Schmidt's grocery and liquor store at 18th and S Streets, NW |
Like many buildings and houses in
the District of Columbia,
the well known building on the northeast corner of 18th and S Street
was not built as the result of one particular building permit, but rather
evolved over time from a modest house with a series of additions and
alterations. It served for many years as
the original location of the famed Lauriol Plaza, a Mexican restaurant now
located a block north, in a new building at 18th and T Street. Today, its the location of Rosemary's Thyme restaurant at 1801 18th Street.
Interestingly, the original
configuration of the corner building was that of a brick townhouse, matching
those located between 1743 and 1753 S Street today. They were all built simultaneously sometime
before 1874, the year they were valued at $3,000 each, a substantial sum for
the time. They are situated well behind
the building line, providing a deep front yard.
The end two houses, 1759-1761 S Street, at 18th Street, were later added
onto both the front and rear to form a grocery story, and later a restaurant;
they also later had a duel address of 1801-1805
18th Street when their orientation was
changed to face west. An adjoining
building at 1807 18th
Street was built by Susan Fletcher in1889, the
same year three rear wood frame kitchens were added to the corner buildings.
Susan Fletcher was the owner of
record of the corner building in September of 1900, when Wilhelm Schmidt
applied for a permit to construct three large show windows on the corner, one
measuring over 22 feet long, all at a cost of $600. A grocer, Schmidt would operate a business at
the location for about 30 years, which also carried the finest array of wines
and liquors, delivered by a horse drawn truck, seen in the image above.
A separate dwelling on the site
built in 1889 was the subject of a complaint by a Mrs. M. C. O’Brian of 1912 13th Street
years later, in a letter dated July
29, 1908. She claimed that
the dwelling built behind 1807 18th
Street had been recently utilized as a stable,
which she found “very objectionable.”
The building inspector noted in his reply that the owner was to apply
for a stable permit or face “prosecution if necessary.”
Wilhelm Schmidt |
Wilhelm Schmidt is pictured above about
1908 inside his business in the liquor room.
Signs on the wall indicate that no one under the age of 21 was allowed
in the room, and on the floor one can see stacks of “Old Possum Hollow”
whiskey. Schmidt ran a successful
business at the site for nearly three decades, and when he died in 1935, he
left an estate worth and estimated $400,000, an impressive sum not long after
the Depression was coming to a close.
Copyright Paul K. Williams
A Note on Source: InTowner newspaper reader Chris Hinkle contacted the author and provided the rare and personal vintage photographs of his ancestors, longtime Washingtonians, accompanying this feature. We are grateful that his sharing of family history can benefit and educate a new generation of residents.