In the late 1880s, then-Representative
Francis G. Newlands of
Nevada and his partners began to buy up farmland in northwest Washington, D.C., and southern
Montgomery County, Maryland, to develop a residential
streetcar suburb. (See
Washington streetcars.) They founded the
Chevy Chase Land Company in 1890, and its eventual holdings are now known as this neighborhood and
Chevy Chase, Maryland. Chevy Chase, D.C. was developed beginning in the early 1900s after construction was completed on the
Chevy Chase Line, a streetcar line stretching to and beyond the northwestern boundary of the District of Columbia, thereby linking the area to downtown. Over succeeding decades, the formerly remote area was transformed from farmland and woods to middle-class housing. Chevy Chase D.C. includes many
kit houses, including
Sears Catalog Homes and others, a popular housing option in the early twentieth century that allowed individuals of modest means to order by mail the materials and instructions for a home and build it themselves. The neighborhood's major commercial road is
Connecticut Avenue NW. The street is home to commercial establishments, apartments, a community center, and a regional branch of the
D.C. Public Library. Unlike many urban neighborhoods that have lost local businesses to large chains and suburban malls, the small, generally locally owned businesses along
Connecticut Avenue remain and are well patronized by the local population. These businesses include Magruder's Supermarket, established in 1875; and the Avalon Theatre, which opened in 1923 as a silent film house and ran until the theater underwent renovations in 2003. The Avalon thereafter reopened as a non-profit movie theater. The area's parks include
Rock Creek Park, Lafayette-Pointer Park, and Livingston Park.
Electoral boundaries redrawn Until 2002, the entire neighborhood was located in Ward 3. After the 2000 census revealed an increase in population in Ward 3 and a decrease in population in Ward 4, the
Council of the District of Columbia voted to reassign the portion of the neighborhood east of Broad Branch Road to Ward 4 as of January 1, 2002. Many residents were upset at the decision. ==Education==