This Might Not Be Great For Our Reputation

The Washington City Paper reported yesterday that a new bar/restaurant is coming to Georgetown called Apéro. It will takeover 2622 P St. And while Georgetown may have started to get away from its reputation for being only for rich people in the last couple years, this will surely set us back a bit: the bar’s specialty will be champagne and caviar.

As the City Paper writes:

Apéro’s food selection will include small bites like “little fried things” and some salads. Johnson, who as a culinary background, will execute the menu. Customers will be able to add caviar to any dish or order at least five varieties of caviar on its own.

“It’s a nice place for everybody to come grab a snack and a drink,” Benchimol says. “It sounds pretentious because of the Champagne and caviar, but it’ll be very approachable and still elegant. I want people to learn more about eclectic wines and grower Champagnes not from the big-name houses. It’s not, ‘Come in and spend $300.’”

Indeed.

This space has seen quite a lot of changes over the years. It used to be a church-owned thrift store. Then it was converted into the After Peacock Room, an artistically inspired restaurant, but that closed fairly quickly. It was later turned into 2622, a coffee house/salon (which is about the best use for the space in GM’s opinion). But that recently closed. Will a high-end restaurant succeed here? Time will tell.

 

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The Morning Metropolitan

Photo by Geoff Linvingston.

Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:

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The Georgetown Metropolis

1000 block of 33rd St.

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Where the Streets Had Old Names

Many readers are aware that most streets in Georgetown used to have names different from their current ones. In fact, GM has long wished the city would erect some mementoes to the old names on the streetposts themselves. But one thing GM has only recently began to wonder is this: where did those names come from?

A bit of history first.

Georgetown was established as a new town in 1751 in the colony of Maryland. Upon being established, the first streets and building lots were laid out. This is the first map of Georgetown (actually, it appears to be a 19th century recreation of the original map):

There were only a handful of street names:

  • What is now M St., west of Wisconsin Ave., was called Falls St.
  • M St., east of Wisconsin Ave., was called Bridge St.
  • Wisconsin Ave., north of M St., was called High St.
  • Wisconsin Ave., south of M St., was called Water St.
  • Confusingly, Water St. was called West Landing and Keys
  • Roughly where K St. is now was called Wapping
  • 33rd St., south of M St., was called Duck Lane
  • 33rd St., north of M St., was called West Lane
  • 31st St., south of M St., was called Fishing Lane
  • 31st St., north of M St., was called East Lane (each of these “lanes” were probably closer to alleys than streets)

After a series of land additions through the second half of the 18th century, the streets of Georgetown took the form that they largely still have:

This 1814 map shows a complete street grid for the neighborhood, and contains the street names that would stick around until the street renaming in  1879. (The names were changed to help incorporate Georgetown with the rest of the District of Columbia, although, to be honest, geography continued to make that incorporation pretty attenuated.)

Some of the streets didn’t quite line up with the Washington street naming convention, and so the old names remained. That’s why we still have Dumbarton, Olive and Prospect, for example. But most were changed.

This is a story that GM has been familiar with for quite some time. But it was only recently that he began to wonder, “but wait, why were the old streets named the way they were?”

Some appear, at least at first, to be fairly self-evident. Bridge St. was literally the street that led to a bridge over Rock Creek. And Market St. led to the Georgetown Market (which was near the current Georgetown market building, i.e. the former Dean and Deluca). Continue reading

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The Morning Metropolitan

Photo by Vincent.

Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:

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The Georgetown Metropolis

Montrose Park

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Missing Dumbarton Oaks in the Fall Hurts

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Every year around now, GM re-runs an article reminding people that Dumbarton Oaks in the fall is nearly as spectacular as it is in the spring. But this year we can’t enjoy it in person, whether we’re reminded to or not.

So GM will have to merely offer you this virtual visit. May it bring you some peace:

Dumbarton Oaks is well known for its spring displays of incredible seasonal bounties. But people often overlook how spectacular the acres of gardens are in the fall. Hurry up and catch it now before it’s gone.

But here’s just a taste. The wildflowers of the Herbaceous Border are breathtaking:

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The rest of the garden is at that magical moment when the gardeners loosen their grips and the plants give off one more explosion before the winter:

Dumbarton Oaks

IMG_5505 Continue reading

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The Morning Metropolitan

Photo by Geoff Livingston.

Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:

Just a reminder: I’m running for ANC for northwest Georgetown. If you live in that area, I hope you decide to vote for me! If you don’t live there, but know people that do, I would be grateful if you could let them know about my candidacy and encourage them to vote for me. Thank you!

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The Georgetown Metropolis

3200 block of M St.

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Georgetown Time Machine: GU’s Floating Boathouse

This week on Georgetown Time Machine, GM visits an oddity that once plied the waters of the Potomac: Georgetown University’s floating boathouse.

The photo, taken from the front page of the Evening Star from March 11, 1906, came to GM’s attention by way of a wonderful new research tool. It’s an image search tool now available for newspapers in the Library on Congress’s archive. You can plug in a subject, and the tool will identify photos containing that subject from hundreds of newspapers from 1900 to 1963. Continue reading

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