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Columbia Heights History
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Columbia Heights is about one and a half miles long
and a mile wide. The present day population is around thirty
thousand people (1990 census figures provided by M. Meyer).
In recent years many refugees from oppression and war in
other countries have moved here. At one time the nickname of
Columbia Heights was the "City within a City". Perhaps now a
better nickname would be "the World within a
Neighborhood".
The subway station is in the heart of Columbia Heights
downtown. This has been downtown for about a hundred and
fifty years. I am sure you have heard of Washington's famous
Jockey Club where the elite dine and confer. But if there is
a Jockey Club where is the racetrack? The answer is that the
subway station is in the middle of it. From the beginning of the
Republic until about 1840 there was a circular mile long
track centered, approximately, at todays 14th and Irving Streets .
After the track closed, the immediate area was a
village crossroads for a farming area with some large
estates. Here was the terminus for a stage coach line that
ran twice daily to and from downtown Washington.
After the Civil War, and the coming of the horse drawn
trolley, detached houses were built in sub-divisions"
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