Photo by Omar Bárcena.
Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
- New water taxi with service between the new wharf complex and Alexandria starts this week.
- The Graham Hotel hooks up with Hilton.
Photo by Omar Bárcena.
Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
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Recently, GM finally got around to reading The Georgtown Set, the 2014 book about the power brokers who once lived in Georgetown, with a particular emphasis on the Alsop brothers. The book seems tog o out of its way to emphasize just how geographically close all these important people were who lived in Georgetown in the middle part of the 20th century. And in doing so, it repeatedly refers to Joe Alsop’s home on Dumbarton. Rather, it calls it Dumbarton Ave., not Dumbarton St. This brings up an issue GM has explored in the past, and the result of that is reprinted below.
But in summary, GM concluded that the official name for the road is Dumbarton St. For some periods throughout the last 150 years or so, it has been, at least, colloquially, if not formally, as Dumbarton Ave. The best GM can guess is that the odd old Georgetown street names that survived renaming were temporarily given avenue status (including, for example, Olive and Prospect). But that was only a fleeting designation. Continue reading
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Photo by Omar Bárcena.
Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
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Photo by Omar Bárcena.
Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
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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. Continue reading
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Photo by Omar Bárcena.
Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
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