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Germantown is an urbanized census-designated place in Montgomery County, Maryland. With a population of 91, as of the census, it is the third-most populous community in Maryland, after Columbia and Baltimore. Germantown was founded in the early 19th century by European immigrants, though much of the area's development did not take place until the midth century. Germantown has the assigned ZIP codes of and for delivery and for post office boxes. It is the only "Germantown, Maryland" recognized by the United States Postal Service , though three other Maryland counties have unincorporated communities with the same name.
In the s and s, the central business area was focused around the intersection of Liberty Mill Road and Clopper Road. Several German immigrants set up shop at the intersection and the town became known as "German Town", even though most residents of the town were of English or Scottish descent. Although it avoided much of the physical destruction that ravaged other cities in the region, the Civil War was still a cause of resentment and division among residents of Germantown.
Many Germantown residents were against slavery and had sons fighting for the Union Army. In contrast, other residents of Germantown owned slaves, and even those who were not slave-owners had sons fighting for the Confederate Army. As a result, many people in Germantown, who had been on friendly terms with each other, made an effort not to interact with each other, such as switching churches, or frequenting a store or mill miles away from the ones they would normally do business with.
Late in the summer and fall of , there were more than twenty thousand Union soldiers camped to the west of Germantown, in neighboring Darnestown and Poolesville. Occasionally, these soldiers would come to Germantown and frequent the stores there. In September and in June , several regiments of Union Army soldiers marched north on Maryland Route , on their way to the battles of Antietam and Gettysburg , respectively.
Throughout the course of the war, Confederate raiders would often pass through the Germantown area. Local farmers in the Germantown area lost horses and other livestock to both Union and Confederate armies. In , George Atzerodt , a co-conspirator in the assassination of U. President Abraham Lincoln , was captured in Germantown. Atzerodt had come to the town with his family from Prussia when he was about nine years old. About five years later, his father moved the family to Virginia , but Atzerodt still had many friends and relatives in Germantown.