Untitled - Capital Community News
Transcription
Untitled - Capital Community News
For a limited time, triple your winnings when you get a TRIPLER message on your ticket. Promotion dates are 4/1- 5/26/12 good on any bet type. Maximum prize payment is limited to $1,000,000 on any single play including tripled prizes. See Official Rules for additional terms, conditions and restrictions. Real Estate Manufacturing at 1125 D Street, NE One Building’s Various Uses T oday, there is only one industry on Capitol Hill: The federal government. Whether you work for it, or work on it, or provide those that do with goods and services, without that big building with the dome, there would be precious little happening in our neighborhood. It was not always thus. For many years, businesses both great and small populated the Hill, producing beer, bricks, ice, ice cream, wagons, soft drinks, optical instruments, and pie for distribution across the city and beyond. Some of these businesses were large, like the two beer breweries, but most were smaller operations Pies on the Hill One location that managed to house several of these operations was 1125 D Street NE. Built in 1860s or Advertisement for Kern’s Pies from January 1, 1915, Washington Times (LOC) by Robert S. Pohl early 1870s, it was converted to a pie factory in the late 1870s by Henry Kern. Kern, a German émigré, had previously run a pie factory on East Capitol Street. He married Carrie R. Koons, the daughter of Henry Koons, a gardener and blacksmith who owned most of the land around 1125 D Street, NE. Kern moved into the new store along with his wife and children. For a number of years, the Kern Pie company was a frequent feature in advertisements of Washington papers, boasting of the merits of the pies. Detail of 1909 Baiste map of DC. Kern’s Bakery is in the upper right corner (LOC) According to the ads, Kern’s pies were “as ery. The contents were not as described necessary to the real Thanksgiving dinner as the turkey on the labels, but rather the leftovers itself.” The copy was adjusted for from orange juice manufacturing that had been reconstituted with some other holidays. In 1899, Kern decided to ex- other ingredients. Kern, as the injured pand the store significantly. He party, escaped any fines, which were bought a strip of land next to his paid by the manufacturer. shop from his father-in-law, Henry Koons, and proceeded to build a Trouble with the law In the 1920s, Kern, now well past two-story addition, as well as raising the roof on part of the original 60 years old, decided to get out of the building. His pie manufacturing baking business. In 1922, he rented grew rapidly from that point, and out the premises to the Halley Ice Co, advertisements for Kern’s pies were run by one George F. Hoover. The ice frequent in the newspapers of the business did not last long, and so Kern rented his premises to Ellis Duke, who time. Not all was simple for Kern. On started the Duke Bottling Works. In May 23, 1912, five cases of crushed contrast to other bottling concerns on oranges were seized at Kern’s bak- the Hill, and even the Eagle Bottling capitalcommunitynews.com H 85 Exterior Shot (Tom Kavanagh, Capitol Realty Team) Company - which Duke had run before - this enterprise chose not to advertise or otherwise announce its presence. The reason for this became clear in 1929, when the Duke Bottling Works were padlocked on order of the DC Supreme Court. The charge? The “manufacture, sale and possession” of liquor, as the Washington Post reported on March 26, 1929. The article continued in explaining that, during a raid on the premises on November 12 of the previous year, the police had discovered “78 half-gallons of whisky, 44 cases and 2 kegs of beer and 17 bottles of wine.” This being during the height of prohibition, there was no doubt that this was a clear violation of the law. And Duke knew as much, having been arrested for a similar offense not six months earlier. Duke once more managed to avoid any jail time, and was arrested again in 1932 - less than a year before President Roosevelt once again relegalized the manufacture and sale of alcohol. erty. Kern’s son sold it in 1943 and later that decade, it was taken over by the Capi- A new beginning? The next few decades were quiet for this prop- A bottle from the Duke Bottling Works (chosi.net) tal Regraining Company, who produced lithographic plates. In 1965 the company, now renamed Durolith, moved to Easton, Maryland. About ten years later, 1125 D was used by the oddly named R&R Driftwood corporation. Much like Duke before them, the new owners made no attempts to advertise their services, and the reason for this became clear after a major international police investigation, which ended with the arrest of two men for smuggling heroin. 1125 D had been used as a destination for the drug being mailed from Thailand. The drugs had been intercepted in the mails in New York, and only empty packages – carefully prepared by the police – made it to the address, where it was picked up by one of the smugglers, who then drove it to the other’s house – at which point the police stepped in. About ten years later one George Salah attempted to convert the old print shop into a pizzeria. Unfortunately for him, the property was now zoned for residential use only, and thus his efforts went for naught. Today, it is once again possible to buy a pie baked on the Hill, possibly signaling a resurgence in manufacturing, though the days of beer brewing or printing are presumably over. However, if you are interested in owning this piece of Hill history, stop by the Capitol Realty Team on 7th Street for an opportunity to visit the premises. No drug dealers, please. Follow the progress of Robert Pohl’s latest book at www. facebook.com/RobertPohlAuthor. H Location, Location, Location 503 2nd Street NE • $1.5 Million Prestigious location on Historic Capitol Hill at Senate, across from US Judiciary Bldg & Union Station. 2 story + English Basement brick bay front townhouse office of approx 2214 sf well designed offices for lobbyist, non profits, law firms etc. Property zoned C2A & Certificate of Occupancy for office use. Flexible floor plan offers large reception /entry lobby, 7 offices, conference room, 2.5 baths, 2 kitchenetts, gas fplc, exterior flagstone patio for entertaining. This kind of property so close in is seldom on market. Metro, rail, & 15 min. to National Airport. Kitty & Tati Kaupp 202-255-0952 www.kittykaupp.com. Kitty Kaupp & Tati Kaupp Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 605 Pennsylvania Ave SE 202-255-0952 • 202-255-6913 kkaupp@cbmove.com www.kittykaupp.com capitalcommunitynews.com H 87