28 Sep 2009

Lost Capitol Hill: William Tunnicliff and His Two Taverns Pt. 2.

The story of William Tunnicliff’s taverns continues this week, as Tunnicliff abandoned his Pennsylvania Avenue location for a much better site nearer the Capitol, then under construction. In this week’s post, he plays host to two important names in the new capital, including the President of the United States. Follow me over the jump for […]


21 Sep 2009

Lost Capitol Hill: William Tunnicliff and His Two Taverns Pt. 1.

Tunnicliff’s Tavern is a popular Hill watering hole that has been a local favorite since the early 1980s. Its name, however, has a much longer history reaching back to before Washington was the capital of the country. From the mid 1790s, during a ten-year period, a man named William Tunnicliff ran taverns that were important […]


14 Sep 2009

Lost Capitol Hill: The Temporary Capitol

During a hearing in 1962 Representative H. R. Gross asked a witness “You have heard that old saying, Mr. Macy, that there is nothing so permanent in Washington as something temporary, have you not?” It was hardly a new sentiment at the time; one reason why the temporary structures built during WWII were made to […]


07 Sep 2009

Lost Capitol Hill: Chicken Coops

There has been a lot of interest in the trend  of keeping backyard chickens of late, with numerous articles on the subject appearing in papers around the country — and even here on the Hill. There are also websites and a trade  magazine devoted to the subject. For many people, it is a reminder of an earlier […]


24 Aug 2009

Lost Capitol Hill: Eastern Branch Market

With the reopening of Eastern Market, it seems only right to look at the pre-history of what is again the center of our neighborhood. Long before Cluss built his masterpiece, there was another market, one which L’Enfant had planned into his earliest drawings of Washington DC: Eastern Branch Market. In 1791, it made sense to […]


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