NGS SGI '91 Field Trip Notes
National Geographic Society's
Summer Geography Institute (June - July 1991)
This document was last updated on 02 April 2001 (Ver. 1.2)
© Greg E. Nelson
Sometimes I hear the BBC news on WAMU, 88.5 FM, in the evenings, or CBC talk show. I told Jill B about listening to CBC and she asked about the fires there. I believe the golden panicles like those trees found in New Harmony are at the corner of 18th & I St., on GWU campus. We walked home last night past the Student Health. GWU is huge, has some interesting buildings. Just not time to see everything!
We "peeled back the years" and talked about the Potomac, C & O Canal, tobacco, wheat. If you have to carry a crop more than two days, consider changing the crop. Wheat-flour, corn - whiskey, or the method of transporting it. Water transportation became essential to earn dollars. With the opening of the Erie Canal, for example, the price of cartage dropped from $100 per ton to $10 per ton. Great Falls, up river from here (Washington Harbor) was a huge barrier to transportation. With the introduction of water to Los Angeles, the population grew from 1,000 (in 1900) to 500,000 (in 1920) due to irrigation / potable water. One story is that $1 billion has been lost here in this Harbor area. Without fertilizer, tobacco is a shifting Third World agriculture, very labor intensive. We see here why Pentaquat [ we'd been reading Michner's Chesapeake ] wisely realized how his lifestyle was changing forever. The C & O Canal here was begun by G. Washington and stretched 184 miles to Cumberland MD, not that far from Pittsburg. The C & O was used for a century, beginning in 1824. Barges were broken up here and the lumber was sold. Dead heading was difficult. The canal began to lose its importance as some of the RR was built.
In 1871, Georgetown MD became the Port of DC. The New Deal era helped it grow, becoming a funky place to live. Today, a 900 [square] ft. real estate [property] will cost $800,000-900,000. When has land use intent failed? There are examples of that all around us. The Japanese now own Washington Harbor; some talk of turning it into something like Baltimore's harbor.
Look at the gentrification. Have fun, talk with your group leader (Cathy), have some cool drinks, lunch. Enjoy the atmosphere and challenges, reconvene near the Georgetown Mall at 2:15 for a sharing / debriefing.
Washington Harbor, fountain, shops, flood barrier, elevated highway - my sketch
The sign on the red brick building across from our interview, Jefferson & K Sts., was "Jefferson Court MCMLXXXIV". We walked up Jefferson Street with Cathy Riggs-Salter, and our group then crossed the old C & O Canal, and I got pretty excited as I'd read about it, [and] seen old photos. The canal is now a tourist site here, has 90 minute rides, barges pulled by donkeys. We saw where they had been. Cathy gave us the second part of the field walk [handout], which included a scavenger hunt, see handout, map, which we are to bring to our debriefing, 2:15. We looked around the C & O. I want to return, then [we] walked up the hill to M Street.
We had mid-morning break with fruit juice and apple croissant at Au Croissant Chaud, 3222 N Street. [I] used Cirrus Atar [ATM] across the street. [We] walked over to the Old Stone House, (1765), 3051 M Street, and its beautiful garden in the rear. I passed an old fish shop with fresh seafood on display, past the Georgetown PO, 31 & N Street. We saw some beautiful old row houses, [set into] long narrow lots. One of the Qs was re real estate. We found out that real estate runs $135-215 [square] ft. with places running 900-3500 ft. in size. Fire marks in the old days indicated that the family had their fire insurance paid.
Sketch of Doorway detail, 3256 N St. NW
We talked about the role that landscape played in such a neighborhood. See also notes from May-June 91 trip to D.C. There is gentrification in [the] landscape. Mike Mulligan is in the basement of...
The Potomac Cafe, for example, serves Greek food. We saw the Strassi Gallery, former home of Marbury, owner of [the] home made famous by "Marbury verses Madison" Supreme Court Case. We were enticed into a below M St. Italian Restaurant for pasta and drink, away from the hot sunny pavement. Our group included: Bob A, Kathy S, Eric E, Susan B and myself. Deb R (TC from TX) and some of her friends wandered in later, and we gave them a tough time.
We had already been to the Georgetown Art Center, 1046 Potomac, and looked at old maps, lithographs, and postcards. Bob purchased over $100 of prints, while the rest of us were more restrained. We ended up under a shop covered porch for debriefing, but not before visiting Dream Dresser shop nearby. The D.D. is like some places in Kobenhavn.
We walked back to Washington Harbor, after our group talk. I did some reading while Angel took a nap. At 7:00, we were all nicely dressed, took the Metro to Farragut North, walked past NGS and Sumner School to the Governor's House, Holiday Inn, about 1 block north of Sumner/NGS on 17th St. We saw Bob S and Chuck G there, as well as other Alliance Coordinators. Some of us had a little bit of jealousy, having to share our wonderful SGI friends with people we didn't know. We got to meet a number of ACs and enjoyed our talk. We talked about our ASGI for next June, and I felt pretty confident in knowing what is involved. Our own SGI, TCs weren't there much. We had pizza & pop.
After our meeting, I worked on Mac project files at Sumner until about 11 PM, then ... later, back at the dorm, I spoke with some 'Glades Residents who were relaxing.
Thanks to Marie Nelson for typing up these notes on her Apple //e, summer 1991.
Back to Greg's Home Page Back to WebQuest Lessons Go to field trip notes for 18 - 22 July 1991.
(WQsgi910713.html)gen 02 April 2001