Monthly Archives: October 2025

Capitol Hill Ghost Walk – Photo Essay

Capitol Hill Ghost Walk – Photo Essay

by Larry Janezich

Posted October 27, 2025

Last Friday night, Capitol Hill historian Robert Pohl lead a tour of Capitol Hill’s reputed haunted houses, sponsored by the Capitol Hill Restoration Society for its members.  Here, at the tour’s beginning on Eastern Market Metro Plaza, Pohl related the story of the haunting of the US Capitol’s old House Chamber (currently Statuary Hall) by John Quincy Adams, who returned to the House of Representatives after serving as President of the United States. 

A house across from the Marine Barracks at 822 G Street, SE, was owned by a curmudgeonly career Marine named “Old Howard.”  After his passing, the family rented it out to successive tenants who reported the presence in the house of a poltergeist – presumably “Old Howard” – who would move the bed around the room while it was occupied.  Old Howard’s restless spirit eventually departed the premises.

The Marine Commandant’s House at 801 G Street, SE, is reputed to have three ghosts:  Two sergeants who in 1814 were directed to hide the Barrack’s payroll on the grounds before departing to try to halt the British army’s advance on Washington (where they were killed in the battle) and the ghost of Archibald Henderson known as the “Grand Old Man of the Marine Corps” for his record 38-year tenure as Commandant who by his causing his portrait to fall off the wall during a reception, seemed to be protesting the admission of women to the Marine Corps as clerical workers. 

The John Phillips Sousa House at 636 G Street, SE, was the occasion for relating the history of the Marine Band leader and the claim that on foggy days, the “lonesome sound of the Sousaphone can be heard over Congressional Cemetery,” where Sousa is buried.  (On November 6, the Marine Band remembers Sousa with a birthday concert at his grave site in Congressional Cemetery.)

The MPD 1st District Substation on Marion Park was the site of the murder of an MPD police captain by a disgruntled officer in the late 19th Century, which could be the genesis for the report of a late night appearance of a solitary dripping wet figure who entered the front door of the station and disappeared through a locked side door.

The hour-plus long tour became darker figuratively as well as literally near the end which was at The Maples, at 619 D Street, SE.  One of the oldest houses on Capitol Hill, The Maples was purchased in 1871 by Emily Edson Briggs, the first female reporter in the here-to-fore all male Senate Press Gallery.  Briggs’ husband died shortly thereafter.  His widow, who continued to live in the house, began experiencing unexplained sounds of weeping and piano playing which culminated  in evidence of a slept-in guest room bed and a presence – and departure – marked by the leaving of a single pearl on the bed’s pillow.  The peculiar happenings ceased after the pearl incident.  A possible connection, Pohl suggested, was the ghastly suicide in the house of a friend of the wife of a previous owner.  That owner, one Augustus Nicholson, the Marine Barracks Quartermaster in the 1840s, was by all accounts a bounder, who had been keeping company with another woman, Sally Carroll, who he married six months after his wife’s suicide. 

Robert Pohl is the author of “Wicked Capitol Hill: An Unruly History of Behaving Badly”

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The Week Ahead…& Some Photos from the Past Week

The Week Ahead…& Some Photos from the Past Week

by Larry Janezich

Posted October 26, 2025

Wolfgang Puck’s Place in Union Station.  Here are some photos of where Wolfgang Puck’s restaurant is going to be in Union Station, and a rendering of what it’s going to look like.  It will be at the top of the escalator – which from the mezzanine – will lead UNIQLO on the west end of Union Station.

On the right hand side of the up escalator in the space formerly occupied by Pizzaria Uno is where you’ll find Wolfgang Puck’s BAR + Bites.

And here’s an architect’s rendering of what it’s going to look like.

Construction Update on SE Library Renovation.  Photos from the DC Library’s October 23 Construction update – a view of the skylight from the historic entrance on 7th Street, and the view from the inside looking toward the historic entrance.  (Apparently the postings on the bulletin boards inside the historic entrance will be last to go of the interior features of the original libarary.)

Inside the universal entrance at the South Carolina Entrance at street level. 

Photo of the glass façade and canopy at the South Carolina Avenue Entrance. For more, go here:  SE Library Construction Update for October 23:  http://bit.ly/4noq3yI

Triple Candies’ monthly installations in the former Li’l Pub at 655 Pennsylvania Avenue, SE.  For nearly 50hears, DC artist Betsy Packard has transferred the objects she encountered in her life into art:paintings made from dryer lint; tapestries sewn with used clothes and hair clippings: and toys.  Accoring to curators Triple Candies, her work references Constructibism, Surrealism, Pop Art, Nouveau Realism, Fluxus, Feminist Art, etc.  Triple Candies is a research-oriented curatorial agency run by art historian co-founders Shelly Bancroft and Peter Nesbett. 

The Week Ahead….

Highlight:  Monday, ANC6B Public Safety Committee discussion with DC Attorney General Brian Schwalb.  7:00pm.  See below. 

Monday, October 27

ANC6A Community Outreach Committee holds and IN PERSON meeting at 7:00pm. 

  • Location:  1207 H Street NE (Old Autozone Building).

Among items on the draft agenda:

  • Announcements and Reminders: People’s Front of H Street, Sunday Clean ups in 6A01.
  • Meet your ANC Commissioner.
  • FreeDC with COC Member Ashley Blake.

ANC6B Public Safety Committee will hold a hybrid meeting at 6:30pm. 

Physical Location: 700 Pennsylvania Ave SE, 2nd Floor – Conference Room #2 (Entrance Adjacent to Trader Joe’s)

Among items on the draft agenda:

  • Briefing from MPD 1st District (Captain Crist).
  • Discussion with DC Attorney General Brian Schwalb.
  • Planning for next meeting.

ANC6B Southeast Library Task Force will hold a hybrid meeting at 6:30pm. 

Meeting location will be 700 Pennsylvania Ave SE; Second Floor, Conference Room #1 (entry adjacent to Trader Joe’s).

Among items on the draft agenda: 

  • Update on renovation from Jaspreet Pahwa, of the library system (DCPL), & from Terri Bosnick, of general contractor Whiting Turner.
  • Discuss progress on maintaining & expanding access to the interim library at the Arthur Capper Recreation Center, 1000 5th St., SE.

Tuesday, October 28

ANC6A Alcohol Beverage & Cannabis Committee will hold a virtual meeting at 7:00pm.

For info on how to join the meeting, go here: https://anc6a.org/community-calendar/

Among items on the draft agenda:

New Business

November and December meeting dates/Call for new Chair (needed beginning Jan 2026)

Liquor license renewals:

Class C tavern license with Brewpub Entertainment and Summer Garden endorsements at Henceforth DC, 1335 H Street. NE.

Class C tavern license at Providencia, 1321 Linden Court, NE.

Class C tavern license with Dancing Entertainment and Summer Garden endorsements at Sushi Sato, 1245 H Street, NE.

Class D tavern license with Entertainment endorsement at Solid State Books, 600 H Street, NE.

Class C tavern license with Entertainment endorsement at The Little Grand, 808 7th Street, NE.

Class C tavern license with Entertainment and Summer Garden endorsements at Copycat Co., 1110 H Street, NE.

Class C tavern license with Cover Charge Dancing and Entertainment endorsements at District Alley on H at 1378 H Street, NE.

Class C tavern license with Dancing Entertainment and Summer Garden endorsements at Pie Shop, 1339 H Street, NE.

Class C tavern license with Entertainment and Summer Garden endorsements at Sol Mexican Grill, 1251 H Street, NE.

Class C tavern license with Entertainment endorsement at Allure Lounge, 711 H Street, NE.

Class C tavern license with Cover Charge Dancing and Entertainment endorsements at Ethio Vegan, 1362 H Street, NE.

Class C tavern license with Cover Charge and Entertainment and Summer Garden endorsements at Little Miss Whiskey’s Golden Dollar at 1104 H Street, NE

Thursday, October 29

ANC6C Grants Committee will hold a virtual meeting at 7:30pm. 

Among items on the draft agenda: 

  • Discuss structure of Final Reports.
  • Online template for applicants to fill out.
  • Discuss increase in Grant funds from ANC.
  • Report on outreach efforts.

Capitol Hill Corner would also like you to know about: 

Saturday, November 1

CHRS House Expo Set for Saturday, November 1, in the North Hall of Eastern Market.

  • The Expo connects homeowners with contractors & experts.  Free House Expo is hosted by the Capitol Hill Restoration Society (CHRS) , from 9am to 3pm  Saturday, November 1, in Eastern Market’s North Hall.
  • For more on CHRS, go here:  https://chrs.org/

Sunday, November 2

Día de los Muertos at Congressional Cemetery

Ongoing:

  • Folger Library Tours:  Tuesday – Friday | 11:30am – 4:30pm | Each tour lasts 1 hour.  We invite groups of all ages to sign up for guided tours of the Folger’s building and grounds. All tours are led by experienced guides who can share details about the Folger’s collection, the architecture of the building, and fascinating facts about Shakespeare, his world, and our own.  Priced at $25 per person with discounts for student groups, tours must be booked at least two weeks in advance. Special student experiences are also available for classes.  http://bit.ly/43t0LYS

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Navy Secretary Withdraws from Navy Museum Land Swap

Map of the proposed land swap. The deal involved exchanging a 15 acre parcel of land in the SE corner of the Navy Yard (blue at lower right) for a 6 acre GSA parcel just outside the NW corner of the Navy Yard on M Street SE (red at upper left). 

Secretary of Navy John Phelan has withdrawn the Navy from the land swap agreement it forged with the DC city government announced last year to construct a “National Museum of the United States Navy” near the Navy Yard.  

This news came from former Secretary of the Navy, Kenneth Braithwaite, who serves as the chair of the Naval Museum Development Foundation, as first reported in Tuesday Tidings, the newsletter of the National Maritime Historical Society.  See the October 21, 2025 edition of the newsletter here: https://seahistory.org/education/navyhistory/)

During a Q&A session in last week’s annual “Congress” of the Naval Order of the United States  held in Philadelphia, Braithwaite announced that Secretary Phelan has pulled the Navy out of the deal for construction of the long-awaited museum, halting his fundraising efforts pending identification of a new site.  The Navy had expected to open the museum by 2030.

Last October, city officials, including DC Deputy Mayor Nina Albert, attended a ceremony at the M Street site to celebrate the construction of the museum, envisioned as “an enduring memorial to honor the service of American Sailors, inspire selfless service, and enhance public understanding of the Navy’s history and heritage.”  See here:  http://bit.ly/3WSv7jR

No other details were forthcoming, though Tuesday Tidings added that “an overview of previous sites considered for the Navy Museum will be provided in next week’s TT.” During the selection process, 42 potential sites in 18 cities were considered for the location of the museum before the Navy chose DC. Other candidates included San Diego, New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Boston and Norfolk. 

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The Week Ahead…& Some Photos from the Past Week

The Week Ahead…& Some Photos from the Past Week

by Larry Janezich

Posted October 19, 2025

The Signs of Fascism.  Last Thursday evening, starting at 8th and Pennsylvania Avenue, SE and stretching to the east, a half dozen or so masked individuals, all dressed in black, held signs alerting outbound traffic to the Signs of Fascism. 

City Shutters Illegal Weed Outlet on Barracks Row.  ABCA has closed down DC’s first Mushroom Church at 409 8th Street, SE, above the former and future Popeyes.  According to an advertisement, mushrooms were “only available for purchase for members of our Church through verified membership on location or through a Member Portal.”

The ABCA Notice makes pretty clear what was happening at the church. 

Barracks Row’s Little District Books formerly at 737 8th Street, SE, relocated to 631 Pennsylvania Avenue, SE. 

Here’s the new place.  From their website:  “Our collection is curated to represent the full spectrum of LGBTQIA+ identities and we’re proud to uplift local authors, indie publishers, and expand access to queer literature.”

Congressional Cemetery Master Plan.  Last Wednesday night, the landscape architectural firm Rhodeside and Harwell held the second of two community meetings to receive feedback on the proposed Master Plan – a comprehensive, long-term plan for the future of Historic Congressional Cemetery.  Some 50 community members turned out to hear their presentation.  The firm will continue seeking community feedback on the Master Plan throughout the process and is scheduled to receive a finalized Master Plan in February of 2026.  After that the Board of Congressional Cemetery will begin several fundraising initiatives to realize the plan.

The Week Ahead…

Monday, October 20

ANC6A Transportation & Public Space Committee holds a virtual meeting at 7:00pm.

Among items on the draft agenda:

Old Business

  • Strategic Bike Plan Feedback – Chris Berg from DDOT presented an overview last mont on the plan to update the Strategic Bike Plan. The committee will discuss feedback to DDOT.
  • H Street NE Corridor Update – The 14th Street, NE, bike lane gap between Florida Avenue and G Street, NE is set to be closed this month. The installation of bus platforms at 6th and H Streets, NE has been delayed until at least November.

New Business

  • H Street/Benning Road, NE Streetcar – Due to a change in DC budget, streetcar service will end in March 2026 as opposed to September 2026.
  • Public Space Construction Permit application at 729 K Street, NE – this application covers installation of benches at the pocket park on 8th and K Streets, NE.

ANC6B Parks & Public Spaces Taskforce will hold an In Person Meeting at 7:00pm. 

  • This meeting will be held 700 Pennsylvania Ave SE; Second Floor (entry adjacent to Trader Joe’s).

Agenda:  TBA

ANC6D will hold a virtual meeting at 7:00pm.

For info on how to join the meeting, go here:  https://www.anc6d.org/

Among items on the draft agenda:

  • Public Safety Report: 1st District Commander Colin Hall will report on public safety.  
  • Discussion of Better Bus Reorganization: WMATA has been invited to send a representative.
  • ABC Matters.
  • Report of Task Force on Pedestrian Safety.
  • 801 Maine Ave.  (Jair Lynch Development)  Zoning Application.  Extension of PUD.  The approved development would rise up to 130 feet along Maine Avenue and 90 feet along G Street, delivering 498 residential units—75 of which will be affordable under Inclusionary Zoning, including eight family-sized three-bedroom apartments—along with more than 24,000 square feet of ground-floor retail space, including a neighborhood-serving grocer or market and a bank branch. The applicant cited persistently high borrowing costs, rising construction expenses, and a sharp decline in new rental construction across D.C. as reasons for the delay, noting that despite pursuing financing partners and cost reductions, current market conditions have hindered the project’s ability to move forward. The requested extension would allow additional time to secure financing and preserve the entitlements while the developer continues advancing design and permitting work.
  • Adopt FY26 ANC 6D Budget

Capitol Hill Corner Would Like You to Know About:

Folger Theater – Continuing, through Sunday, October 26

Julius X – a re-imagining of Shakespeare’s classic tragedy Julius Caesar through the lens of the American Civil Rights Movement, focusing on the story of Civil Rights leader Malcolm X and drawing parallels between ancient Rome and 1960s Harlem.

Playwright and poet Al Letson, a Peabody Award-winning journalist and the host of the Reveal podcast, champions Shakespeare’s original text, amplifying it with his own verse.

Tickets starting at $20.  Go here:  http://bit.ly/4mZJ1ve

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Photos from the DC No Kings Rally 10/18/25

Posted October 19, 2025

The photos speak for themselves.

Photo credit: Anton Janezich

Photo credit: Anton Janezich

Photo credit: Anton Janezich

Photo credit: Anton Janezich

Photo credit: Anton Janezich

Photo credit: Anton Janezich

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Update on ANC6B and National Guard Beautification

Update on ANC6B and National Guard Beautification

by Larry Janezich

Posted October 17, 2025

Marcus Hunt, Office of the Deputy Mayor’s Director of DC Government Operations for the DC National Guard, makes a presentation to ANC6B.  Hunt has been billed in local media as “Director of the National Guard.” 

Wednesday night, at its hybrid October meeting, ANC6B re-affirmed its decision not to place a discussion of the National Guard on the meeting’s agenda.  The genesis of the proposed discussion was an offer from the Guard – via Marcus Hunt, DC’s liaison to the Guard – to help with beautification projects in ANC commissioners’ single member districts.  The offer was sent to individual ANC commissioners across the city.  Some commissioners suggested that since Hunt’s offer was sent to individual commissioners, the decision should be left to them, and as such, there was no role for the ANC in this matter. 

Commissioner David Sobelsohn continued to push to hear from two individuals on the subject. First, from Marcus Hunt, who was billed as the Director of the National Guard, but who is actually an employee of the Office of the Deputy Director of Public Safety.  He is the city’s liaison with the National Guard on the issue of beautification efforts.  And while he is also a Lt. Col. in the National Guard he did not appear in uniform and is currently not acting “under orders.”  Second, from ANC2G01 Commissioner Howard Garrett who authored a letter opposing Commissioners accepting the offer for the Guard to assist in beautification projects because that would “normalize” the Guard for tasks that belong to civilian agencies. 

It is routine for the commission to provide a period for “Community Announcements” and it was the consensus of the commission that Hunt and Garrett could use this time to discuss the National Guard.  Comments are usually limited to three minutes, but the Commission agreed to a motion to allow discussion at the beginning of the period and then subsequently set a time limit of 20 minutes. 

As it turned out, the discussion lasted some 40 minutes, but produced little clarification on beautification possibilities as Hunt discussed his background, history of the Guards and its relation to DC, his job with the Deputy Mayor’s Office and some of the beautification activities the Guard has undertaken.  He referred questions regarding the safety activities of the Guard to Master Sergeant Arthur Wright (who was not present), saying he could only speak at tonight’s meeting to talk about beautification.

During the Q&A, the meeting turned confrontational as some of the dozen community members attending in-person challenged the legitimacy of the deployment of the National Guard on DC streets – a subject on which Hunt could not comment.  One member of the audience expressed his appreciation for the Guard’s presence in the community.  Afterward, Commissioner Howard Garrett, appearing on-line, read a prepared statement reiterating the points of his letter (which many ANC Commissioners have signed) opposing requesting assistance for beautification efforts. 

Following the discussion, Sobelsohn proposed two more motions.  The first asked the ANC’s Public Safety Committee to make a recommendation about what commissioners should do regarding the Guard’s offer to help with beautification projects.  When that motion failed for lack of a second, the second motion asked for a recommendation from the ANC’s Parks and Public Spaces Task Force.  That motion also failed for a lack of second. 

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Tonight!  Creative Vendor Event at The Fridge

Tonight!  Creative Vendor Event at The Fridge

Friday, October 17 – 5pm – 9pm in The Fridge Alley – 518 ½ 8th Street, SE

Benefitting the renovation of The Fridge – projected opening in January 2026

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The Week Ahead…& Some Photos from the Past Week

The Week Ahead…& Some Photos from the Past Week

by Larry Janezich

Posted October 13, 2025

New Café/Bar/Creative Space coming to Barracks Row.  A knowledgeable source says the former Ophelia’s Fish House at 501 8th Street, SE, will reopen as a coffee/pastry cafe/creative space by day and a cocktail bar by night.  The new venture will be the first all African American woman-owned hospitality venue on Barracks Row. Eat DC reports that it will be called Civic and operated by Andra “AJ’ Johnson.

The Former 7-11 on Barracks Row is on track to reopen as a gift shop, according to several sources familiar with Barracks Row businesses. 

Here’s the latest photo of progress on the quick service counter opening at 325 7th Street, SE.  Eat DC reported some months ago that according to WaPo food critic Tom Sietsema, the 25 seat space – Maru San – will have no servers and one thing on the menu:  Peruvian fish rolls.  Photo credit:  Maggie Hall

MPD 1st District Commander Colin Hall met with community members in Lincoln Park last Tuesday, and then with ANC6C on Wednesday night.  In his remarks to the ANC, he said:  Violent crime on H Street NE has plummeted – violent crime in the First District is down 17% and down 12% city-wide – discussed MPD’s relationship with its federal partners on the Crime Fighting Taskforce and said the major difference in the relationship now is that agents are patrolling with MPD – said that MPD knows the community and can direct federal agents to hot spots and other violent areas – that MPD doesn’t engage in ICE activities other than protecting the scene in cases where officer safety is an issue – and crime statistics are being reported the way they have always been reported despite allegations of down grading violent crime to get better stats. 

Photos from Walk and Roll to School Day.  Local organizers billed the Walk and Bike to School Day as a Unity Walk and urged participants to bring DC flags and wear FreeDC Tee Shirts.  CM Charles Allen welcomed and thanked people for showing up, platformed the event’s partnership with FreeDC and asserted that “nobody does this event better than we do.” 

FreeDC was on site distributing literature about the renewed campaign to protect Home Rule. MPD cadets who were there to escort bikers and walkers to schools are shown taking advantage of the refreshment table where free coffee, granola bars and tangerines were provided courtesy of the Ward 6 Public Schools Parent Organization which received a $350 mini-grant from the Capitol Hill Community Foundation.

The Week Ahead…& Some Photos from the Past Week

by Larry Janezich

Posted October 13, 2025

The Week Ahead…

Tuesday, October 14

ANC7D will hold a virtual meeting at 7:00pm.

Among items on the draft agenda:

Elected District Government Updates

  • Office of Ward 7 Councilmember Wendell Felder
  • Mayor’s Office of Community Relations & Services (MOCRS)
  • Eboni Rose-Thompson, President, Ward 7, DC State Board of Education
  • Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) Updates – Districts 1, 5 and 6 invited (TBD)

Community Presentations

  • Nash Street NE Pedestrian Bridge Demolition – Kisha Anderson, District Department of Transportation
  • DC 2050 Comprehensive Plan – Alex Freedman, DC Office of Planning

Commissioner SMD Reports

Wednesday, October 15

ANC6A Economic Development & Zoning Committee will hold a virtual meeting at 7:00pm.

Among items on the draft agenda:

  • 307 15th Street NE; Zoning Adjustment Application for special exception to construct a two-story with basement rear addition, and a garage with second story accessory dwelling unit, to an existing, attached, two-story with basement, principal dwelling unit.  The official action of ANC 6A resulted in a letter of support approved by unanimous consent during the ANC 6A meeting of October 9, 2025. The recommendation for an additional request for special exception (pending) is that ANC 6A takes no further action at this time.

New Business

  • 1371-1375 H Street NE; Zoning Adjustment Application to extend for an additional year, Board of Zoning Adjustment Order, to construct a new, attached, six-story with roof deck, 30-unit, mixed use building.
  • 1332 Corbin Place NE; Zoning Adjustment Application for a special exception to construct a third story and a three-story with basement rear addition, to an existing, attached, two-story with basement, principal dwelling unit.   

ANC6B will hold a hybrid meeting at 7:00pm.

Meeting location will be 700 Pennsylvania Ave SE; First Floor (entry adjacent to Trader Joe’s).

Among items on the draft agenda:

Adoption of Agenda

  • Expected motion to amend the agenda to provide for discussion of the use of the National Guard in DC, in contrast to what seems to be the informal consensus of members ANC6B’s Public Safety Committee voiced at a September 29th meeting, who suggested that the best course of action for the ANC would be to ignore the National Guard’s request for recommendations from each individual ANC Commissioner for beautification projects for which the Guard might provide assistance. Subsequently, the ANC6B Executive Committee, in setting the agenda for the October 15 meeting, voted against a motion to invite the National Guard and a representative of the ANC Home Rule Caucus to give presentations, and then failed to agree to a motion to place a discussion of the use of the National Guard in DC on the agenda.

Consent Agenda (TBA)

Community & Commission Announcements and Speak Out

  • Office of the Mayor
  • Councilmember Charles Allen’s Office
  • Metropolitan Police Department
  • Reminder of Upcoming Meeting Dates

Alcohol Beverage and Cannabis Committee

Renewal of restaurant and tavern licenses

  • Barrel – 613 Pennsylvania Ave SE.  Renewal with Entertainment & Sidewalk Café endorsements.
  • The Eastern – 360 7th Street SE.  Renewal with Sidewalk Café endorsement.
  • Tune Inn Restaurant – 331 Pennsylvania Ave SE.  Renewal with Sidewalk Café endorsement.
  • Ginza BBQ Lounge & Karaoke Spot – 526 8th Street SE. Renewal with Entertainment & Summer Garden endorsements. .
  • Omakase @ Barracks Row – 522 8th Street SE.  Renewal – no entertainment.
  • Trusty’s Bar – 1420 Pennsylvania Ave SE.  Renewal with Entertainment, Sidewalk Café & Summer Garden endorsements.

New restaurant and tavern licenses

  • Awakening Bar & Grill – 520 8th Street SE.  Request for Class “C” Tavern license with Sidewalk Café, Carry-out/Delivery, Entertainment Endorsement (inside only). Draft Settlement Agreement under consideration.
  • Streets Market – 1442 Pennsylvania Ave SE.  Request for Class “B” Full-Service Grocery Store license with Tasting Permit.

Protests and other updates

  • Ambar – 523 8th Street SE.  Ongoing negotiation regarding settlement agreement and protest hearing. Parties have requested continuance while discussions proceed.
  • ALOHA/Tobacco King – Medical Cannabis Retailer (Second Application) – 539 8th Street SE – Second application for medical cannabis retailer license, including Delivery Endorsement. ANC6B has retained legal counsel (Kerry Verdi) to assist with protest.
  • Tobacco King Outlet in NW Shutdown (Informational)

Transportation Committee

  • Discussion of Issues at Capitol South Metro Station
  • Barney Circle Illegal Left Turns

Planning & Zoning Committee

  • 624 C St SE, Historic Preservation Application.  Postponed
  • St. Peter School.  Zoning Adjustment Application
  • Alley Homes campaign

Capitol Hill Corner Would Also Like You to Know About:

Wednesday, October 15

Congressional Cemetery Holds Community Meeting 2 on Master Plan.

Location: Christ Church, 620 G St. SE

5:30pm  (Presentation begins at 6:00 PM)

  • “Join us, share your thoughts, and enter our door drawing for great prizes, including VIP tickets to Soul Strolls, jars of our Rest in Bees honey, and gift shop swag.
  • This is an important meeting—don’t miss your chance to be heard.
  • This meeting, hosted by Christ Church, the cemetery’s owner, is your opportunity to weigh in on the concepts and recommendations that will shape the next decade and beyond at HCC. From preservation priorities and landscape design to programming and sustainability, the Master Plan will be our roadmap for the cemetery’s future.
  • Your voice matters. This is a chance to make sure the values and needs of our community are reflected in how we steward this historic landmark for generations to come.”

RSVP Here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/master-plan-community-meeting-tickets-1758336735509?aff=oddtdtcreator

Folger Theater – Continuing, through Sunday, October 26

Julius X – a re-imagining of Shakespeare’s classic tragedy Julius Caesar through the lens of the American Civil Rights Movement, focusing on the story of Civil Rights leader Malcolm X and drawing parallels between ancient Rome and 1960s Harlem.

Playwright and poet Al Letson, a Peabody Award-winning journalist and the host of the Reveal podcast, champions Shakespeare’s original text, amplifying it with his own verse.

Tickets starting at $20.  Go here:  http://bit.ly/4mZJ1ve

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Video from Dead Man’s Run – October 12

Video from Dead Man’s Run – Historic Congressional Cemetery – October 12

by Larry Janezich

Posted October 12, 2025

Here’s the scene in Congressional Cemetery about 20 minutes before the start of Dead Man’s 5K Run.

Seconds before the start of the race. Organizers said about 530 runners registered.

Interim Executive Director of Congressional Cemetery A.J. Orlikoff, after thanking this year’s sponsors of the race – which included Fulcrum Residential, DC Access, Duffy’s Irish Pub, and Grounds Maintenance and Landscaping LLC – counted down the start of the race.

And here’s the first 60 seconds of the start of the Dead Man’s Run.

Here’s the first runner to cross the finish line at just under 17 minutes.

The second and third runners cross.

The annual race is a fundraiser for Congressional Cemetery. All proceeds help fund the physical preservation of the cemetery grounds and structures, as well as support the cemetery’s ongoing programs and operations. 

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National Guard Director’s Q&A with ANC6C 

ANC6C meeting on October 8, 2025. National Guard Director Lt. Col. Marcus Hunt is at center. Chair Karen Wirt is top, center.

National Guard Director’s Q&A with ANC6C 

by Larry Janezich

Posted October 9, 2025

National Guard Official’s Q&A with ANC6C 

Wednesday night, ANC6C heard a short on-line presentation from Lt. Col. Marcus Hunt, DC National Guard Director of Government Operations, on how the National Guard connects to the DC community.  The occasion was the ANC’s October meeting, conducted virtually and chaired by Commissioner Karen Wirt. 

Hunt is the liaison between the Guard’s commander – Brigadier General Leland Blanchard – and Lindsey Appiah, DC Deputy Mayor of Public Safety and Justice.     

In a 20 minute session ANC commissioners Hunt stressed the home-grown character of the National Guard, presenting them as neighbors who like himself live in the community.  Commissioners heard how the Guard’s beautification program works, asked questions about what kinds of beautification assistance the Guard could provide and expressed concerns about the Guard’s role as a military presence in the city. 

Hunt explained the current mission ordered by the President on August 11, has two components: Task Force Safe and Task Force Beautification.  He said he was at the ANC meeting to discuss Task Force Beautification and that any questions on Task Force Safe should be submitted to National Guard Master Sergeant Arthur Wright, whose email he provided. 

He said Task Force Beautification has three components:  resilience, opportunity, and community and each of these components has two subsets:  food/housing, youth/jobs, and help/safe and public spaces.  He spent considerable time on the youth/jobs component and the Guard’s efforts to provide opportunities for and mentoring of at risk youth. 

With respect to the help/safe and public spaces subset, in September Hunt had sent an email to all ANC commissioners in the city asking about neighborhood beautification projects and offering assistance.

On Wednesday night, Hunt emphasized that community requests for assistance must be filtered through ANC Commissioners (but apparently not through the full ANCs).  Upon receipt of the request by his office it undergoes an assessment regarding whether it is  something the National Guard can support. 

Commissioner Jeremiah Foxwell began the short Q&A by asking about the limits of what the Guard could do, specifically if that would include acting as crossing guards on H Street to provide an element of safety for school children crossing H Street NE.  Commissioner Daniela McInerney added to Foxwell’s question expressing resident’s concerns about armed National Guard in battle gear noting that “we have had the National Guard patrolling the streets around Ludlow Taylor Elementary School without the community being notified.” 

Hunt replied that he wasn’t trying to deflect the question about patrolling streets but said that any question relating to Task Force Safe should be directed to Master Sergeant Wright.  He added that what he could say regarding not notifying the community of a mission operation is that a lot of those are just not shared publicly for operational safety purposes.

Rather than giving Foxwell a specific response to the crossing guard question, Hunt said that “once I receive an email from an ANC commissioner inviting Task Force Beautification into the community to serve side by side with community members – that’s where we kind of lean forward – to go through our process to partner with the community.”  

Just how “partner with the community” is defined is somewhat uncertain, but it implies personal interaction.  Though not explicitly stated this appears to mean working alongside community members (for example in cleanup and other projects) which allow the Guard to engage directly with community. 

Hunt added, “We have been very successful in the safe public spaces subset in responding to invitations from the ANC commissioners…a half dozen Ward 8 commissioners have invited us out…we have an event in Ward 4 this Saturday at Fort Stevens Park…we also have a bit upcoming with Ward 5 to do some community clean up and partnership.”

Commissioner Andrew Hayes addressed the resentment of the presence of the Guard on city streets felt by many residents.   He acknowledged that some of the Guard are neighbors…“but at the same time I think it is unacceptable and not appropriate for our streets to be policed by people in military gear and I would really appreciate if you could take the message back that we would only be open – at least I personally would only be able to support assistance from the current beautification if those folks can work in (civilian attire)….”   

Hunt replied that if an ANC Commissioner sends an invitation with requirements regarding – for example – community clean up in civilian clothes, “I believe that’s doable.”

It appeared that Hunt had limited his availability to 20 minutes, and Chair Wirt thanked him for appearing.  He may not have still been online in the virtual meeting when former ANC6A Commissioner Drew Courtney summed up his own feelings which likely crystallized the mixed feelings many have about neighbors who are Guard members, Guard members sent from other parts of the country and the other federal law enforcement officers deployed in DC. 

Courtney said, “I am so grateful for the service of our neighbors in the National Guard and I think one of the saddest things about these recent months has been the way that the politicization of the Guard has undermined some really good efforts.  But I don’t think there’s any way right now that we can expect constituents to separate what we’re seeing from Guards who have been sent in against the will of our limited representatives from Ohio and South Carolina and from West Virginia, and the fact that this is so closely associated … with the raids that are really unconscionable being conducted by ICE…. I think we all underscore our gratitude for our neighbors in uniform but the respect for that uniform has been undermined by the political actions that have been taken by the president in this community and I think we have to recognize that.”

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