Chevy Chase dates back all the way to 1725, when Col. Joseph Belt was granted 1000 acres by Lord Baltimore, the first proprietor of the Colony of Maryland. Col. Belt, who had commanded the Prince George’s County Militia in the French and Indian War, named his new farm Cheivy Chase after an area in Northern England. A portion of the land was bought up for development in the late 1800s, and lots began to sell when a streetcar line connected the neighborhood to downtown Washington. Many of the houses in Chevy Chase were bought straight from a Sears and Roebuck catalog and remain standing today. Much of the architecture in the area is in the humble Bungalow, Foursquare and Dutch Colonial styles, but many of my favorites are in the less well represented Tudor revival style. Some of the key landmarks of the community are Magruder’s Market which opened in 1875, the 1923 Avalon Theater and the far newer Chevy Chase Library and Community Center. Chevy Chase is my home neighborhood, and I have wonderful memories from my childhood of movies at the Avalon, art and gymnastics classes at the community center, going to the old Riggs Bank with my grandmother and for ice cream at the long-gone Baskin Robbins. I often take my morning walk up Connecticut Avenue, the central road of the neighborhood, and reminisce about times gone by and five generations of my family who have wandered these streets. It made my heart feel good to go out and shoot these photos of my home neighborhood.

D.C. Quarantine Quarters is a series of photo essays from around my hometown, Washington D.C, in the time of our quarantine here due to Covid 19 in 2020. Washington D.C. is itself is divided into four quadrants or quarters, and people from the city strongly identify with which quadrant they grew up in. As a visual storyteller, my normal photo essays are long, but this series aims to be more succinct and include only 25 photos in each post, hence “quarters”. I hope you enjoy these photos of my hometown neighborhoods. Click on any photo to enlarge it. All photos are available for purchase and licensing, please contact me at the link below for more information.

Beautiful Door At Blessed Sacrament Home

Ramer’s Shoes

Chevy Chase Presbyterian Church

Read at the Library

Avalon Reflections

Chevy Chase Circle Bus Turnaround

Lilacs and Chevy Chase Episcopal Church

The Avalon Theater

Bread & Chocolate

Flowers at Blessed Sacrament

City Diner Mural

The Avalon Theater

Magruder’s - Since 1875

I Love This Statue

Castle on the Corner

One of My Favorite Signs

Gone But Not Forgotten

Blessed Sacrament

Chevy Chase Arcade

Chevy Chase Liquors

The Parthenon

Chevy Chase Baptist Church

All Saints Episcopal Church

Inside The Circle

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