Whittaker Chambers Farm


The Whittaker Chambers Farm, also known as Pipe Creek Farm, is a historic cluster of farm properties near Westminster in rural Carroll County, Maryland. The farm's historic significance comes from ownership by Whittaker Chambers, a pivotal figure in American Cold War politics. In December 1948, Chambers hid the "Pumpkin Papers" while awaiting a subpoena from the House Un-American Activities Committee to relinquish any intelligence stolen from the US Government by members of the Soviet spy rings within the federal government. Chambers also wrote his best-selling memoir Witness there. The property was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1988, in a somewhat controversial decision. The property remains in the Chambers family and is not accessible to the public.

Description

The Whittaker Chamber Farm is located a few miles north of Westminster, and is roughly bounded by East Saw Mill Road to the southwest and Pipe Creek to the northeast. The farm comprises three contiguous areas, separately purchased and separately owned, totaling about. The land is a mix of open farm fields and woods. Whittaker Chambers ran this "dirt farm" as a dairy farm.
Whittaker Chambers had joined the Communist Party in 1925, and engaged in spying for the Soviet Union in the 1932. By 1937, he was becoming disenchanted and left the party by 1938. In 1948, he revealed that Alger Hiss, then a prominent official in the State Department, had also engaged in espionage for the Soviets. Hiss was convicted of perjury in a sensationalized trial that was a major event of the Cold War. Chambers was a witness who, in December 1948, retrieved microfilm from a hollowed-out pumpkin on his farm which was turned over to investigators. The case served to greatly raise the profile of Richard Nixon, then a little-known Congressman from California.
The farm was also a key in the relationship between Chambers and Hiss. Chambers reported that he first saw a nearby property in company with Hiss, who had originally contracted to buy it. In 1937, Chambers purchased it as part of his retreat from Communism and as a place remote from possible retaliation for his defection from the Soviet underground. He moved his family in 1941.

Landmark designation

The decision in 1988 to designate the Chambers Farm a National Historic Landmark was unusual at the time for two reasons. First, it did not pass the usual requirement of 50 years' age for a historic event. Second, the National Park Service Advisory Board recommended against its designation. In 1988, Interior Secretary Donald P. Hodel granted national landmark status to the Pipe Creek Farm.
In 2012, a book on the Cold War questioned the propriety of the farm as landmark, particularly because it is not open to the public. A member of the Chambers family replied, explaining that the farm was not a museum but a working farm, not open to the public.

Threats

A twice-proposed Union Mills reservoir, if built, would flood portions of the Chambers property close to Pipe Creek. The first proposed dam was in the 1970s, when a petition by the "Carroll County Taxpayers' Committee" raised more than 5,000 signature to stop it. Carroll County officials renewed efforts to claim property for a dam in the 2000s.