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Legal Link Confidential
You can’t just let anyone handle your name, image, likeness, and intellectual property.
Legal Link Confidential
Legal Link Confidential
18505 Yarnbrooke Pl, Olney, MD 20832Olney Maryland 20832United States
(202) 505-7481
Business Description
Legal Link Confidential, the most trusted legal staffing and recruiting firm, partners with law firms to find long-lasting, mutually beneficial employment matches. We hire only the best legal professionals to fill in a position or positions that corporate legal clients or law firms search for in this business. You won't find the usual hiring process for your team or law firms. With us, it will be a different kind of search for the next candidate. It would be one that is efficient in getting the best match for you and your firm.
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About Olney
Olney is a census-designated place and an unincorporated area in Montgomery County, Maryland, United States. It is located in the north central part of the county, ten miles (16 km) north of Washington, D.C. Olney was largely agricultural until the 1960s, when growth of Washington, D.C.'s suburbs led to its conversion into a mostly residential area. It has a total population of 35,820 as of the 2020 United States census. == History == In 1763, Richard Brooke received a patent for a tract of land located in the Province of Maryland. Originally known as Mechanicsville, the village which became Olney was established in 1800. The area was mostly farmland, but it soon began attracting artisans. Early residents Sarah Brooke and Dr. Charles Farquhar were devotees of the English poet William Cowper, and named their home after the poet's hometown of Olney in England. The area was later named for their home, which still stands and is known as the Olney House. In the town's center was a blacksmith, William Kelley's wheelwright shop, Canby's pottery factory, and a Benedict Duley's store.The Brooke family held the largest tracts of land in Olney, whose central village was at the intersection of the Rockville to Baltimore road, and the one which connected Washington with Westminster to the north.