Maryland, you've come to the right place for trucking careers. We have open trucking jobs all across your state and serve customers across the country.
Did you know Maryland’s Chesapeake Bay produces more seafood - oysters, crabs, clams, fin fish - than any comparable body of water? And Old Bay seasoning (a blend of 18 spices) was created by a German refugee in Maryland in 1939. So the next time you get ready for a crab, crawfish, or lobster boil, think of the Old Line State, which is also home to the country’s first intercity railroad, battlefields that built America, the world’s best lacrosse stick manufacturer and the second jewel of horse racing's Triple Crown. And the jewel of the Chesapeake, Baltimore, is protected from the Atlantic by Delaware, making it the closest port to the Midwest and is geographically situated along the Mid-Atlantic coast. While you can certainly take the fastest route to your destination on Maryland’s 500 miles of interstate, you may want to consider taking one of its 18 scenic byways, featuring nationally significant themes: The Star-Spangled Banner, Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad, Religious Freedom, Chesapeake Country, Charles Street, Historic National Road, and the Catoctin Mountain National Scenic Byways.