in Near Northeast
Early history It is believed that the general area was occupied as early in the
Paleo-Indian period (10,000-8,000 B.C.) all the way to the
Woodland period (1000 B.C. to the time of European Contact). Several streams flowed throw the area feeding into
Tiber Creek (also known as Goose Creek) making it an attractive area for settlements for
Native tribes and hunting. Near Northeast started a patchwork of several different European landowners' claims. Most of the land belonged to Notley Young, under the name of
Youngsboro or
Isherwood) forming the northern border of the city. However, nearly all of the land remained undeveloped, used as farmland to cultivate fruits and vegetables for the fresh market in the more developed sections of the city. The land lots that were used for non-agricultural purposes in the early 19th century were mostly cemeteries.
19th century In the 1830s, the
B&O Railroad constructed its
Washington Branch, which entered the city of Washington at roughly 9th and Boundary Streets and proceeded through the neighborhood down I Street NE and Delaware Avenue NE to the
New Jersey Avenue Station located between the current
Union Station (built in 1907) and the
Capitol. Its presence gradually led Old City to evolve into a working-class neighborhood: wood and coal yards appeared to serve the railroad and its terminals, with houses subsequently built for the employees of the railroad industries. The neighborhood remained undeveloped and sparsely populated through the end of the 19th century. By the 1890s,
H Street NE was the eastern terminus of the
Washington streetcar system (at 15th Street). Many of the older houses still standing in the area were built in that period. Commercial development began to develop along H Street to serve these new customers.
20th century Near Northeast evolved into mixed neighborhood. It was a major center of black population in the first half of the 20th century as well as a significant neighborhood for immigrant populations from
Ireland,
Germany,
Greece,
Italy,
Jews from
Eastern Europe as well as
African Americans. Many
Russian-Jewish immigrants settled on
H Street during the early 1900s, founding Ezras Israel Congregation in 1907.
Union Station's construction destroyed the poor Irish neighborhood known as
Swampoodle, buried Tiber Creek and allowed for development to increase. Today, Near Northeast sides on the Eastern part of the now non-existent Swampoodle. During this same period, a twelve-block strip of H Street (from 3rd Street to 15th) became one of the most important shopping corridors in Washington. It catered primarily to a working-class clientele, but was densely commercial, with restaurants, theaters, banks, grocery stores and clothing stores. It was the location of the first
Sears Roebuck store in Washington. In addition, two of the most recognizable and popular locations were the whites-only
Moderne-style
Atlas Theater at 1331 H Street which opened in 1938. For black customers, the Plymouth Theater down the block at 1365 H Street opened its doors in 1943.
Present day H Street, so long the center of the neighborhood's life, is being structured as an arts district. In 2002, H Street Main Street, in partnership with the city and community members started breathing new life in the neighborhood. Theaters, jazz clubs, performance spaces and exotic restaurants appeared in the neighborhood. In 2005 and 2006, more venues and bars opened in the H Street corridor. Business owners in that area are calling the area the
Atlas District, after the movie theater (now a dance and performance studio) that has been its most prominent landmark for half a century. File:800 block of H Street, N.E..JPG|800 block of H Street NE in 2009 File:DC Streetcar construction on H Street, N.E..JPG|Construction of the
DC Streetcar's H Street NE/Benning Road Line in 2009 File:Buildings, H St. near intersection with 7th St., NE, Washington, D.C LCCN2010641599.tif|The intersection of H Street and 7th Street NE in 2010 File:Buildings and cars, H St. near intersection with 14th St., NE, Washington, D.C LCCN2010641633.tif|The intersection of H Street and 14th Street NE in 2010 A new wave of residents has rapidly changed the area with sit-down restaurants, hip bars, more upscale retail establishments. The older residents note that this process has also made the neighborhood feel safer with more affluent residents investing in the community. This is a return to a more diverse community as it was before the 1968 riots when most white residents left. ==Neighborhood landmarks==