History

Old School Brookland: St. Anthony’s Anti-Freeway Poster

Posted in Brookland, History, Old School Brookland, Transit on October 31st, 2009 by brookland – 6 Comments

Douglas Willinger has been posting a lot of great information on his great blog A Trip Within the Beltway about the infamous 1-95 freeway that was to cut through Brookland and DC in the 1970s. Douglas’s posts containing images, posters, and other information from the Emergency Committee on the Transportation Crisis give an historical picture of local opposition to unwanted freeways cutting through the urban landscape and neighborhoods of Washington DC.

The above poster announcing “Mayor Walter E. Washington is Coming to Brookand” was likely for a 1968 or 1969 meeting against the freeway. It was sponsored by Brookland members of the Emergency Committee on the Transportation Crisis and the Brookland Civic Association. This poster is a great find, the original version can be seen along with other ECTC creations on on A Trip Within the Beltway

Also check out the DC Library’s Guide to the Records of the Emergency Committee on the Transportation Crisis, ca. 1960-1978 for more information. Plus there are a number of other Freeway Fights and Revolts from around the country for an even broader view.

Bloomingdale House Tour: Now Tomorrow, 10/25/2009

Posted in History, Ward 5, Washington DC on October 24th, 2009 by brookland – Be the first to comment

The Bloomingdale house tour that was originally scheduled for today Saturday 10/24/2009 has been moved to tomorrow Sunday 10/25/2009 because of the rain. It’s a good opportunity to see a few gorgeous victorian rowhouses near Brookland.

Its also a great excuse to check the Big Bear Cafe for great coffee, read about Big Bear’s commitment to sustainability. Also its this is a good opportunity to check out the always fantastic Bloomingdale Sunday Farmers Market, which I have to say is still my favorite farmers market in DC, others tend to agree.

Below is the tour’s logistics.

The Bloomingdale Civic Association Presents “Victorian Secrets”
A Fund Raising House Tour

Sunday, October 25, 2009
1 – 5:00 PM

This tour features 10 private homes in the Bloomingdale neighborhood – from a home that once housed nuns, to a home with an incredible garden oasis, to a North Capitol Main Street board member’s lovely abode, to the best rooftop view in DC! Afterwards, join the end-of-the-tour party at the Anna J Cooper house and enjoy fantastic food & the smooth sounds of jazz artist, and Bloomingdale resident, Maurice Lyles.

This is a fund raiser to benefit the Bloomingdale Civic Association’s cooperative work and commitment to the citizens of this community.

Tickets are $15 in advance, $20 day of the tour (children 7-12 ½ price, under 7 free) and can be purchased at Bloomingdale Wine & Spirits, 1st and Rhode Island Ave., NW, Mon-Fri and at Big Bear Cafe on the day of the event.

You may also contact J.C. Blount, 202/986- 2772, J.C. Bond, 202/328- 3068 or Laurie Choice, 202/797- 7407 for additional information or to volunteer.

Weekend Pick: Walking Town DC

Posted in Brookland, History, Washington DC on September 19th, 2009 by brookland – Be the first to comment
Walking Town DC

Walking Town DC

The fall Walking Town DC event this is weekend with lots of great tours in around DC. Much like previous Walking Town events Brookland and other NE locations have multiple tours. To bad there is no tour of Rock Creek Cemetery this time, but there are plenty of others including St Elizabeth’s East Campus, Congressional Cemetery, Civil Wars tours, and tours for neighborhoods like Brookland, Shaw, Takoma, Georgetown, among others. Its a good time and great way to get to know DC a little better.

Below is a short listing of some of the tours being offered this weekend.

Saturday September 19, 2009

  • Kenilworth Aquatic Garden Early Bird Tour Parks/Gardens 7:45 – 9 am
  • St. Elizabeths East Campus Tour – Past, Present, and Future Development 9 – 11 am
  • History of Brookland 9 – 10:30 am, 10:30 am – 12 noon, 12 noon – 1:30 pm,1:30 – 3 pm, 3-4pm
  • Walter Reed Army Medical Center and the National Museum of Health and Medicine Military 9 – 11 am
  • Before Harlem, There Was U Street African American History 10 am – 12 noon
  • Historic Anacostia African American History 10 am – 12 noon
  • Old Takoma Park 10 am – 12 noon
  • A Self-Reliant People: Greater Deanwood Heritage Trail Neighborhood Heritage Trails 10 am – 12 noon
  • Blagden Alley and Naylor Court Alleys 11 am – 12:30 pm
  • Congressional Cemetery Introductory Tour 11 – 11:30 am, 11:30 am – 12 noon , 12:30 – 1 pm
  • Barry Farm, Anacostia African American History 1 – 3 pm
  • Catholic University of America Campus Tour Universities 1 – 2:30 pm
  • Historic Tour at Twin Oaks Estate 2:30 – 3:30 pm

All Saturday September 19th Tours & Details

Sunday September 20th, 2009

  • H Street Alley Exploration Alleys 10 am – 1 pm
  • Kenilworth Aquatic Garden Tour Parks/Gardens 10 – 11 am
  • The United States Capitol Grounds – Olmstead Landscape Tour U.S. Capitol and Surrounding Areas 10 am – 11:30 am
  • Blagden Alley and Naylor Court Alleys 11 am – 12:30 pm
  • Gallaudet University Universities 11 am – 12 noon
  • History of Brookland 12 noon – 1:30 pm, 1:30 – 3 pm, 3 – 4:30 pm
  • Kingman Island: From a Theme Park to Parklands Parks/Gardens 12:30 – 1:30 pm
  • The Pleasures and Work of Immigrants in the Old Downtown 1 – 2:30 pm
  • History before History: The Geologic Saga of Washington, DC 1:30 – 4:30 pm
  • Historic Logan Circle 2 – 4 pm
  • Open the Door to Lincoln’s Washington Civil War 2 – 3:30 pm

All Sunday September 20th Tours & Details

Beyond Brookland: McMillan Sand Filtration Plant

Posted in Beyond Brookland, History, Old School Brookland, Transit, Washington DC on August 15th, 2009 by brookland – 2 Comments

The McMillan Sand Filtration Plant is a 25 acre parcel of land that is part of the McMillan Park along with the McMillan Reservoir located in the Bloomingdale neighborhood in NW Washington DC. The site is located just below the Washington Hospital Center complex and between 1st NW and North Capital.

The land was in active use until about the mid 1980s. The filtration plant was innovative for its time. Sand was used to purify and filter 75 million gallons of water per day for Washington DC. The McMilllan Reservoir located across 1st Street from the filtration plant is still in active use.

The reservoir was part of the McMillan Plan developed by the McMillan Commission, both were named for Senator James McMillan of Michigan . Some of the greatest architects of the day served on the commission including Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. who designed McMillan Park which was intended to be part of the city’s park system.

The very unique looking “structures” are silos used that were part of the sand filtration system and washed the impurities out of the city’s water supply. The vines and plants located on the silos were intentional and placed for aesthetic purposes.

The plant itself sits on top of hollow vaults of sand running the length of the property and over 15 feet deep. The vaults only light is from the entrances and the 5000 or so man hole covers located on top of the vaults. Most of the sand used for the vault was donated from James McMillan’s home state of Michigan.

The site is destined for development and there is a plan to redevelop it in the near future. The plant is very unique from a historical and architectural perspective and one hopes at least some of that will be preserved when the site is redeveloped.

Below are a number of additional photos of the McMillan Sand Filtration Plant taken during a recent tour.

McMillan Filter Plant Sign Photographer The Shrine from McMillan Chair in a McMillan Vault McMillan Silos Underground In a Vault Water in a Silo Underground Door Deteriorated Vault Entrance Vines Green Vines Flower Vehicles Keep Off Grass (Man)Holes Water Plants Good View In Emergency Break Glass Building with Vines More Vines Door with Vines Vault Entrance Vine Mania Rusty Door Door Hinge Vault Entrance Broken Door McMillan Girl Steps Fence & Geese

View the complete photoset


Old School Brookland: Photoset from Back in the Day (1979-1984)

Posted in Best of Brookland Avenue, Brookland, History, Images of Brookland, Old School Brookland on July 25th, 2009 by brookland – 8 Comments

Brookland photo collection from Sean Parks a Chicago native and current windy city resident who was a former long time Brookland resident from 1961-1996. Sean lived predominately on Kearny street and attended Slowe Elementary, St. Anthony’s Elementary, Archbishop John Carroll High, and Catholic University. While attending CUA Sean picked up a camera with serious intent and he’s been shooting ever since. His fantastic photos can be seen at seanparksdesign.com and on Flickr.

Sean’s photos for Brookland and DC give a a complete sense of nostalgia for the neighborhood at that time. Below are are selection from the series My Home Town by Sean Parks

Murry and Paul’s 1984

Great Hopperesque photo inside Brookland’s own greasy spoon on 12th Street.

Sterling Brown 1980

Below is caption from Sean about the above photo and about meeting Sterling Brown.

Mr Brown was a poet and retired Howard University professor when I lived a just a few doors down from him.
One day he invited me to come by later that evening and meet a friend who was visiting. When I arrived he introduced me to a very flamboyant and cape clad James Baldwin, who along with a documentary film maker, was helping to chronicle the migration of blacks from the Deep South to Harlem.
I won’t ever forget that evening, which was rich with ideas and conversation, nor will I forget Mr. Brown’s kindness to a young man just starting out in the world.

The Brookland Area Writers and Artists have a good write up about Mr Brown Including a great response to a Washington Star article about Brookland. Wikipedia also has a entry on Sterling Brown

Lefty’s 1983

Before it was Bobby Q’s, before it was Nate’s Comfort Zone it was Lefty’s.

Brookland Shoe Sign 1983

Brookland shoe repair while you want.

Brooks Mansion 1983

Great shot of Bellair the former residence of Colonel Jehiel Brooks commonly referred to as Brooks Mansion.

Newton Street 1979

Photos of the Mediterranean style house on Newton street that was made into apartments after World War II. Still one of my favorite houses in Brookland. Look closely and you can see a woman next to the house.

Early Morning Sweep 1983

Early morning street sweeping in Brookland.

Late for School 1983

Neighborhood kids on their way to school.

Kearny Street 1979

Great high contrast black and white shot of Kearny Street with snow in 1979. I wonder if this is from the 1979 blizzard I remember as a kid.

Deadly 1906 Washington DC Train Wreck Near Fort Totten

Posted in Best of Brookland Avenue, Brookland, History, Transit, Washington DC on June 25th, 2009 by robert.malesky – 3 Comments
Map of village of Terra Cotta in modern day Fort Totten

1890 Map of Terra Cotta

The Metro subway crash that killed nine on Monday was not the only serious accident on that stretch of track. On December 30, 1906, one of the country’s worst railroad disasters occurred about a half mile away — on what was then the Metropolitan Branch of the B&O Railroad. On that day, at 6:30 in the evening, train #66, a local coming from Frederick, Maryland, was stopped at the Terra Cotta station. Terra Cotta station no longer exists, but was about where the Fort Totten station of the Metro sits today. Train #66 had three passenger cars, all made of wood as most were a century ago, and it was pretty full. Behind it was a deadhead train, #2120, with a big locomotive pulling six empty passenger cars.

It was a foggy night, and track signals were not easy for the train crews to see. Just as train #66 was beginning to pull out of the station, train 2120 slammed into it, apparently going full speed, about 65 miles per hour. The heavy locomotive tore through the passenger cars, sending debris and bodies flying on both sides of the track for a quarter mile.

Although Terra Cotta was called a village, it wasn’t much more than a few houses, with the large Potomac Terra Cotta Company occupying most of the land around the tracks. Brookland was really the nearest community, about a mile away. Here is the way the Washington Post described it the next day:

“The scene after the accident was terrible. Bodies were hurled on every side. A heavy fog hung over the scene, making it difficult to see far. The many acts of heroism and self-sacrifice that were performed will never be known. Mothers were robbed of their children, husbands lost wives, and wives husbands. Parents died before the eyes of their children, and saw little ones mangled beyond recognition.

There was little of the wrecked train left. The monster engine had done its work of death and destruction thoroughly. On either side of the track were great piles of debris, and buried in it were men, women, and children. A quarter of a mile from where the collision took place the last vestige of the wreckage was found. It was a high pile of debris, and buried far under it were the bodies of two women and a child. A neatly gloved arm protruded from the debris.”

Many Brooklanders did what they could to help.  Rev. Edward Southgate of St. Anthony’s was one of them.  He spoke to the New York Times the next day:

“We have now in Brookland,” said Father Southgate of St. Anthony’s Church, in Brookland, the first priest to reach the wreck, “a little baby, not much more than a year old, whose mother was evidently killed, and who was picked up alongside the track and brought into Brookland.  The little thing is not hurt bodily, but no one knows her name or where her relatives may be.  A kind woman is taking care of the child.”

Frank Kuntz was a Catholic University student. Though he was home for the holidays the day of the crash, his friend and fellow student, Brawner Hetfield, lived in Brookland and was near the tracks that night.  In his book, Undergraduate Days 1904-1908, Kuntz relates what Hetfield told him of the disaster:

“Then came a terrible noise which he described as a combination of an explosion, escaping steam, breaking wood, groaning brakes and human screams. It was so loud that it could be heard on the campus and all over Brookland, as well as any place within a mile or more of the crash. According to Brawner, the gateman yelled “My God! She’s wrecked!” That was all Brawner needed to start him up the railroad tracks at a pace calculated to cover one mile at the best steady speed.

In a few minutes he came to a huge locomotive, hissing leaking steam. In the darkness he could vaguely make out its engineer running around in circles, wringing his hands and crying, “I swear, I thought it was on the siding where it belonged.”

A conductor in the little ramshackle station was yelling into a telephone, “The excursion train was not on the siding where it should’ve been, and we rammed clear through it! Send ambulances, doctors, and nurses as quickly as you can! And wreckers to clear the tracks!”

“And priests!” Brawner shouted to him, and the conductor repeated Brawner’s words into the phone.

Brawner saw the watchman of the terra cotta plant near his shanty and asked him if he could use his telephone to get help. Brawner dialed the University’s number, which he knew, and soon had a divinity student at Caldwell Hall on the line. Brawner told him that the tracks at Terra Cotta were strewn with dead and badly injured and asked him to get as many priests from Caldwell, the Marists’, the Paulists’, and Holy Cross as he could to come over to the wreck…

Soon a few priests left Caldwell and were joined at the Marists’ by two more carrying lanterns…Meanwhile, Brawner called his pastor at St. Anthony’s Church in Brookland and, knowing he had no rig, asked him to bring a doctor with him since doctors did have rigs…

Soon telegraph and telephone lines all over the country were humming with the news, and people were jamming the Brookland-bound trolleys. A locomotive with a searchlight and wrecker came out from Washington carrying many newspaper reporters.

Brawner kept busy helping priests and doctors move the dead and injured from the tracks. All told, there were fifty-three killed and nearly a hundred injured, and it was daylight before all the injured and dead were removed…

The priests from Caldwell, Holy Cross, the Marists’ and the Paulists’ did heroic work under appalling conditions and deserve to be remembered for the inspired work they did.”

Four men were charged with manslaughter – the engineer, conductor, brakeman, and fireman of train 2120. After a lengthy trial, the jury found them not guilty, saying there was not enough evidence to convict. Still, the Interstate Commerce Commission laid the blame on those men and the signal operator at Takoma Park, claiming all were negligent and not following proper procedure. As a result of the Terra Cotta wreck, the ICC banned wooden body passenger car construction. What changes might WMATA make to prevent future accidents of the kind that killed nine people on Monday?

This post was written by Bob Malesky, a 40 year Brookland resident and CUA alum. Bob and his wife lived in several parts of Brookland before settling on Newton St. Bob spent over 30 years working as a producer at National Public Radio and is currently working as freelance writer/producer.

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