Last week, the Washington Post published an article on living in Georgetown. It was a fairly anodyne piece focused on the real estate perspective. But it repeated a fairly common trope that GM tries (and fails) to dispel, from time to time:
Housing types range from condominiums and attached rowhouses to grand estates, many in the Federal and Georgian architectural styles.
This is wrong! There are very few Federal homes in Georgetown, and even fewer (if any) Georgian homes. You can re-read GM’s old series on architectural styles to understand what those terms really mean, but here’s a quick recap:
- Georgian: a style of architecture that was popular in the late 18th century. It is characterized by (among other things) dentil moldings, square lights (i.e. small windows) over the front door, pilasters beside the door, and double-hung windows with many small panels of glass.
- Federal: a variation on the Georgian style that arose in America after the Revolution. Shares many of the same features as Georgian, but it distinguished by Palladian windows and fan lights over the door.
You don’t have to have understood anything about those two paragraphs to grasp this more salient point: the Georgian and federal period of architecture ended by 1820. So any home built after 1820 is by definition not either Georgian or federal. And more over, it is almost certainly not stylistically of those groups either. Continue reading





















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