Ad
related to: foggy bottom michigan
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Foggy Bottom became the site of the George Washington University's 42-acre (17 ha) main campus in 1912. Foggy Bottom was also the name of a line of beer by the Olde Heurich Brewing Company, which was founded by German immigrant Christian Heurich's grandson, Gary Heurich. He tried to revive the tradition of his family's Christian Heurich Brewing ...
The Current Newspapers consisted of four print and online weekly community newspapers in Washington, D.C., with editions targeted to affluent communities in Georgetown, Dupont Circle, Foggy Bottom, and Northwest DC.
Foggy Bottom; Georgetown; Sheridan-Kalorama; Logan Circle; Mount Vernon Square (Part of the neighborhood is also in Ward 6) Penn Quarter; Shaw (Parts of the neighborhood are also in Ward 1) Southwest Federal Center; U Street Corridor (Part of the neighborhood is also in Ward 1) West End
Foggy Bottom, one of the oldest late 18th and 19th-century neighborhoods in Washington, D.C. Foggy Bottom (Washington Metro), Washington Metro station; Forgotten Bottom, former name of the Gray's Ferry neighborhood of Philadelphia, PA; Fraziers Bottom, West Virginia, unincorporated community in Putnam County, West Virginia, United States
Buildings and structures in Foggy Bottom (33 P) G. George Washington University (4 C, 39 P) Pages in category "Foggy Bottom"
Kitty Snows, a cat well-known for her contribution to controlling the rodent population in Washington D.C.’s Foggy Bottom neighborhood, has gone missing. Kitty Snows is part of the Humane Rescue ...
The Oscar W. Underwood House is a historic house located in the Foggy Bottom neighborhood Northwest, Washington, D.C. It is nationally significant for its association with Major Archibald Butt (military aide to both presidents Theodore Roosevelt and William Howard Taft), and painter Francis Davis Millet – both of whom died in the Titanic disaster on April 15, 1912 – and also Alabama ...
St. Mary's Episcopal Church, also known as St. Mary's, Foggy Bottom or St. Mary's Chapel, is a historic Episcopal church located at 730 23rd Street, N.W. in the Foggy Bottom neighborhood of Washington, D.C. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1973. [1]