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Petworth

Petworth is a residential area located in Petworth, a neighborhood of residential homes in the Northwest part of Washington, D.C. It is bordered in the East by the Armed Forces Retirement Home and Rock Creek Cemetery, to the west by Arkansas Avenue NW, to the south by Rock Creek Church Road NW and Spring Road NW, and to the north by Kennedy Street NW.

The area is mostly residential and has a mixture of single-family and terraced houses. It is accessible via the Georgia Avenue-Petworth train station located on the Green Line and Yellow Line of the Washington Metro. Petworth has two historic areas of green space, Rock Creek Cemetery and the Lincoln Presidential Cottage in the Soldiers’ Home.

Historys

Petworth is the title used to describe the country estate belonging to John Tayloe III, likely named after the town of Petworth in West Sussex, England. The estate was located near the northwest corner of 7th Street Pike (later known as Brightwood Avenue, now Georgia Avenue) and Rock Creek Church Road, and was left by his son Benjamin Ogle Tayloe. In 1887, the estate was sold by the heirs of Tayloe 1887 to developers for $107,000. In 1889 developers were able to register “Petworth” with the district surveyor as a 387-acre parcel of subdivision that included the previously-owned Tayloe estate and the Marshal Brown estate. In 1893, other real estate deals were formed “West Petworth,” from the west of Brightwood Avenue, including the Ruppert Farm, which was sold at $142,680 and in addition to the 20-acre Burnaby tract, as well as 14 acres of property known by the name Poor Tom’s Last Shaft. It was in 1900 that Henry J. Ruppert sold another 31.7 acres to the west of Brightwood and Iowa Avenues and south of Utica Street (now Allison Street) to the district to fund the construction of a municipal hospital.

In the early 1900s, expanding the streetcar line across Georgia Avenue to the border of Silver Spring, Maryland, helped make Petworth much more easily accessible. EZ Bed Bug Exterminator Washington DC

Many of the neighborhood’s tens of thousands of brick row homes was built through Morris Cafritz and by D.J. Dunigan Company in the 1920s-1930s. The Dunigan Company donated land, which later was used as the site of St. Gabriel’s Church and School, which is located next to the Grant Circle.

Community

Locating a neighborhood that has an enthralling sense of community, such as Petworth, in Washington, CO is a challenge. Petworth is called porch culture, where residents walk around the streets and greet their neighbors. It’s a place where people have a sense of community by borrowing sugar from the next-door neighbor or participating in events like the no-cost Petworth Jazz Project and the Celebrate Petworth Festival. At this festival, it’s difficult to determine if the residents are friends or family.

Petworth Community Market is a very popular social gathering place. People gather to support local farmers and artisans every Saturday, from May through November, while stocking with the weekly necessities. Live music plays while residents visit, eat, and shop.

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