Photo by Mantislee.
Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
- Is Anacostia the next Georgetown? Probably not, but huge change is coming there regardless.
- Ridiculously swanky home on O St. for sale.
Photo by Mantislee.
Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
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A new neighborhood market is set to open today. Dent Place Market, at the corner of 34th and Dent Place, is replacing Le Petite Corner Store, a Turkish-flavored market that was open for years. The new market aims to take its place among the historic corner markets that once dotted Georgetown (and still exist, with Scheele’s and Sara’s). Continue reading
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Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
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Right now–for about $650,000–you have a rare opportunity to own a piece of Pineapple Place. Pineapple Place, of course does not exist. It exists only in the charming children’s story about a boy living in Georgetown who finds a mysterious lane “located” between 3414 and 3415 P St. where the ghosts of children from another age live. Although Pineapple Place doesn’t exist, a house from the street that inspired it–Pomander Walk–is for sale. (GM pointed out in 2015 when another one of the homes was for sale.)
GM only finally read the book this spring with his daughter. It really is a fun book for Georgetown history buffs. The author (who was actually Charles Lindbergh’s daughter) lived in Georgetown at the time she wrote the book (published in 1982). And real streets a locations of Georgetown of that time pepper the book. For example, the main character is enrolled at Hyde and plays in Volta Park. And in one section, the characters are transported back to Georgetown of the 1930s, with accurate locations mentioned. It’s a great book.
Anyway, the street that inspired the book, Pomander Walk, is really a special little street. It’s a group of ten tiny rowhouses on an even tinier alley. Sometimes they accidentally get called former slave homes (GM’s made this mistake) but they were built 1889-90 and as such came decades after emancipation. But they were clearly built for laborers. Of course they now host modern residents who have learned to live small. Continue reading
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Photo by John Weiss.
Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
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Yesterday, DCist ran in interesting piece identifying various unusual or notable trees around the District. Probably the most impressive on the list is the nearly 400 year old white pine bonsai kept at the arboretum. But several Georgetown trees make the cut too. Including the katsura trees at Dumbarton Oaks:
A couple Himalayan cedars, also at Dumbarton Oaks, and the massive tulip poplar on the northwest corner of Montrose Park (top photo).
These are all great trees, but GM wanted to highlight a few more notable trees in our neighborhood.
The first group are a couple of Chinese dawn redwoods planted at the P St. home of Sophia Owen.
These trees were planted by Owen in the 1960s, and if you get a good wide view of east Georgetown, you will see that they tower over all the buildings and trees. They now stand approximately 110 feet tall. If they’re left alone and healthy, they could eventually grow to over 400 feet tall. Continue reading
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Photo by Mike Maguire.
Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
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