Thursday, March 31, 2022

A Ready Made Bungalow


This Sears kit bungalow on the corner of Cathedral and Carolina was built in 1922, the same year that Sears opened a model home store on 10th Street NW. Kit homes started popping all over Potomac Heights.  


The house first belonged to Albert J and Susie Kegal. Albert was born in Holland in 1873. He came to the US when he was eight years old with his parents Martin and Johanna. They settled in Milwaukee, and in 1896, Albert married a Wisconsin girl, Susie Kampe.

Suzie Kampe


Albert worked as a pressman all of his life, and Suzie was a homemaker. In 1900, the couple adopted a baby boy and named him Earle Martin. When Earle was about 20, the family moved to Washington, DC. Albert got a job at the printing office and rented a place until he could afford the new house on Cathedral Avenue in 1922.  That same year in June, Earle married Gladys Steel. Both families lived together in the Cathedral house for about 20 years during which time Earle remarried. 


In the 1930 census Earle and Gladys have a one year old son named Martin. Earle was working as a car salesman. Albert was still employed as a pressman, and Suzie was very active in the Potomac Heights Community Church which often had fun and crazy fundraisers like this one - an all woman, cross-dressing wedding.


Suzie front row, second from right 



By the late 1930s. Earle had married a neighbor, Mary Hill, who was living on Hawthorne Place. I'm not sure what happened to Gladys, but Earle, Mary, young Martin and a new baby, Mary Elizabeth, all were living with Albert and Suzie according to the 1940 census. 


That same year, on an extra cold day in January, eleven year old Martin made the papers when he and his friend Don Custard fell through the ice into the canal while trying to walk under Chain Bridge. Martin could swim and was able to get out and run for help, stopping traffic on Canal Road. James Cox, one of the firemen who came to the scene, also fell through the ice, on his first attempt, but eventually was able to get Don out by throwing him a rope. 




 Don, who lived across the street from Martin, survived without ill effects even though he was in the freezing water for a half hour. Later in life, Don joined the Marines and died on active duty in Korea in 1951. Martin came out unscathed, but their hero, James Cox was hit by a car the next day on Canal Rd while discussing the rescue. Both of his legs were broken.


Earl and Mary moved to 5618 Conduit Rd by 1942 according to his draft registration, but Susie and Albert stayed in the house until the end of their lives.  Susie died in 1948 and Albert died a few years later in 1952. The house was left to Earl, and he sold it soon after his father died.



Albert and Suzie in the yard of 5423

Tuesday, March 22, 2022

The Cutler House

 


Howard Cutler, born in 1883, might be most famous for designing the Kodak Tower in Rochester, New York, but here  in Washington DC, his architecture is found all over town including the Masonic temple in Silver Spring, Bethesda Chevy Chase High School, and St Andrew’s Church in College Park. He also designed the unassuming but handsome home at 5404 Cathedral Avenue. 

The first owner, William Franklin Young, was born on a farm in 1860 in Fairfax Virginia- just before the Civil War. He moved to DC by 1889 and married Sina V. Collins relatively late in life. He was 30, and she was 26. I found them in the 1900 census renting a house in DC and living with their  three children- Ruth,Thomas, and Calvin. The census listed Sina as a house inspector, and William was a carpenter. The family wanders a bit in the next twenty years. In 1910, they were living in Fairfax. In 1920, they moved to Miami, Florida, but then William bought the lot on Cathedral Ave in 1923 and built the house in 1926 when he was 67 years old. Was he unhappy in Florida? Or was it an investment? In any case the house went on the market starting in 1927 according to this ad in the Evening Star.





The house didn’t sell. Maybe the Depression was partly to blame.  In the 1930 census, the Youngs were all living on Cathedral Ave. Their son Calvin, now 37, still lived at home. Calvin was a steamfitter. 



 In 1932 The Youngs left Calvin behind and moved back to Florida. They finally sold the house in 1934 to David and Grace Rogerson, a young couple with three boys. David Jr, Chester, and William. David supported the family by working in the dairy industry,  I found this little clipping on Dec 25, 1940 in the Evening Star. (Weaver Place is now called Arizona Avene)







Poor Chester...I wonder if he got the bike for Christmas?


In 1946, the couple divorced. David moved to Baltimore and remarried while Grace stayed in the home with the boys. In the 1950s, Grace joined the bowling league at Palisades church. The boys went to Wilson High School and afterwards, David Jr joined the military. 





Grace sold the house in 1962 to Ruth Olsen and Marguerite Roney who were living there when I moved onto the block. The "bluestone finish" had been inexplicably painted black by then which, I imagine, set Howard Cutler to rolling in his grave. 






Thursday, March 10, 2022

The Oldest House on the Block


The house at 5426 Cathedral Ave was built in 1917, and the first owner was James Price Cochran. James was born in Lynchburg, Virginia in 1863, when the Civil War was still raging. He was the eldest of ten children, born when his mother Amanda was just 17. His father William was a wheelwright and ran a grocery store. James became a policeman in 1883 and saved the lives of two people caught in a house fire in 1890.  In 1886, he married Emma Kate Gertrude Huysman in Washington, DC. and worked for the fire department here before returning to the police force. He served both in uniform and plain clothes and according to the Evening Star made many “clever captures” which included a gang of silver thieves operating near Dupont Circle.




A daughter, Merceda, was born on March 3, 1890, but by 1899 his marriage was in big trouble. Allegations of “unfaithfulness with persons of questionable character” were made by James and denied by Emma. (I wonder if James used his detective skills for domestic purposes as well.)


In any case, James resigned from the DC police force in 1899 and started a new career as a night watchman. He was instrumental in starting the NIght Watchman’s Association in 1905 and was their business agent.



During a Watchman meeting in October 1905, stories were told about the original watchmen, Fritz Stutz, “a venerable German who patrolled the warehouses on the riverfront of Georgetown” in the 1850s when there was no metropolitan police force “with his Cossack-like fuzzy cap, his heavy hickory staff, watchman’s rattle and queer-looking lantern…” Sometimes  Mr Stutz would throw in a bit of news on the hour as well. The current watchman’s association worked with the police and often guarded department stores and other private businesses and homes. 


James married again in 1906 when he was 43 years old. His new bride Mary Louise Rawlings grew up on a farm in Anne Arundel County, Maryland. Mary, no spring chicken herself, was about 30 when they tied the knot. 


The Cochrans bought the large house at 5426 Cathedral Ave in 1916 when James was 54 years. He still worked as a watchman, but the five bedroom house gave them an opportunity to make extra money by taking in boarders. In the 1920 census, a boarder named Annie Phipps lived with them. She was single and a seamstress.


Meanwhile, James’ daughter Merceda had married George Isemann.  The  two lived nearby in Georgetown. Both would become champion duckpin bowlers and frequently appeared in the sports pages until George died of a throat infection in 1940. James' ex-wife Emma married two more times before she died in 1922. Her last husband was an embezzling, brawling bartender who made the papers when he assaulted a cop in 1916. I can’t help but think James probably heard about that one.


In 1925, when James was 62 and Mary about 50, a baby appeared in their lives. He was named George Michael Cochran. Here’s Mary with George on her lap from a 1926 Potomac Heights Church congregation photo. 




James and Mary attended one of the very first meetings which initiated the formation of the Potomac Heights Community Church. (Now Palisades Community Church) Mary taught Sunday school from the very beginning in 1923 until the 1950s. She was also enthusiastic about drama, and when the church was first getting organized she proposed scoping out “home talent to put on plays.” Later Mary herself participated in those plays including this one. 

Mary back row far left next to David Correll of 5414 Cathedral


In the 1930 census, Annie had left the household, but three more boarders appeared. George F Cochran was listed as an adopted son. James was still working as a watchman at 67 years old.  That same year little George was bitten by a dog. It made the Evening Star on April 24, 1935.





In the 1940 census, The Cochrans were still hosting lodgers which included Bess Custard and her two little boys, Don and Jimmie. Bess was divorced and supported herself as a stenographer.  Don and his friend Martin Kegel, who lived across the street, made the papers when both fell through the ice while playing on the canal that same January. Even though Don was in the icy water for at least a half hour, he survived the incident unscathed, and joined the Marines at 18. He was killed while serving in the Korean War. 


Evening Star Jan 16, 1940 (Don on right)


James died early in the summer of 1942 and was buried in Lynchburg. He was almost 80 years old. George joined the Navy that August and served until 1947. Mary stayed in the house until 1946 when she sold the property to James and Marguerite Schaeffer. Mary remained active in the church until her death in 1961


Mary and James congregation photo 1940

. George joined the Navy that August and served until 1947. Mary stayed in the house until 1946 when she sold the property to James and Marguerite Schaeffer. Mary remained active in the church until her death in 1961. She even manned a ceremonial shovel when the church built an addition in 1959. Here are two of her recipes from the church cookbook. (click on the photo for a larger version)




I don’t know much about the Scheaffers, who lived here for 8 years, except that they  won a prize in a beautiful house contest in 1952. This ad appeared in March 1954 when Armin and Mary Hufnagle bought the house. 



Armin was in turns an insurance salesman, a “proprietor” and a cabbie. Armin died in July 1973, and Mary sold the house to the current owner in November 1973. 

Here's one more photo of Mary hanging out with other charter members at church.