speckatacular t1_iy50d1u wrote
Reply to comment by kirkl3s in In the 1900s, what were the most desirable neighborhoods in Washington, DC? How to they compare to the neighborhoods today? by Mtserali
Bethesda was the country back then! The Grosvenors, the founding family of the National Geographic Society, built a summer home in 1928 near where the Grosvenor Red Line Metro station is today.
https://images1.loopnet.com/d2/C1fHYmRpe1VPY5trgMBbYO1LBewUOJa84KMQw76iTLE/document.pdf
kirkl3s t1_iy512u4 wrote
I remember reading that Lincoln would vacation at the Old Soldier's home (a few blocks west of Petworth) to escape the city
cptjeff t1_iy5aaqg wrote
Yep. You can book your wedding there if you want. They've got a little Linconalia there, but mostly it's just the house itself, no furnishings or anything like that. Great place for events, lousy as a museum.
giscard78 t1_iy5japl wrote
If you go on the tour, they tell you he lived there for about three years and commuted to work everyday, mostly alone, on Old Bob. There is a statue of the pair.
[deleted] t1_iyb9yne wrote
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speckatacular t1_iycu79t wrote
I think it was in late 1940s? People had flocked to work in Washington because of the war, and there wasn't enough housing in the city proper. Also people wanted more room to raise their baby boom kids! But pockets stayed rural even after the housing tracts came in. The mascot of Walter Johnson High School on Democracy Blvd is actually a cow, because dairy cows used to roam the adjacent fields when it was built in 1956.
CaptainObvious110 t1_iye8ers wrote
Wow
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