Twist
  • The Sweet Shoppe – Candies & ice cream
  • Tian’s Teriyaki
  • Wireless One, Inc. – Cell phones & accessories

Now, that’s all still true… sort of. The Cross Street Market has been through some changes over the years—but it’s still alive and kicking. Find out what’s new about one of Baltimore’s oldest landmarks!

The new market is “sterile” when compared with the old. Upon entering it appears more like a hospital than a thriving market.

The new Cross Street Market Website is shiny and fresh (like the produce in the many stands a few years back). The site claims, “22 independently owned and operated businesses,” yet lists only 14 merchants. That means almost a 40% vacancy rate. Indeed.

cross street market facade
Entrance to the Cross Street Market on Light Street (April, 2022)

Listed Cross Street Market merchants (as of April, 2022)

cross street market fenwick meats
A refreshing sight is one of the original and popular merchants, Fenwick Meats.
  • Atlas Fish Market – Fresh seafood market w/ raw bar
  • Blowfish Poke – Hawaiian cuisine
  • Ceremony Coffee Roasters -Sharing amazing coffee
  • Chicken Lab – Korean fried chicken
  • Crepe Crazy – European crepes
  • Fenwick’s Choice Meats – Quality meats ( a wonderful carry-over from “before”)
  • Gangster Vegan Organics – Eat healthy
  • Pizza di Joey – New York style brick oven pizza
  • SoBeachy – Haitian restaurant
  • Southside Burger Bar – Local family business with burgers and dogs – done right.
  • Steve’s Lunch – Breakfast and lunch for over 50 years in the Cross Street Market (another wonderful carry-over)
  • Taco Love Grill – Authentis Taqueria
  • Taharka Bros. – Confections
  • Watershed – Seafood restaurant/crab house

What happened to the Cross Street Market that many of us used to know? Progress? Maybe not…

sterile entrance to the Cross Street Market from Light Street.
This is what greets you as you enter the Cross Street Market from Light Street. Note that the area on the left is currently empty (April, 2022).

The Rejuvenation of South Baltimore dot com

South Baltimore’s original website is coming back stronger than ever. Here is why and how.

When a webmaster retires and moves on to other endeavors (travel, beach, photography, etc.) sometimes there is a void felt in leaving something behind. SouthBaltimore.com was created in May, 1999 as an information source for the South Baltimore Peninsula (South Bmore, SoBo) and neighboring communities – but languished with inattention for the last three years. That void recently became overwhelming and it was decided that SouthBaltimore.com, the webmaster’s first commercial website should be reborn in a modern style. The original site was never mobile-friendly but this new version is – and it is showing in the attention being paid by the major search engines (Google, Bing, Yahoo).

The numbers in the chart below tell the story of the positive impact a bit of “attention” can provide. January, 2022 is representative of each month in 2021 – not much traffic. The new rebuilding effort began in the middle of February, with the first real transition starting on February 14th. The chart below shows growth through March. Page views went from 19,000+ in January to 75,000+ in March – after just six and a half weeks of effort and TLC. Imagine where it will be in another few months…

South Baltimore Statistics for first quarter 2022
This chart shows visitor and page view statistics for the first three months of 2022. Note that internet bots and search indexing crawlers are not included in real visitor numbers.

Page views are a valid indicator of the use a website is seeing. Unique visitors and a (larger number of visits) means that people are returning to view more of the website. They must like the changes being made. On average, each visitor looking at more than 9 pages, indicating there there must be something interesting for the reader to see.

So, what does the webmaster get out of all of this? Simply, the site provides revenue, wages so to speak, to help support the webmaster and crew. SouthBaltimore.com does not solicit paid advertising** from local businesses. Instead, revenue is derived from national advertising (such as that provided by Google and DoubleClick), affiliate product offerings (Fanatics.com sports apparel), the sale of local art photographs (Pixels.com) and commissions from hotel reservations (Booking.com).

** If a local business would like to have a presence on SouthBaltimore.com, that can be arranged. Currently, without cost.

Baltimore Art Collection

Breathtaking, boutique quality wall art photographs delivered to your door.

Isn’t it time to have some Baltimore, South Baltimore and Fort McHenry area art in your home or condo – or maybe even your office? The Baltimore Art Collection is offered in partnership with Fine Art America/Pixels, the world’s largest and distinguished art printing/fulfillment company to produce the fine art photography of Bill Swartwout Photography, a local photographer.

Fort McHenry Shrouded in Snow
Fort McHenry Shrouded in Snow – Blizzard of 2016 – Panorama

FAA/Pixels has production and shipping facilities in several United States locations and in several countries around the world to provide shipping directly to your home – with a 100% satisfaction guarantee.

Anchor Chain Links and the Museum of Industry
Anchor Chain at the Baltimore Museum of Industry