Carroll County Daily Headlines newsletter
Luck runs out for Carroll’s Shamrock Farm, as state drops plan to turn it into horse training facility • Teen stabbed by mother in Carroll expected to recover from lung puncture
 ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌
Header Logo

Carroll County Daily Headlines

Thursday, January 22, 2026

Springdale Preparatory plans to buy former New Windsor Middle building

Legal representatives of New Windsor Holding LLC wrote to the commissioners on Dec. 30, notifying the board that they were electing to purchase the 30.009 acres of property for $4,250,000.

Read more →

Luck runs out for Carroll’s Shamrock Farm, as state drops plan to turn it into horse training facility

Carroll residents have had mixed opinions about the project ever since the state bought Shamrock Farm for $4.48 million in May.

Read more →

Teen stabbed by mother in Carroll expected to recover from lung puncture

The teen was still at Shock Trauma as recently as midday Tuesday.

Read more →

Baltimore region braces for ‘biggest snow’ in a decade

Forecasters say frigid temperatures are expected to settle in Saturday and could last into next week, with a strong winter storm likely over the southern and eastern U.S.

Read more →

PJM data center plan leaves out some of Moore’s, Trump’s concerns

Maryland lawmakers, energy advocates are cautiously optimistic that PJM’s plan that targets data centers will boost electric supply while lowering costs.

Read more →

Maryland redistricting: A matchup between Sarah Elfreth and Andy Harris?

Maryland Democrats are trying to redraw election maps years before required to do so, potentially carving a more challenging path for the state’s lone Congressional Republican.

Read more →

$47.5K Burton Batmobile model draws top bid at Towson Hollywood auction

The footlong miniature dominated a catalogue with an early model of E.T. the Extra Terrestrial and a signed Johnny Unitas football helmet.

Read more →

Are you breathing invisible plastic? What scientists discovered in the air may surprise you

Chinese researchers who developed a new method to measure airborne microplastic pollution found more than they expected.

Read more →