In 1632 the English Crown unilaterally took the land from the Piscataway Natives who inhabited the Potomac-Anacostia region.
King Charles I of England in turn granted the land, which was to become the state of Maryland, to
George Calvert, whose interest in the colony lay in "the sacred duty of finding a refuge for his Roman Catholic brethren." It took until about 1675 for English settlers to reach what is now the DC area, after defeating the Powhatans that reduced the Native American numbers by roughly 90 percent.
Colonel Jehiel Brooks married into the land when he married Ann Margaret Queen, daughter of Nicholas Queen, and they received a 150-acre estate. In 1722, the Queen family raised a Roman Catholic church, which morphed into St. Francis de Sales Parish in 1908. For most of the 19th century, the area was farmland owned by the prominent Middleton and Queen families. The
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad later connected this portion of
Washington County to downtown. Bellair, the 1840 brick
Greek Revival mansion built by
Colonel Jehiel Brooks, still stands. It is referred to as Brooks Mansion. It is the site of offices and production facilities for the
Public Access Corporation of the District of Columbia, the city's
Government-access television (GAVT) channel known as DCTV. Change came rapidly during and after the
American Civil War. First, Fort Slemmer and Fort Bunker Hill were constructed as defenses against the
Confederate Army, and later the
Old Soldiers' Home was constructed to the northwest. The population of the city itself increased with the expansion of the
federal government, and the former Brooks family estate became a housing tract named "Brookland". Growth continued throughout the 1870s when the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad opened its Western Branch Line in the developing Brookland neighborhood. With the construction of nearby Sherwood, University Heights, and other tracts and with the expansion of
Washington's streetcar system, a middle-class
streetcar suburb developed. Eventually its expansion southward met Washington's northward expansion. Many
Queen Anne style and other
Victorian homes still stand. The transition from a country estate towards a residential development beginning in 1887 "marked the extension of suburban growth into the rather isolated reaches of the northeastern sector" of D.C. In its early days, the Brookland community was marked by "spacious lots and single family homes", which appealed to middle-class families and provided a "small town atmosphere". == Education ==