Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
- “Chambongs” (and other fancy booze) available at the Donahue cocktail bar.
- How Georgetown is reacting to “Georgetown”, the movie.
Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
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The DC Department of Transportation is pushing ahead with its plans to repair sidewalks throughout Georgetown with composite material over the objections of the ANC.
As every resident knows, while they are lovely, brick sidewalks can be hazardous. It does not take much to make them a tripping hazard. And growing tree roots are especially a problem in terms of pushing the bricks up. Historically, to fix this the city would occasionally come in and remove the offending bricks and replace them with an asphalt patch. This would often sit for months or years before the city would then get around to rebuilding that portion of the brick sidewalk.
Starting recently, the city began taking a different approach. It started using porous flexible pavement (PFP). PFP has the appearance of asphalt but is–as the name suggests–flexible. This has the benefit of allowing the sidewalk to bend around the growing tree root while still maintaining a smooth and safe sidewalk.
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Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
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This week for Georgetown Time Machine, GM is checking out another photo from the Willard R. Ross postcard collection. It’s from November 12, 1910 and shows a football game between Georgetown and UVA.
The game was taking place on Georgetown Field, otherwise known as Varsity Field. It once stood north of Healy Hall where now Copley and White-Gravenor Halls stand. It was built 1894 and remained until 1930. It hosted both the baseball and football teams:

Georgetown first started playing football in 1889, just twenty years after the very first college football game. The team first played on the old Georgetown Field, which was what was there before the stadium above was built. They spent a couple years playing at American Park (where the Nationals played at the time) before moving to the new Georgetown Field in 1894. They played here until 1920, at which point they moved to Griffith Stadium. They played there until 1951 when the team was disbanded. (It was reformed as a varsity sport in the 1970s).
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Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
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This is a topic that is always on people’s minds, particularly over the past year as crime rates have risen across the city. Speaking will be Councilmember Brooke Pinto, Wendy Pohlhaus, Director of Community Outreach, DC United States Attorney’s Office, and Liz Wieser, Public Safety Division, Deputy, DC Office of the Attorney General.
The discussion is described as centering on the balance between public safety and police reform, which is perhaps a bit of a controversial framing of the issue, but one that will likely draw passionate feelings regardless.
The meeting is from 6 to 7:30 and can be accessed via this Zoom link.
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