Daisy is an unincorporated community located at the northwest tip of Howard County, Maryland, United States.
[3] The Oakdale manor slave plantation was built on the site in 1838 by Albert Gallatin Warfield[4][5] and, as of 1940, overlooked a remaining 1,300 acres (5.3 km2) of the original tract.
[3] Senator Arthur Pue Gorman's daughter, Grace (1871–1958), who went by the name "Daisy", lived at the historic Overlook farm house in North Laurel.
[7] The current Daisy United Methodist Church property, eligible for the National Register of Historic Places, was built in 1906 on 2.25 acres (0.91 ha) of land acquired in 1876 "to be used as a school house for colored children and also a house of public worship for the use of the colored members of the M.E.
[8] The farming community was active in the mid-20th century, with a general store, schoolhouse, and Good Templars Hall, though diminished in the 1970s as agricultural profits fell and families moved to larger towns.