Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
- GU covid numbers are back up again…
- In retirement, GM would love to get a job at one of the estate museums around Georgetown. If you already want that, here’s your chance.
Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
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A new coffee shop is coming soon to Georgetown. And this one comes with a mission. The shop is called Bitty & Beau’s Coffee, it will be located at 3207 M St. (the former Calvin Klein Underwear shop).
The shop is part of a chain of roughly twenty locations nationwide, originating in Wilmington, NC. The business prides itself on the fact that it hires individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities to staff the locations.
So in 2022, if you want to grab some joe and support a great mission, you’ve got a perfect choice on M St.
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Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
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A new liquor shop that specializes in extremely expensive bourbon is coming to 2816 Pennsylvania Ave. The shop, called The Bourbon Concierge, is currently in the process of obtaining a liquor license.
The shop already runs a website where you can spend way, way too much money on booze that can’t possibly be worth it. For instance, here’s a $3,800 bottle of Pappy Van Winkle, the most prominent of the new ultra-expensive bourbons. Here’s a $29,000 bottle of the same brand that was bottled in 1990 (unlike wine, however, distilled spirits don’t continue to age or improve once they’re bottled.)
Anyway, GM thinks the bourbon bubble is ready to pop and the really money is in rum. But if you’ve got more money than sense, keep an eye out for this space!
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Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
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Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
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This week for Georgetown Time Machine, GM is traveling back to the summer of ’72 and the devastating floods that Hurricane Agnes wrought.
The photo is from DDOT’s archives and it shows K St. completely flooded. The storm emerged from the Gulf of Mexico June 15, 1972. After moving through Florida and causing a great deal of damage, it weakened as it moved through the southeast. But then as it approached the mid-Atlantic it suddenly strengthened again and brought huge amounts of rainfall:

The Georgetown waterfront was no match for that amount of water coming down the Potomac gorge, as you can see from more of DDOT’s photos:
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