Photo by Dasjabbadas.
Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
- Mendocino might work out their tax problem and reopen, or so GM hears.
- George goes before ABC to request their voluntary agreement be thrown out.
Photo by Dasjabbadas.
Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
Filed under The Morning Metropolitan
Filed under The Georgetown Metropolis
Photo by Bitzcelt.
Valentines Day is just next Monday, and if you’re still looking for an option around Georgetown, here’s what’s still available on Open Table:
Filed under Restaurants
Filed under The Georgetown Metropolis
GM doesn’t normally do this, but he was especially touched by a comment he received the other day in response to posting the image of the old Roy Rogers on Wisconsin Ave. It’s from reader “George” and it’s a love letter to Georgetown’s past:
I remember the balloon man, I heard he was busted for selling heroin, he used to be outside of the Little Tavern, at Wisconsin and N St. And those were not “Hells Angels”, they were “Pagans”. They were scary! Used to be a lot of them in the middle sixties, down on M Street, when the auto parts stores were there, and the saddlery store, near Desperado’s, and the laundromat on M St. And the other Little Tavern. Near Stohlman’s Chevrolet, and Menehan’s and Hardware, around the corner was Weaver’s. And the Cellar Door. And the head shops selling trippy posters and black lights. Before “Up Against the Wall”. Remember when Britches first opened on Wisconsin, just below N? 1967. And Doc Dalinsky’s, Mrs. Crocker’s lamp shop, Dorcas Hardin’s dress shop. Bill Fitzgerald’s Wine and Cheese Shop, next to Peoples Drug Store. Or Coffee, Tea and Spice? Rive Gauche! The French Market, Magruders, the Sealtest dairy at 25th and M St? They delivered! Rich’s shoe store. John Learmont’s Records and Books. Arpad’s Antiques. Long before, my mom kept her horse in the stable at 23rd and P Street. We used to take the street car to the amusement park at Glen Echo! My sister and I once got stuck there because our nanny didn’t have the 5 cents for the return trip. Buying our goldfish at Woolworth’s. Exotics pets up at Friendly Beasties. And the man with his haunting bell, who would walk the streets in the summer, sharpening knives. Lad Mills selling Esso on Que Street. Georgetown was a great place to grow up, and still is. Continue reading
Filed under History
TJ St. bridge (and duck) by Carol Joynt.
Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
Filed under The Morning Metropolitan
Filed under The Georgetown Metropolis
Photo by Knowsphotos.
Recently GM sat down to compile some of the new stores that are planning on opening up in Georgetown in the near future and a realization occurred to him. Georgetown is in the midst of a shift in terms of the retail mix.
What does that mean? Well consider the chain stores that have closed in Georgetown over the past two years, or so:
They’re all perfectly fine, average stores you could find in just about any mall in the country (RRL was perhaps a slight exception to that; there are only five of those in the country).
What has moved in over that same period of time, however, has been decidedly less common. Some, but not all, offer “higher end” goods. But in almost every case, they are stores that you can’t find in Anytown, USA’s mall: Continue reading
Filed under Retail
Baked and Wired by Kevin H.
Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
Filed under The Morning Metropolitan
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