Historical Vignettes
Oral Histories Map
Brian Kraft created the Washington DC Oral History Map through a grant from the DC Oral History Collaborative. The intention is to collect and better organize online histories and make them more accessible to the public. Use the black button on the right side of the map to open the map in a new tab. Zoom and pan around the map. Click a point to get a pop-up, then click the link to the online oral history. The oral history might be a transcript, video, or audio recording.
For more information, visit Brian Kraft’s Visualizing DC History: Making and Mapping Historical Data
Capitol Hill House Histories
The Capitol Hill Restoration Society is in the process of acquiring histories of Capitol Hill houses and interesting facts about Capitol Hill properties. These documents may be accessed by links contained in the pdf file: Database of Capitol Hill Houses listed here. New addresses will be added to the list as warranted. Recent additions to the database are listed here, with links.
- Park Street NE 1880 Census
- 320 & 625 East Capitol St, (Senate & Conchran’s) Tourist Homes
- 1017 C Street SE
- 810 D Street NE
- 415 East Capitol St. SE Society of Woman Geographers Headquarters
- 24 9th St. NE – written by owner; includes history of the Rothwell (builder) family
- 529 6th Street SE
- 423 6th Street SE (Carbery House)
- 219 A Street SE & Terrace Ctourt SE part1 part2 part3 part4 part5 part6 part7
- 122 5th Street SE
- 705 E. Capitol St. SE
- 229 10th Street SE
- 819 D Street NE (9th St. Christian Church)
- 801 North Carolina Avenue NE (Christ Our Shepherd Church)
- 800 H Street NE
- 647 South Carolina Avenue SE
- 200 Ninth Street SE
- 202 Ninth Street SE
- 228 East Capitol St Sleuthing an Old House
- 228 East Capitol St
- 906 East Capitol St
- 323 A St SE
- 812 C St SE
- 609 Constitution Ave NE
- Elliott Street NE
If you have an electronic copy of a house history please submit it to the webmasters at chrs420@gmail.com
If you have a paper copy please contact Deborah Bell via e-mail (ionic_order@verizon.net) or phone: 202.744.8700
Photos of houses in selected squares: chrs.org/the-capitol-hill-photo-project/
Free searches of house histories through the Washington Post.
The Database Of Capitol Hill Permits also may be accessed here as an Excel spreadsheet. The Excel spreadsheet is divided between Northeast addresses and Southeast addresses and then sorted by street and address. Note that Streets 10 and above sort before 2nd Street. The spreadsheet may be downloaded and sorted.
Hill East History Project
“The Big Three Rowhouse Builders: Howenstein, Jameson, and Kite” by Beth Purcell is in the July Newsletter. Big 3 Rowhouse Builders and Big 3 Rowhouse Graph.
Looking Back
A Series of Historical Vignettes by Nancy Metzger
One of the parochial schools that became a public charter school this summer is the Holy Comforter-St. Cyprian School at East Capitol and 14th Streets, SE. Perhaps some Capitol Hill residents were puzzled by the name ‘St. Cyprian,’ since both the church and the school were torn down in the 1960s when the Catholic Diocese combined the congregation with that of Holy Comforter Church and sold both buildings to developer Barrett Linde, who constructed rowhouses on the sites.
When institutions are merged and properties demolished, it is sometimes difficult to find a trace of their former existence except for perhaps a plaque marking the spot, some photographs, and individual memories and stories. Indeed there is a plaque in a small triangular park in front of where the handsome stone church once stood at 12th and C Streets, SE. There are undoubtedly many photos of the church, but one of the best—a 1949 photograph of the choir boys in their robes entering the church—is in the Wymer collection at the Washington Historical Society. And many Capitol Hill residents have their own memories of the church, which began in 1893 as an all-black congregation for those who felt less-than-wholly accepted at other neighborhood parishes.
St. Cyprian’s School and Convent stood four blocks west of the church, at Eighth and C Streets, SE, across from the Hine School playground. The Atkins family, long associated with St. Cyprian’s Church, gave that land for a Catholic School for black children. There is no plaque marking the school’s existence, but a magnificent oak tree protected by a low stone wall remains in the alley, behind the 1960s rowhouses, an amazing survivor that sheltered the school and convent.
The photographs shown here were taken by Sylvia Cotter, a former Capitol Hill resident, when the building was being demolished in the 1960s.
The memories come from Helen Ogle Atkins, who married into the Atkins family in 1935 and lived at 823 C Street, SE, one of a series of houses owned by her mother-in-law, Marion Atkins. Helen Atkins’s husband worked in the Post Office at night and in real estate during the day, and his parents had a stall at Eastern Market. In a 2005 interview for the Overbeck Oral History Project, Helen Atkins, then 97, talked with Pat Driscoll about her life on Capitol Hill, her love of theater, the difficulties of living in segregated Washington, and her career teaching in DC public schools:
ATKINS: You know about St. Cyprian’s? … It was a lovely church at night. My mother-in-law. She was a big worker in that …the Atkins people did a lot, they put in a lot of money. They gave all to the Blessed Virgin and they gave property for the school. …The Atkins family gave the land for a school for colored children, that didn’t have any, a Catholic school for colored children. They gave the land with their family homestead on it.
DRISCOLL: When did they homestead?
ATKINS: I don’t know. It was before my time. …When I got there, they had already given it, you know. …
DRISCOLL: How did the family feel then when the Archdiocese sold it?
ATKINS: [The Bishop] came in and told her that he was going to sell it. Was nothing that she could say or do. …I think she was hurt. …
DRISCOLL: I sure would be…. And there was a wonderful old tree. I don’t know what kind of tree it was, but it was a great big tree in the St. Cyprian courtyard, in back.
The complete interview with Helen Atkins can be found at www.capitolhillhistory.org. An interview with Georgiana Barnes by Sharon House, on the same website, tells more of the story of St. Cyprian’s School.
The Michael Shiner Diary
The Diary of Michael Shiner, Slave and Freeman at the Washington Navy Yard,1813-1869
Relating to the History of the Washington Navy Yard
Presented by Geneaology Trails. Transcribed and edited by : John Sharp ©