Petworth, Washington, D.C.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Petworth is a neighborhood in the Northwest quadrant of Washington, D.C., bounded by Georgia Avenue to the west, North Capitol Street to the east, Rock Creek Church Road to the south, and Kennedy Street NW to the north.
The neighborhood was originally the site of two separate country estates outside of Washington City: Petworth, the 204-acre estate of Col. John Tayloe, and the 183-acre Marshall Brown estate, which eventually also became the property of the Tayloe family. In the late 1880s, after the estates had become part of the city, two real-estate investment partnerships purchased the estates for development. The neighborhood bloomed with the expansion of the streetcar line up Georgia Avenue (then known as Seventh Street Extended or Brightwood Avenue) from Florida Avenue (Boundary Street) to the Washington DC line at Silver Spring, Maryland. [1]
Many of the thousands of similar brick row houses in the neighborhood were constructed by Cafritz Builders and also by D.J. Dunigan Company in the 1920s. Dunigan personally donated the land that became the site for St. Gabriel's Church and School adjacent to Grant Circle.
Today, the neighborhood is primarily residential with a mix of townhouses and single-family homes. It is served by the Georgia Ave-Petworth station on the Washington Metro Green line.
[edit] External links
- Petworth Neighborhood Website
- Petworth News blog
- "Prince of Petworth" Blog on Life in Petworth and the Life Absurd
- Grant Circular: A Petworth Neighborhood Magazine
- Mapping from Multimap or GlobalGuide or Google Maps
- Aerial image from TerraServer
- Satellite image from WikiMapia