Dupont
Circle Historic District Washington DC
Location: Rhode Island Avenue, NW; M and N Sts., NW, on
the south; Florida Avenue, NW, on the west; Swann St., NW, on the north; and the
16th Street on the east.
It was the Board of Public works under the leadership
of Alexander Shepherd that spearheaded the way for the development of Dupont Circle.
Nevada Senator William Morris Stewart led the "California Syndicate" which bought
up tracts of undeveloped land. The style of the neighborhood was set when Stewart
erected his mansion (now demolished) in the 1870s.
By the late 1880s the Dupont neighborhood was an affluent
and vibrant neighborhood. In 1871 the Corps of Engineers began construction of Dupont
Circle itself which at the time was called Pacific Circle. In 1882 Congress authorized
a memorial statue of Rear Admiral Samuel Francis duPont in recognition of his Civil
War service.
The bronze statue was erected in 1884. In 1921 the statue
of Dupont was replaced by a double-tiered white marble fountain. It was designed
by sculptor Daniel Chester French and architect Henry Bacon. Three classical figures,
symbolizing the Sea, the Stars and the Wind are carved on the fountain's central
shaft. The Dupont Circle Historic District is a primarily residential district extending
generally in all directions from Dupont Circle. The area was developed in the last quarter of the 19th century and the early years of the 20th century. Two types of
housing predominate in the historic district: palatial mansions and freestanding
residences built in the styles popular between 1895 and 1910; and three-and-four-story
rowhouses, many of which are variations on the Queen Anne and Richardsonian Romanesque
Revival styles, built primarily before the turn of the century.
The mansions line the broad, tree-lined diagonal avenues
that intersect the circle and the rowhouses line the grid streets of the historic
district. This juxtaposition of house types and street pattern gives the area a
unique character. When the Dupont Circle area first became a fashionable residential
neighborhood some of this community's wealthiest residents constructed houses here.
One early Victorian house still standing is the Christian
Heurich Mansion (Washington Historical Society) NR at 1307 New Hampshire Avenue.
It was built in 1892-4 and designed by
John G. Meyers for the owner of the Heurich
Brewery. Stanford White of McKim, Mead and White, was the partner in charge of the
design for 15 Dupont Circle for Robert W. Patterson, (The Patterson House NR). The
1901 building is currently the home of the Washington Club. White also designed
the Thomas Nelson Page House NR at 1759 R Street. The 1896 structure is in the Colonial
Revival style.
Jules Henri deSibour designed the Embassy of Columbia
at 1520 20th Street in 1906 in a French country Chateau style. The Perry Belmont
House (International Order of the Eastern Star) NR was designed in the Beaux Arts
style by Samson and Trumbauer in 1901. It is located at 1618 New Hampshire Avenue.
The Boardman House (Embassy of Iraq) at 1801 P Street was designed by Hornblower
and Marshall in 1890. The Weeks House (Women's National Democratic Club) NR was
designed by Harvey Page in 1892 with an addition by Nick Satterlee in 1966.
The Scott-Thropp House (Church of Scientology) NR at 1701
20th Street was designed by Hornblower and Marshall in 1890 in an eclectic
manner. Another large, commanding building is St. Matthew's Cathedral and Rectory NR at
1725-39 New Hampshire Avenue designed by Heins and LeFarge in 1893. The majority
of the houses in the Dupont Circle Historic District are not mansions, however.
The blocks along the grid streets are lined with rowhouses that were occupied by
middle-class professionals and official Washingtonians. The styles employed in designing
these rowhouses which were built from the 1880s into the first decade of the 20th
century, range from Queen Anne to Richardsonian Revival to Renaissance and Georgian
Revival. Variations on Queen Anne and Richardsonian Romanesque were most prevalent
in this area of DC.
Some of the rows were designed as a unit by a single architect
while others were individually built and designed. The row on the south side of
the 1700 block of Q Street, designed in 1889 by T.F. Schneider, is one of the most
impressive Richardsonian rows in the area. The north side of the 2000 block of N
Street is one of the finest Second Empire rows in the district. These houses were
built between 1879 and 1881 by Christopher Thom. The 2000 block of Hillyer Place
contains a variety of styles, especially Queen Anne and Richardsonian Romanesque.
One of the most varied and architecturally intact blocks is the 1700 block of N
Street which reflects the breadth of architectural talent in the area.
A commercial corridor along Connecticut Avenue and P Street
west of the circle developed in this district. The early commercial buildings are
small in scale and do not detract from the district's character. In recent years,
pressure for large-scale commercial office development on Connecticut Avenue has
been intense. A number of new office buildings, some unsympathetic to the historic
district line the northern and southern fringes of Connecticut Avenue.
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