Monday, April 23, 2007

Fun with ProQuest: Truxton Circle pt 2

Find part 1 here
The name Truxton Circle is somewhat controversial. There are residents of the TC who loathe the name and will on occasion mention how offensive the name is. Personally, I have no problem with the name, and it was the name on the map at the Washingtonia room at the MLK Library. It is a decent description of this eastern side of Shaw
The circle that Truxton Circle is named after is long gone. The man the former circle was named after, Revolutionary war vet Thomas Truxtun, is long dead, and we couldn't bother spelling his name right and nobody 'round here really cares who was anyway. Regardless of all that, the name has stuck. Fun with ProQuest is simply tracking the name and its use in the Washington Post.
So up until the 1940s Truxton Circle was a traffic circle. Then circle go bye-bye. The next time Truxton Circle appears in the paper is in the 60s when it is a Post Office area. In 1964 the Truxton Circle postal annex at 17 Florida Avenue NE was robbed at gunpoint. Most of what I found in the 60s was in relation to the post office. The closest in this period of it being a neighborhood name or an area name is a classified ad in 1963 listing an address as "Box 26001, Truxton Circle, Wash, D.C."
Nothing in the 70s. Nada.
Then in 1984, the city somehow christened the area as Truxton Circle when it was launching a subsidy program to encourage home buying in the District. Truxton Circle was one of the target areas, which also included "Columbia Heights; Shaw-Westminister, Carollsburg, Capitol Hill South...." Yeah, now I'm wondering what was so wrong about the area that it had to be a target area. The other funny thing about the 1984 article was the description of the program:
What the loan terms are: Fixed interest rate of 11.39 percent for 30 years. Buyer pays 1 point and seller pays 2 points.
Eligible candidates were to be first time District home buyers making less than $42,960. I was making less than that in 2000. Anyway, from 1984 on Truxton Circle was a neighborhood as far as the city was concerned.
I'm open to researching (light researching) the other possible alternate names the area may have held.

Bibliography:
All Articles from the Washington Post
"Classified Ad 343" Sept 22, 1963 p. G6
"2 Gunmen Rob DC Postal Annex of $2000, Shut 8 in Rest Room" by Alfred E. Lewis. Sept 3, 1964 p. A1
"Postal Machines, Men Move Mountain of Christmas Mail" by William Clairborne. Dec 7, 1972. p.A36
"Subsidy Program's Nuts and Bolts" August 2, 1984. p. A15.

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5 Comments:

At 4/24/2007 7:53 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

we use to call florida & north capitol Exxon/mobil Circle

 
At 4/24/2007 9:41 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

how can i use proquest? do i need an account? it sounds super cool!

 
At 4/24/2007 10:37 AM, Blogger Mari said...

A- you need to sign or initial your posts.
B- ProQuest is a subscription service marketed to libraries and research places (think tanks, museums, etc) and is too expensive for individuals. If you are a student, you need to see if it is a database you can access remotely thru a student account. If you aren't, drag your butt to a library that has it.

 
At 4/24/2007 11:03 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

kewl. thanks for the info.
i can imagine all sorts of cool uses for proquest.

like many things, if it's that good, it's gotta cost $$$

 
At 4/24/2007 7:38 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Just do like most folks. Get a job w/a Federal Agency and you're in.

 

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