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History

This history of the Palisades Community Association was prepared by Harold Gray for its 40th anniversary celebration in 1956 and updated in 1966 for the PCA’s “golden anniversary celebration” by Ruth Hall.

Pre-Colonial Period

The first people to enjoy the good life here at the head of navigation were the Powhatan Confederacy—a group of more than 30 Algonquian-speaking tribes—who could fish both the placid tidal waters and the turbulent upper river. They had villages down in the Potomac Gorge as well as atop the bluffs. No one knows when the first Native Americans settled in the Palisades, but history does record that in 1608 captain John Smith was the first white man to reach the Potomac’s navigable headwaters.

The Colonial and Federal Periods

The Colonial period has left several traces in our community. Remnants of a lock of George Washington’s original Powtawmack Company Canal still are visible near Fletcher’s Boat House. This early canal merely bypassed Little Falls and was largely obliterated when the canal that we know today was built.

Nearby the old stone house on Canal Road at the foot of Reservoir Road was restored by the National Park Service. This was the home of the Cloud family, who operated a mill there on Maddux Branch and were related to the Pierce family—famous for their mill on Rock Creek.

A short distance up Reservoir Road, at No. 4928, stands the Colonial manor house, Whitehaven Plantation. Beautifully restored initially by Dr. and Mrs. E. Stuart Lyddane, it is believed that this house was built in 1754. The Carberry family once lived there and later built the original house of the former Nelson Rockefeller estate at 2500 Foxhall Road. Another early occupant of Whitehaven was Thomas Main, a noted horticulturist, who often had his friend Thomas Jefferson as a guest. When the name “Whitehaven” appears on the deed to houses in this area, it is because the lot is within the 759 acres of that old land grant that goes back to Lord Baltimore in 1689.

Like Georgetown, our neighborhood also had houses of the Federal period, except that ours were farmhouses. One of the best examples was the Boyle house (4452 MacArthur Boulevard). This house originally faced Foxhall Road before Conduit Road—renamed MacArthur Boulevard in 1942—was opened. It was built by the Crowns and purchased by the Boyles. One Boyle daughter and her husband, the Joseph Fowlers, still lived there in the 1960s. The Boyles previously lived at Casey’s Hill, which is the present site of Key School and the Dana and MacArthur shopping area. Daniel Boyle, who was born there, lived on Galena Place.

Another Federal Period dwelling was the Amberger farmhouse at 5239 Sherier Place, which was the home of Mrs. Frances Walsh in 1960. The Ambergers operated a truck farm there and developed a new kind of lettuce. Old timers referred to the vacant lot along lower Arizona Avenue as the “lettuce patch.” Mrs. Joe Amberger’s daughter, Mrs. Mary Braswell, represented the third generation of this pioneer family and lived on Chain Bridge Road in 1960.

The original Sherier farmhouse at 5066 MacArthur Boulevard was purchased by Conrad Sherier in 1850, which placed it in the Federal Period, but a Victorian addition to the front hid the original lines. Another farmhouse of this period was the Weaver or Hughes house once located at Cathedral and MacArthur. It was build around 1860 and replaced by a Georgetown-style apartment building. It is said that the old house was a hospital during the Civil War, used by Union soldiers who guarded a Chain Bridge approach to Washington. These soldiers were stationed at Battery Martin Scott along the bluffs where Potomac Avenue now runs, at Battery Vermont on the Loughboro Road site where Sibley Hospital now stands, and at Battery Kemble, now the park.

Agricultural ERA

The Weaver brothers were prominent early farmers who bought land here in the 1850s. Joe Weaver’s farm was below Conduit Road and Charles Weaver’s place was up the hill on Loughboro Road at the present Lowell Street. The also called their farms Whitehaven since they were within the old land grant. There were so many Weavers around here that three streets were named after them. Once was changed to Arizona Avenue years ago, but we still have Weaver Terrace to remind us of the pioneer family. The Weaver descendants moved to the city and to the Georgetown area and founded the Georgetown Gas Company, the hardware store, and the Weaver Brothers real estate firm.

After the Civil War, the Weavers provided plots of land for their former slaves on Chain Bridge Road and what is now University Terrace. One of the freed families, the Cephuses, served as sextons of the black cemetery on Chain Bridge Road and continued to work for the Weaver descendants for many years.

Mrs. Augusta M. Weaver, widow of Charles, was a gifted writer and has left in the family chronicles some beautiful descriptions of the 18 years she lived at Whitehaven during and after the Civil War. She tells how the soldiers from Battery Kemble overran the place and helped themselves to firewood and anything eatable. She also recorded many legends of Little Falls and folktales of the Potomac Valley, and she wrote stirring word-pictures of the scenery around these hills.

The various Sherier families in the community were descended from Mike and John Sherier, sons of Conrad, the original settler, whose farms lay on lower Chain Bridge Road. Their lands were bisected by Sherier Place—somehow or other an extra letter “r” was added to the street name. The Mike Sherier farmhouse was moved to 2428 Chain Bridge Road, but Mark Sherier, who was born in the house, lived at the original location at 5016 MacArthur. Mr. and Mrs. Mark Sherier’s daughter and her husband, Roy Studd, built their house right next door. Paul Sherier, who lived “up the road a piece” at 5361 MacArthur, was also born in the old farm house. John Sherier built his place on the upper corner of Chain Bridge and Conduit roads. His son Charles returned to it after some yeas in the city, and his home was sometimes used as a meeting place for two area churches, St. Davids and the Community Church, before their own buildings were constructed. This site at 5005 MacArthur Boulevard is now occupied by the St. John’s Child Development Center. The original St. David’s was build on Sherier land just across the road.

The Malone family’s ancestors, the Shugrues, operated the Palisades Dairy Farm at what is now the corner of MacArthur and Arizona. In the days before commercial dairies, their contented cows grazed all over the nearby hills and supplied milk to several embassies. John and Jeanette Malone were born on this farm and though the meadows and barns are long gone, they lived on the original acres until the late 1950s. After five generations, the site is now occupied by the First National Bank of Washington.

Another pioneer family of the rural area was the Crumbaughs. Their home, though not the original house, at 3027 Arizona was restored by Bill and Kay Everett in the 1960s. Mrs. Roy Connick, a great-great-granddaughter of that “first family” remained in our area until the 1950s.

The Knott families farmed or lived in this section before the real estate promoters came. George T. Knott ran a dairy farm where the Fulton Street Circle is now located. A relative, William Knott, who was born in this area, moved to 5216 Sherier in 1912 and his widow lived there after his death for many years.

Charles Davis ran a florist business and hot house farm at 2710 Chain Bridge Road. His widow, who was born on the hill now called Palisades Lane, and his daughter lived on the original farm site for many years.

The Readys ran a farm at what is now MacArthur and Q Street that extended clear up to “Indian Rocks” at Salem Lane. Grandson George Ready built a house there, and granddaughter Agnes Ready Holliday moved only as far away as Hawthorne Place.

In 1866, the Lightfoots bought a 14-acre farm on Foxhall Road called Terrace Heights. Mrs. Mary Lightfoot Bradford was born there in the house once called Uplands. In 1916, she moved to a “new” house on the property and in 1960 still owned one of the original acres. The big house was owned or occupied by the Averell Harrimans, Thomas Fortune Ryan, Mrs. Perle Mesta, and former Secretary of the Treasury Humphrey, among others.

Industrial or Commercial Phase

The industrial or commercial phase overlapped the farming period. The first industry was Henry Foxall’s 1812 cannon foundry on the Potomac at the mouth of Foundry Branch. The creek is now in a pipe but other traces remain. The Foundry Methodist Church took its name from Foxall’s foundry because his profits helped finance the church. Foxhall Road was named after this early industrialist, but added and “h” to his name in the process. Mr. Foxall’s house stood between that road and the present 44th Street at P Street. The house as 4435 P Street contains foundation stones and floor joists from the ruins of the Foxall home.

During the heyday of the C&O Canal there was a lot of mule-drawn shipping and commerce on both the canal and Canal Road. And there was a family in the neighborhood descended from lock-keepers on the canal. Mrs. Ada Atkinson was the daughter of the King family who operated the locks just above the District Line for three generations.

The dean of the descendants of that period was the late Enoch Barnes who was born in 1879 in a house at Canal and Chain Bridge Roads. He lived on MacArthur Boulevard less than a mile away from his birthplace until his death in 1960. For many years he ran the meat department at Fox’s market. He attended the one-room school, which housed the Palisades Branch Library until November, 1964, and is now Discovery Creek Children’s Museum of Washington, and worshiped at the Little Falls M . E. Church which stood at Canal Road and Arizona. His brother Joseph, who lived way up on Dana Road, worked in the stone quarries across the river, and Joseph’s son Charles lived on the old site on University Terrace.

In those days there were four or five slaughterhouses on Foxhall Road and at least two on Canal Road. There was a huge drovers yard at Reservoir and MacArthur overlooking the Georgetown Reservoir where the cattle and sheep were rested and fattened for slaughter after being driven on the hoof from the distant Maryland and Virginia farms. The Drovers Rest Tavern stood about where Our Lady of Victory Church is now located. Mrs. Katherine Woody of 5100 Sherier reported that her grandfather-in-law ran a slaughterhouse at the food of Reservoir Road. Reed’s slaughterhouse was just below the present Field House and was operated by Mrs. H. D. Johnson’s father.

Old maps show that in the early days the only roads existing were Foxhall Road (then called Ridge), Reservoir Road (then called New Cut), Loughboro Road (often called Little Falls Road), Chain Bridge Road and Canal Road. There was a short lane coming up the valley where Arizona Avenue is now located, and another lane in the Clark Place Valley. Conduit Road, later renamed MacArthur Boulevard, was opened in 1863 after the Aqueduct was built and provided a level terrace for the roadway. The “Dana Place Road” soon followed. One block of this old wagon road still remains between Eskridge Terrace and Garfield Street.

Summer Resort Stage

The canaling period overlapped with the summer resort stage of our community’s development. Many of the cliff dwellers in the hot cities of Washington and Georgetown built summer or weekend cottages out here on the palisades and enjoyed the cool country air and the recreational advantages of the city. Col. Robert Curtiss, an early officer of our community association, first came out here as a summer resident during his childhood.

Two fine examples of the summer resort houses remain in a charming sylvan setting a the end of private lanes in the 5300 block of MacArthur. These were the homes of former secretary of the association: Miss Dora Shepard and Mrs. Anna Maren Stringfield. The resort period is best typified by Fletcher’s’s Boat House, once operated by Julius Fletcher, grandson of the founder. He, too, was a resident of the community.

During the summer resort days, a bicycle racing track was located about Newark and Sherier and at the District Line on the present Dalecarlia Reservoir grounds stood a hotel, which among other things, had a gambling casino. This period was also noted for the road houses, taverns and saloons that existed along both Conduit and Canal Roads.

Early Subdivisions

The first subdivision shown on old maps was at MacArthur and Foxhall in 1880. It was named Harlem after the town in Holland at the time that the community of the same name in New York City was a German neighborhood.

Hurst and Clark’s Addition soon appeared in the area of Clark Place, Elliott Place and Greene Place. The lands of Mrs. Minnie Greene Hospital’s father were broken up for that development. Next came old Senate Heights on the 47th Street hill.

Around 1890, The Hutchinses, Hursts and Clarks came from Canada and opened the first of our large subdivisions called “Palisades of the Potomac” around V. W. Ashby, 48th and 49th Streets. They planned it as an expensive suburb with homes of the type then being build on the Hudson above New York and built several large Victorian houses. The Clarks lived in the house at 4759 Reservoir Road, that became the Florence Crittenton Home in 1923, and later The Lab School. The Hursts lived in the huge stone house at 4933 MacArthur which was restored later by Col. John Duke. The Hutchins’ home was at the present site of the Army Map Service. Another of these houses at 4925 MacArthur Boulevard was the home of Charles A. Baker, the first president of PCA. It was later occupied by the Washington Psychoanalytic Society.

Another house of that period, “Sunnyside,” at 4825 V Street, was originally restored to its Victorian elegance by Elmer and Minnie Klavans.

This development was started about the same time as Chevy Chase. Old-timers tell us that the Chevy Chase promoters spread the rumor that it was unhealthy to live near the river because of malaria. This and other factors caused the home seekers to flock northward and the boom passed us by at the turn of the century. Meanwhile, the Palisades of the Potomac Land Improvement Company had opened three more developments — one at Hutchins Place, another around the present Field House, and a large one on the former Charles Weaver farm along Cathedral, Klingle, Macomb, Manning and Watson above MacArthur. This inland trend caused the Canadians to suffer financial difficulties and they did not develop their fifth tract on the Joe Weaver lands. To encourage growth, 25-foot lots were sold and houses began to appear on them.

The Glen Echo electric railroad, promoted by the Clarks, was opened around 1900 and helped the section to grow. Dorsett Jackson and Maupin from North Carolina organized the Potomac Heights Land Company and opened a subdivision of the same name on the site of Clark’s old bicycle track, formerly the Joe Weaver farm. This development was more successful and it gradually filled up with houses. Mr. Jackson lived in his development until his death.

The Serrin ancestors operated an inn on Canal Road and moved to the first block of MacArthur Boulevard in 1875. Two descendants remained there in the 1960’s: Mrs. Florence Serrin Thompson and Lawrence F. Serrin. The late Mrs. George C. Smith was a daughter of that family but her husband did not move to this section until 1910.

The Harringtons lived in the vicinity of Our Lady of Victory Church in Civil War times and were the first and second superintendents of Georgetown Reservoir. Several descendants moved to the vicinity of MacArthur and Foxhall including Ray and Catherine Harrington still there in the 1960’s.

Another early family in the suburban development era was the Drysdales. James Drysdale continued to promote the “Highlands of the Potomac” on upper Cathedral Avenue after the Clarks moved away. The Binsted clan came from Canada as carpenters with the Clark enterprises, and the family later operated a neighborhood gas station, today the Exxon station.

The Episcopos acquired a half block of Sherier Place in 1898 and they and their children lived their for years. Ralph Hile built the first “new” house on upper MacArthur in 1911 and was there in the 1960’s. Miss Mary Lazenby built on Nebraska Avenue in 1912 and, until her death in the mid-1960’s, served the community with her civic activities and her scholarly writings about the area.

Mrs. Eva Steimer came in 1915 as Mrs. Repasz, becoming quite a civic leader and boosting our community all over town. She served in many offices in our Association, declined the presidency several times and was our delegate to the Federation. She also helped to create many of the other neighborhood organizations.

Mrs. Mary Cochran moved to Carolina and Cathedral in 1917 and was an active community and church worker for many years.

Some of the other early home builders who contributed to the community were the Hamiltons, the Kellermans, the Kidwells, the Carters, the Drakes, the Lynches, the Statts, the Rectors and the Saylors.

Modern Subdivisions

The various stages of our growth would not be completely chronicled without mentioning the high type homes built by most of the post-war builders as typified by the Frank S. Phillips Company. Mr. Phillips went into hilly, long-dormant lands and created show places of suburban beauty. His “Briarcliff” and “Berkeley” subdivisions were built in such good taste that the entire Palisades area has benefited greatly. Until his death in the 1960’s, he followed the tradition of earlier promoters of our community by residing in it.

In a similar manner, the Phillips, Canby & Fuller Company, builder of “Kent,” and Waverly Taylor, developer of the “Dunbarton” subdivision, have added greatly to the prestige of the overall Palisades area as a most desirable residential section.

Other builders and developers who followed them including William Morrison, Raymond Regan and A. L. Wheeler, continued to upgrade the community with their homes.

The dreams and predictions of the Canadians and the Carolinians who first promoted the palisades of the Potomac did indeed come true.

With each stage of development, our area has become a better, more comfortable, more convenient, more desirable place in which to live and to raise a family. None of us need to move to the booming suburbs. Our environment here is greener, more rural, more scenic, more wholesome, more friendly, and has less traffic than many of the sprawling new developments far removed from the center of our nation’s capital.

When families outgrow their homes in our community they can move from apartments to cottages, to large houses, and even to mansions and estates with swimming pools without ever leaving the Palisades. Many of our families have made just such moves in order to stay in the area. Here we have houses for all sizes of families, and pocketbooks. The young married children of some of our families are starting that cycle all over again–and staying in the Palisades. This makes for a stable community.

What caused the high standards and the ever-increasing popularity of our community as a residential section? The answer is its people, and its citizens association, which, through several changes of name, has worked continuously to improve our area.

The following comments were offered by Richard Cook, the author of several books on Glen Echo history:

The line that ran by (through) Palisades was the “Washington and Great Falls”. It began operation in about 1896-1897 and closed in 1961. There was a “Glen Echo Electric Railroad” (which) ran from Tennleytown, through Friendship Heights, where it crossed into Maryland, and on to Glen Echo Heights through the woods entirely in Maryland. The line operated from 1890 to 1901.

A review of Ward 3’s history is available here.

Past PCA Presidents

Listed below are the presidents over the past 50 years with some of the Association’s accomplishment during each administration. But bear in mind that the presidents alone were not solely responsible for these achievements. Many hundreds of people–officers, committee members and Association volunteers–put in many hours of time over the years to achieve our objectives. Too numerous to mention, their names appear in the Association’s records, and to all we say “thanks a million.”

Conduit Road Citizens Association

On October 2, 1916, about 50 residents of the upriver section met in the Parish Hall of St. David’s Chapel at Conduit and Chain Bridge Roads and organized the Conduit Road Citizens Association. Mr. C. R. Morris acted as temporary chairman, and the citizens adopted a constitution and elected officers. Mr. s. T. Dorsett, one of the Potomac Heights developers, was active in getting the organization under way. There were 44 charter members, although the list of names has never been found.

C. A. Baker, 1916-1920, was the first president. During his term of office, membership rose to 150; the average attendance was 40-6- people. The leading projects were the securing of water mains, sewers, gas mains, systematic house numbering, and trash collection. The Association worked for a modern school, better trolley service, and the widening of Conduit, Reservoir and Foxhall Roads, but these were not achieved for a number of years. It also sought the conversion of the Potomac Valley into a park and the opening of Prospect Avenue or N Street past Georgetown University into this area, but never succeeded. Our first president was president of the D.C. Federation of Citizens Association, 1922-24, and a member of the Citizens Advisory Council.

L. E. White, 1920-22, secured improvements to the old Conduit Road and Reservoir schools, and urged a branch library. Several neighborhood dances and social evenings were held.

J. D. Smoot, 1922-24, got some street lamps erected and several streets graded and cindered. Sponsored the first PTA in the area at the Reservoir Road, and secured the promise of a fire engine house.

Cora Van Sant, 1924-25, continued to secure city-type improvements for the convenience of residents.

Robert E. Adams, 1925-27, secured Residential A Restricted zoning for our whole area except the spots of commercialism, continued working for new schools, and started alternating the meetings between St. David’s and the new Community Church.

William F. Dement, 1927-28, worked to keep residential zoning and began asking for bus service. Construction of Key School started. Palisades Garden Club organized.

Samuel P. Hatchett, 1928-29. Key School opened, and PTA organized. Branch Library opened in the one-room school house at 4954 MacArthur Boulevard.

Clyde S. Bailey, 1929-30, secured many improvements, retained residential zoning, and held band concerts in Potomac Heights Park at Macomb and Carolina. Started the fight for a new Chain Bridge. Secured adequate illumination on Conduit Road.

W. A. Sell, 1930-31, started working for a playground and field house, urged a high-level bridge at Little Falls, held come meetings in the new Key School.

Ernest S. Hobbs, 1931-32, got more streets paved, continued agitation for widening Conduit Road, and got the play field opened at Palisades Park. Card parties and dances were held.

Lucien Jordan, 1932-33, organized a Boy Scout troop, had a community Christmas tree. Widening of Conduit Road begun.

Col. Ellis R. King, 1933-35, started alternating meetings among St. David’s, the Community Church, and Our Lady of Victory. Hardy School was built, Reservoir, Foxhall and Conduit Roads were finally widened, and demands for a field house were continued. Stopped working for a high-level Chain Bridge, and switched support to rebuilding the bridge on its old low location.

Frank T. Shall, 1935-36, had another community Christmas tree, got the Field House authorized, and campaigned for a new library.

Charles E. S. Rich, 1936-38, dedicated the Field House on September 11, 1936 and it became the Association’s permanent meeting place. American Legion Post was organized, and a Recreation Council recommended.

Walter D. Cunyus, 1938-39, dedicated the new Chain Bridge on June 17, 1938, kept working for a new library, started asking for the opening of Weaver (later Arizona Avenue) to Loughboro Road, and for a gymnasium at the Field House.

Grady P. Oakley, 1939-1940, sought better bus service, high residential standards and conducted Halloween parades and recreational events at the Field House.

Thomas V. Regan, 1940-41, secured removal of a dilapidated house at MacArthur and Reservoir and conversion of the land into a small park. More and more streets were paved.

Macarthur Boulevard Citizens Association

Curtiss E. McGhee, 1941-43, organized Civilian Defense; changed name to MacArthur Boulevard Citizens Association to match Conduit Road’s new name; tried to get the center islands of the Boulevard landscaped; and started a series of fights to keep liquor stores out of this predominantly residential section lest they be the opening wedge for taverns.

Gordon M. Atherholt, 1943-47, started the drive for a Loughboro-Nebraska bus line; defeated liquor license applications; resigned from the Federation of Citizens Association; urged removal of the children’s Industrial Home from Loughboro Road; gave party for returned service men in cooperation with the local Civilian Defense group, but failed to get the wartime fence removed from around the Georgetown Reservoir.

Dr. John T. Montieth, 1947-49, established a recreation committee which resulted in the organization of the Palisades Community Recreation Council; rejoined the Federation of Citizens Association; launched a constitutional revision.

Robert R. Hershman, 1949-50, adopted new constitution; resumed community Christmas trees; inaugurated monthly “Bulletin”; defeated more liquor license applications; launched intensive membership drive; established businessmen’s committee; changed the Association’s and the community’s name to “The Palisades” and adopted the emblem which appears on our monthly Palisades News and our stationery.

The Palisades Citizens Association

Harold Gray, 1949-1950, popularized new community name; increased membership canvassing by a Japanese beetle control drive; started monthly Newsletter; systemized some street names and house numbers and initiated a “Beautiful Homes Contest:–an idea adopted city-wide by the Federation of Citizens Associations a decade later. Secured Foxhall playground and more land for the Field House; defeated more liquor applications but failed to get express buses routed over the Freeway. Served as president of the Federation of Citizens Association, 1957-59, and in March 1960 was awarded The Evening Star Trophy for outstanding civic activities. Chairman, Interfederation Council of Washington Metropolitan Area, 1961-63.

Lawrence J. Mills, Jr., 1954-56, defeated more liquor applications; continued the block system of membership solicitation; established the Committee for a Clean Potomac which has become the region-wide Citizens Council for a Clean Potomac; and launched drive against low-flying airplanes. The Palisades Lions Club was organized.

William C. Nichelson, 1956-58, secured installation of beacon light for planes at Chain Bridge; supported $69 million school bond issue recommended by Superintendent of Schools; successfully opposed expressway 240 through The Palisades; Lewis zoning plan approved, deleting proposed new commercial zones and restricting entire Palisades area to one-family detached homes on 50 or 75 foot lots except sites already zoned commercial or low-density apartment.

James W. Anderson, 1958-61, sought new branch library; persuaded National Park Service to buy Baltimore property at 5136 Sherier Place; opposed bridge at Arizona or Nebraska Avenues; won a U.S. Court of Appeals ruling that a citizens association has the right to sue in liquor license cases; secured rush hour bus route down M Street and Virginia Avenue; favored constitutional amendment giving District Citizens the right to vote for President and Vice President; opposed D.C. Transit fare increase; purchased and presented to Field House National and D.C. flags; continued to oppose low-flying planes.

Lewis H. Ulman, 1961-62, continued support of low level Three Sisters Bridge and opposition to Arizona Avenue bridge; requested D.C. Commissioners to make available to our Association detailed information required for taking intelligent position on highway proposals; testified before House Subcommittee on Appropriations urging funds to be included in 1963 D.C. budget for new branch Library and opposing Three Sisters Bridge and Potomac River Freeway until complete highway plans demonstrate need for them; First National Bank sought rezoning to build branch; secured traffic light at MacArthur and Loughboro; and urged Fairfax County Board of Supervisors to reconsider apartment zoning of Merrywood tract.

Ruth Aull, 1962-64, defeated rezoning of 3 * acre tract south of Reservoir for high-rise apartment; reaffirmed opposition to high level Three Sisters bridge and reiterated request for detailed information on highway proposals; requested the Park Service not to establish a storage and maintenance depot at Clark and Elliott Places; campaigned to preserve our old library building–the lat one-room school house in D.C.–for Children’s Museum; requested official survey to determine whether the Palisades area is entitled to Branch Post Office and , after favorable survey completed, attempted to get lease-back proposal submitted to the Post Office Department.

Richard England, 1964-66, supported development of rapid transit program; reaffirmed our position that no additional bridges or expressways be built until need clearly demonstrated; withdrew from the Federation of Citizens Association because it voted to retain the world “white” in its constitution; new Palisades Branch Library dedicated; urged that police emergency number be changed to one easily dialed; opposed Park Service maintenance facility at Clark and Elliott Places; supported proposed 2-year junior and 4-year liberal arts colleges for D.C.; opposed jet aircraft operating out of National Airport and urged FAA to fully use Dulles Airport’s facilities; planted tulip and daffodil bulbs at various locations in median strip of MacArthur Boulevard, and won and honorary certificate from Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson’s Committee for a More Beautiful Capital.

William G. Smith
Arthur Watson
Dan Moskowitz
Robert Archer
Nancy Feldman
Marcia Allen
Sally Fallon
Penny Pagano
Cary Ridder
Erik Gaull
Stu Ross
William “Spence” Spencer
Bill Slover
Steve Waller
Nick Keenan
Avi Green
Tricia Duncan
Jenny Wieroniey