The Citizens Association New Home

The Georgetown Citizens Association has a new home: a small rowhouse steps from the canal. The new home was formally announced yesterday by CAG president Tara Sakraida Parker:

In the Citizens Association of Georgetown’s 142-year-old history, there have been milestones that we look back upon and cherish as critical points in CAG’s history.
CAG gratefully announces a momentous bequest from the Trust of A. Michael Sullivan, Jr., intended to purchase a new permanent headquarters in Georgetown. Our new townhome is located on 30th Street along the historic C&O Canal and will honor Mr. Michael Sullivan and his wife, Beverly Bissell Sullivan. Their legacy gift supports CAG in an exceptional and unprecedented way.
For the first time ever, we have a permanent home to gather and grow, and to build a foundation of impact and change.

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The Morning Metropolitan

Photo by Vincent.

Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:

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The Georgetown Metropolis

3300 block of O St.

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Doomsday Scenario Leads to Massive Service Cuts From WMATA

Anyone paying attention to the state of WMATA knew this was coming, but even they will likely be surprised: the transit agency is proposing massive service cuts to balance its FY2022 budget.

And don’t think GM is just being dramatic here. If anything, “massive” undersells how devastating these cuts would be. They would fundamentally devastate the entire public transit model for the DC region. Metrorail trains would come every half hour during the week. They would be completely shut down all weekend long. Nineteen stations would simply be closed entirely.

And buses–which are critical for Georgetowners–would hardly be spared. Half the routes would simply be cancelled. Since this is a budget document, it does not actually lay out which lines would be cut. But we’ve been down a similar road recently, and multiple Georgetown lines were on the chopping block then. With a true bloodbath like WMATA is now proposing, though, we’d be extremely lucky to escape with only those cuts. Continue reading

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The Morning Metropolitan

Photo by M.V. Jantzen.

Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:

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The Georgetown Metropolis

Tudor Place

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Georgetown Time Machine: K St. Canal

This week for Georgetown Time Machine, GM visits a legendary event from Georgetown’s past: the Great Ice Flood of 1918.

The photo, taken February 15, 1918, shows the flooding along K St. through Georgetown. It was caused by a phenomenon called an ice dam. This occurs when a deep freeze is followed by a rapid thaw. What happens is that a thick layer of ice forms with the freeze, but then gets broken up by the thaw. The ice starts to float down river, but can quickly become jammed by bridge abutments, and other blockages. The jam then blocks the water flow and causes the river to rise over its banks. In the case of the 1918 flood, it caused catastrophic damages.

GM has written about this flood before, and the Post wrote a detailed account of how it occurred two years ago. But reading about it in the contemporary newspapers adds a whole new layer.

The flood was instantly compared with another huge flood in 1889. That flooding occurred in June and was simply the result of heavy rains. It caused half the National Mall to be flooded (all the areas within the dark blue line were flooded):

But back to the 1918 flood. The February 14th evening paper gave a blow-by-blow as the situation grew perilous:

By the next evening, the Washington Times was reporting photos of the scene of flooding along the Georgetown Waterfront, including the photo up top.

Although by this point, it was starting to play it a bit for laughs, as it compared Georgetown to the canals of Venice (which were still a war zone at the time):

This photo is one GM has explored before, but would have never guessed the exact context involved directing freight cars around:

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The Morning Metropolitan

Photo by Victoria Pickering.

Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:

 

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The Georgetown Metropolis

Washington Harbour

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ANC Preview: Jelleff Proposals

Tonight is the December meeting of the ANC. There are a variety of interesting topics on the agenda, but potentially the most interesting is a presentation by Perkins Eastman on the feasibility of renovating Jelleff Rec Center.

The aging rec center is in dire need of renovations. The facilities are extremely outdated and the building has terrible accessibility. The DC Council had budgeted $7 million at one point to provide the needed renovations, but then in 2019 the mayor proposed instead to spend $25 million to completely rebuild the center. It will be interesting, therefore, to see what sort of plans such a rebuild could entail. Log in to the zoom at 6:30 tonight to find out.

Some of those other interesting agenda items include the monthly crime update from MPD, a discussion on the DCPS schools reopening plan, and the installation of a bust on the pediment outside the Azerbaijan Chamber of Commerce building on Potomac St.

The rest of the agenda can be found here.

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