Hyattsville
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About this ebook
Andra Damron
Author Andra Damron is a historian and preservationist. She is a decade-long Hyattsville resident who serves as an officer of the Hyattsville Preservation Association. Damron aided the organization in the expansion of its nationally registered historic district, the formation of its advocacy committee, and the initiation of an ongoing digital photograph and oral history preservation program.
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Hyattsville - Andra Damron
Damron.
INTRODUCTION
The land that became Hyattsville was settled originally by the Nanticoke and Susquehannock Indian tribes. With European exploration, the area’s animal resources, primarily beaver, were a strong attraction to the region. Hunters could transport their hides along the area waterways and Native American trails. There was a great demand in Europe for the pelts and traded Native American goods. European settlers made two large land purchases in the area in the early 1700s, known as Black Ask and New Dumfreeze. On John Beale’s Black Ask parcel, a small riverfront community formed, commonly known as Beale Town. Unhappy with their community’s location and economic development, the residents petitioned the Colonial legislature in 1742 to move south, and with that, Beale Town ceased to exist. It seems only one family lived on New Dumfreeze. It would take other factors for development to begin.
In 1783, the first American stagecoach route passed through this area, and two years later, a postal delivery route followed. As the native species’ population dwindled from excessive hunting, the area became popular for tobacco production. By 1812, Maryland authorized construction of the Washington and Baltimore Turnpike, connecting the two cities through the Hyattsville area.
By 1828, the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad was chartered—its Washington Line connecting Washington, D.C., and Baltimore—and running near the turnpike. Tracks were completed by 1835. Christopher Clarke Hyatt purchased his first parcel of land in the area on March 19, 1845. Its ideal location near the stagecoach line, mail route, turnpike, and the railroad with new telegraph lines made the land perfect for settlement. Hyatt opened a store and began mail delivery. By 1859, the post office and local cartographers called the area Hyattsville.
The end of the Civil War and slavery forced many of the tobacco plantations to cease production. The sale of this cheap land coincided with a booming federal government expanded by the war and a rise in property prices in Washington, D.C. Hyattsville’s location on the railroad made it an ideal location for summer homes and a suburb. Neighboring Bladensburg’s Spa Springs, a resort, created a draw with its healing
waters. Hyattsville was known by Presidents Ulysses Grant, Grover Cleveland, and Teddy Roosevelt, who visited their friends for riding and hunting at the local farms of Hitching Post Hill and Edgewood.
Louis Wine, George Johnson, and developers Benjamin F. Guy, Thomas Parker, and Jeremiah Bartholow joined Hyatt in subdividing and selling lots on a large scale. Hyattsville’s population doubled. The Act of Incorporation for the City of Hyattsville was signed April 7, 1886. By 1890, Hyattsville was one of only two communities with a population greater than 1,000 in Prince George’s County. Early street names reflected the importance of those individuals, like Wine and Johnson, who contributed to Hyattsville’s early success. During this period, Hyattsville’s population was expanding steadily. A small immigrant and African American population made Hyattsville their home from its earliest days. Churches, schools, athletic groups, and civic organizations formed in reflection of the growing population. Most of the B&O Railroad traffic at this time was commuters to Washington, D.C. In 1892, Hyattsville gained international fame when it became the first American city to institute the single-tax system, taxing only land and not personal property. Local attorney and supporter of the system Jackson H. Ralston advocated his case to the Maryland Court of Appeals, where the system was found to violate Maryland tax law. The city also boasted the first newspaper, phone system, and utilities in the area. By 1899, the electric streetcar connected the community to Washington, D.C., businesses, boosting Hyattsville’s population ever higher.
After the dawn of the 20th century, Hyattsville’s population boomed and other national issues faced the community. The Carter brothers designed and hand built an automobile here. A reception was hosted for woman suffragists petitioning the U.S. Senate on July 31, 1913. Maryland National Guard Infantry Company F, based in Hyattsville, was called to service in World War I and found themselves involved in key battles, later supporting the founding of the American Legion. Local inventor Dr. J. Harris Rogers was celebrated internationally for his underwater and underground wireless system credited with winning the war. Maryland’s first female justice of the peace was appointed to serve the 16th District during Prohibition. Some 6,000 vehicles a day traveled through town in 1925 when Hyattsville’s main road, Maryland Avenue, was federally designated Route 1, part of the main road from Maine to Florida. Automobile dealerships, garages, and service stations began to line the corridor.
Hyattsville’s prominence in Prince George’s County was affirmed with the establishment of headquarters for the regional Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission and the County Government Services Building, which located here in the 1930s. The St. John DeMatha Monastery was opened in 1931. The monastery was used to train young men for priesthood in the Trinitarian Order. The order