Leaf Collection Season Begins Soon

The city is rolling out its annual fall leaf collection effort very soon. Like last year, the collecting will occur in stages, depending on your location. So please read on!

Georgetown is split into two zones for these purposes: 2C and 2D. The letters are all that actually matter. So basically if you live east of Wisconsin, you’re in group C and if you live west of Wisconsin, you’re in group D.

The way it will work is that when you’re time comes, you are instructed to gather all the leaves that you want collected (including leaves from street trees) into the tree boxes on your block. If there are no tree boxes by your house, just rake them into a pile by the curb. You do not need to bag the leaves.

To avoid people gathering the leaves too early and them simply blowing or washing away, the city is not publishing a pick up schedule ahead of time. You will be alerted with a door hanger and online two weeks ahead of the pick up time. (I’ll also try to give you a heads up). You will be given a date at which point the leaves should be gathered. For what it’s worth, the city is starting with group A at the end of October.

There is a map to track the progress here.

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The Morning Metropolitan

Halloween

Photo by Victoria Pickering.

Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:

  • I poked my head into Osteria Mozza this weekend and an employee gave me a tour and said they’d be open the second week of November.
  • Some more business ins and outs.

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Fall Market This Weekend

Georgetown Main Street’s annual Fall Market is returning this weekend! The events will take place along Wisconsin Ave. from N St. up to Reservoir Rd. It will include over 34 businesses. And there will be an activity hub at the Chase Bank lot with pretzels, kettle corn and books!

More information here. See you there!

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The Morning Metropolitan

2024 Army Ten-Miler 2

Photo by M.V. Jantzen.

Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:

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The Morning Metropolitan

Halloween

Photo by Victoria Pickering.

Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:

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Ghosts of Georgetown’s Market Past

At our last ANC meeting, the house at 2900 Dumbarton St. came up for review. The owner is interested in converting it to several apartments. But what caught my eye about the property is that it is clearly another example of a former commercial building buried deep in the residential portions of Georgetown. I decided to resuscitate my long dormant series called Ghosts of Georgetown’s Market Past to dig into the history of the building!

But first: why did I instantly conclude that this was originally a commercial building? It’s due to the fact the door opens up horizontally on the corner. It is literally a corner shop. That almost always indicates that the building was constructed to host a shop on the first floor (often with the shop keeper living on the second). It’s also probably not a coincidence that the building is catty-corner to Scheele’s.

So I dove into the local newspaper archives to see what I could find. And right away I learned that while it was a commercial building, the business operating there was not a market. At least not during the period I could find evidence for. It was a real estate office:

Here is another announcement:

Hill bought the agency in 1942. I was able to find only a couple more ads listing this office’s address:

Perhaps the reason I only found a couple of ads using this office address is that Hill appears to have stopped using it only a year later:

Oddly enough, I ran into a dead end trying to find older businesses at this address. But then I realized that Hill changed the address of the building. Previously it was 1326 29th St. Searching that address opened up the history. As I originally suspected, it did host a grocery store. At least as of 1918 when a Mrs. L.P. Bernsdorff operated a market there.

A year earlier it was apparently the R.W. Thompson grocery store:

But most of the hits I found for this property related to the rental apartment on the second story. And as this was near the hear of Georgetown’s Herring Hill district, the housing was used by Black families:

I could find no references to a commercial establishment at either address after the 1940s. So It appears the property was a grocery store in the early part of the 20th century, converted to a real estate office for a stretch around the 1940s, and then it either was used for an office or otherwise converted wholly to residential.

Hill lived into her nineties, dying in 1985:

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Georgetown Time Machine: Whitehurst

In honor of the Whitehurst turning 75 years old this week, I wanted to re-run an article I wrote exploring an old photo of the throughway when it drove over a much more industrial Georgetown waterfront.

This week for the Georgetown Time Machine, GM visits this photo of a relatively young Whitehurst Freeway. Come check out what interesting scenes it contains.

The first question is of dating. The DDOT website does not list a date, so it will take a little sleuthing. First of all, the Whitehurst wasn’t built until 1949, so that’s the earliest point. In the distance, as discussed more below, the old Huerich Brewery still stands. That was demolished in 1961 to make way for the Roosevelt Bridge. Also, that large white building that’s in front of the Washington Monument is what is now the Saudi embassy. It was built in 1959. So this photo is from between 1959 and 1961.

The first striking thing about this photo is how the waterfront was a rail yard, there’s even a caboose down there:

The next most obvious it is the massive Capital Traction Power House, which looks a little worse for wear with so many windows smashed out:

The main reason it was smashed up is that it wasn’t in operation anymore. It stopped providing power for the streetcar system in 1933, and was decommissioned in 1944. It nonetheless sat an empty shell until it was demolished in 1968.

GM always laments its loss. It could have served as a wonderful civic space had it been preserved. Look at this interior:

Ah well…

As mentioned above, that noticeable white building in the upper left is what is now the Saudi embassy:

But it didn’t become the Saudi embassy until 1983. Before that it was the headquarters of the People’s Life Insurance Co., which constructed the building in 1959:

What you’ll also notice is that you can actually see this building from Georgetown, which you can’t do anymore. That’s because the Watergate isn’t in the way yet. That wasn’t built until 1964.

And finally, as mentioned above, the last significant structure to notice is the late, great Heurich Brewery:

Here’s a better view:

As also mentioned above, it was sadly demolished in 1961, which must have been just a couple years after the photo was taken.

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The Morning Metropolitan

Biden

Photo by Victoria Pickering.

Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:

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Used Book Sale at the Library

There will be a used book sale at the Georgetown library later this month. Here are the details:

Thousands of donated books will be for sale the weekend of Oct. 19-20 at the Georgetown Neighborhood Library, 3260 R St. NW. Of special interest: 40 brand-new historical fiction and nonfiction books for seventh through ninth graders donated by a judge for a prestigious literary prize.

Saturday: Public admission 11am-4pm. Hardcovers $4, paperbacks $2.

Sunday: Admission 1-3pm. All books half-price or fill your shopping bag for $10. 

Proceeds go toward library programs.

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The Morning Metropolitan

2024 SHOP 9

Photo by M.V. Jantzen.

Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:

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