Quick Facts:
Wicomico County is the Eastern Shore’s second smallest county, but has the second largest population and the second highest population density (140 people per square mile). Salisbury, the county seat, is the most populous community on the Shore.
Less than 20% of agricultural, forested, and important natural and water resource lands is preserved — Wicomico and Talbot are tied for last place in this category. Thirty percent of agricultural and resource lands in the county is under threat of development inconsistent with state goals for land and resource conservation.
The county's boundary with Delaware is made up of the Mason-Dixon Line running north-south, and the Transpeninsular Line running east-west. The town of Delmar is split between Wicomico County in Maryland and Sussex County in Delaware.
Wicomico is the newest county on the Shore. It was formed from parts of Worcester and Somerset counties, but not until 1867.
Wicomico County’s population breakdown by race and ethnicity:
Wicomico County had two of the earliest free Black communities on the Eastern Shore. One is San Domingo, in the west of the county. The other is what is now Allen, formerly Upper Trappe, in the southeastern part of the county.
Over half of Wicomico County residents have a high school diploma or equivalent; an additional 35% have a postsecondary degree.
Wicomico County has the fourth lowest median income on the Shore — $53,500 — and the third highest poverty level (14.6%). Compare this with the state median income of $76,100 and poverty level of 9%.
In 2022, 28% of homeowners paid more than 35% of their income on housing costs, compared with 48% of renters. A full 8.1% of county residents don’t have health insurance, compared with 6.9% statewide.
In November 2022, Wicomico County’s unemployment rate (not seasonally adjusted) was 4.4%. Maryland’s was 3.5%. Six counties on the Shore had unemployment rates below 4% that month.
Like much of the Eastern Shore, Wicomico County was historically Democratic, but White conservatives and right-wing extremists moved into the Republican Party after World War II, as in much of the southern U.S. Lyndon Johnson is the only Democratic presidential nominee to win Wicomico County since the war, although Bill Clinton and Joe Biden came close.
Democrats hold an edge of 42% to 37% in voter registrations in Wicomico, but in 2022, Republican statewide candidates swept their Democratic challengers in the county (even though they lost statewide). Only Heather Mizeur came close — within 100 votes of beating incumbent U.S. Rep. Andrew P. Harris (R-MD1). The bright spot in the county is the continued success of state Del. Sheree Sample-Hughes, who received 62% of the vote in her district, 37A, in Wicomico and Dorchester counties.
Wicomico County is home to two free three-car cable ferries that cross the Wicomico River. Whitehaven Ferry, started in 1687, is believed to be the oldest continuously operating ferry in the country. Upper Ferry — dated to 1688 — makes 150 trips daily. Both ferries are subject to service disruptions due to low and high tides.
Professional baseball returned to the Eastern Shore in 1996, when the Delmarva Shorebirds, a Baltimore Oriole minor league affiliate team, began playing in Salisbury at Frank Perdue Stadium.
Sources:
U.S. Census Bureau, 2020 Decennial Census, Hispanic and Not Hispanic by Race
Statistical Atlas, Maryland
https://statisticalatlas.com/state/Maryland
Maryland Department of Planning Data Center, Sustainability Indicators
https://planning.maryland.gov/MSDC/Pages/sustainability_indicator/sustainabilityindicator.aspx
Maryland State Board of Elections, Official 2022 Gubernatorial Election Results
https://www.elections.maryland.gov/elections/2022/general_results/index.html
Maryland State Board of Elections, Eligible Active Voters, 2020 Presidential Election
Maryland Department of Labor, Local Area Unemployment Statistics
https://www.dllr.state.md.us/lmi/laus/
Wikipedia, Wicomico County, Md.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wicomico_County,_Maryland
Jan Plotczyk spent 25 years as a survey and education statistician with the federal government, at the Census Bureau and the National Center for Education Statistics. She retired to Rock Hall.
Title image: Pond at Pickering Creek Audubon Center, Talbot Co. Photo: Jan Plotczyk