Hebron [hɛbrɪn] is a town in Wicomico County, Maryland, United States.
The Maple Leaf Farm Potato House, Spring Hill Church, St. Giles, and Western Fields are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
[4] Hebron Train Depot In 1890, the Baltimore, Chesapeake and Atlantic Railroad was extended westward from Salisbury.
About six miles from that city, the line crossed a country road where there was a store and a Colonial dwelling.
Five years later, a lumber manufacturing plant was located there, and a hamlet began to develop.
By the 1920s Hebron was a hub for farming as well as manufacturing with major markets being easily and quickly accessible.
Notable citizens responsible for the manufacturing aspect of the town were Walter B. Miller and G.A.
Bounds, the latter which owned both a lumber mill and canning plant and whose house still stands on Main Street today.
[7] According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of 1.28 square miles (3.32 km2), all land.