Will the Russians Come Back to the Eastern Shore?

George Shivers • October 1, 2019

In 1972 the former Soviet Union purchased a 45-acre estate on the Eastern Shore near Centreville in Queen Anne’s County as a vacation get-away for diplomats and their families. With the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Russian Republic took over the estate in 1995. Property records show Russian ownership of two properties on Town Point Lane, 5 miles west of Centreville. The 45.58-acre property is valued at about $8 million and a smaller parcel, slightly less than an acre is valued at $537,200. According to property records, the U.S. Department of State also owns a 1960 office building on Town Point Lane. Perhaps to keep an eye on Russian spies?

The estate was originally part of a 1,600-acre estate that belonged to John Jacob Raskob, chief aide to Pierre S. Dupont and board chairman and president of the Dupont Co. in the early 1900s. Raskob was best known for building the Empire State Building. He died in 1950 and the property passed through several hands before being acquired by the Russians. They converted the mansion into about 12 apartments and also added a dozen cottages with four apartments in each, so that the compound could accommodate 40 families, who paid a small fee for maintenance. In addition to the buildings the estate has four lighted tennis courts, a swimming pool and a soccer field. Locals were occasionally invited to the compound for parties. Joseph Connor, who lived with his family near the estate and who was invited for parties, is quoted by J.F. Meils saying that “the food was good, the company was likewise, and the vodka flowed freely.” A story published in The Talbot Spy in August 2013 reported that for two decades the Russian Embassy used the retreat to host the annual Labor Day Cruise of the Sailing Club of the Chesapeake, one of the few times that it was open to Americans.

In December 2016, the Obama administration expelled dozens of Russian diplomats from the country and closed the Eastern Shore retreat in response to what they described as the hacking campaign by the Russian government to interfere with the U.S. presidential election. Ian Duncan and John Fritze in an article in the Baltimore Sun that “John C. “Chris” Inglis, a former deputy director of the National Security Agency, said the facility’s remote location means it’s unlikely to be particularly useful for conducting electronic eavesdropping or hacking, but it could still have intelligence value to Russia.” The Trump administration told the Russians that it would consider turning the property back over to them if they would lift the freeze imposed in 2014 in retaliation for U.S. sanctions related to the Ukraine. Two days later, however, the administration changed its position. To date, the property has not been returned to the Russians.


Sources:

Theresa Humphrey, Russian Federation Takes Over Maryland Vacation Retreat, AP, 1/20/92

Ian Duncan & John Fritze, Obama Administration shutters Russian retreat on the Eastern Shore of Maryland, Baltimore Sun, 12/29/16

J. F. Meils, Russian Compound on Md’s Eastern Shore gathers dust, awaits its fate. CNS Maryland, 10/27/17

A Spy Visit to the Chesapeake Bay Russian Embassy Estate, 12/20/16

Karen DeYoung & Adam Entous, Trump Administration moves to return Russian compounds in Maryland and New York, 5/31/17


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