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Coordinates: 38°53′26″N 77°02′21″W / 38.8906675°N 77.0391435°W / 38.8906675; -77.0391435
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[[Image:DC-old-and-new.jpg|thumb|300px|Tiber/Goose Creek around 1800, and the modern shorelines of the Potomac River.]]
{{Infobox river
'''Tiber Creek''' or '''Tyber Creek''' was a [[tributary]] of the [[Potomac River]] in [[Washington, D.C.]] Originally known as '''Goose Creek''', it was renamed after [[Rome]]'s [[Tiber|Tiber River]] as the lands southeast of then [[Georgetown, Washington, D.C.|Georgetown]], [[Maryland]] were selected for the City of Washington, the new capital of the [[United States]].<ref>Local farmer Francis Pope is credited with renaming the creek. He also called his 400-acre farm "Rome". Source: {{cite web| url=http://capitolhillhistory.org/library/04/Jenkins%20Hill.html| title=The Mysterious Mr. Jenkins of Jenkins Hill: The Early History of the Capitol Site| author=John Michael Vlach
| name = Tiber Creek
| accessdate=April 24| accessyear=2006| }}</ref> It flowed south toward the base of [[United States Capitol|Capitol Hill]], then west meeting the Potomac near [[Jefferson Pier]]. Using the original Tiber Creek for commercial purposes was part of L'Efant's original plan. The idea was that it could be widened and channeled into a canal to the Potomac. And so part of it became the Washington City Canal, running along what is now Constitution Ave. By the 1870's, however, because DC had no separate storm drain and sewer system, the Washington City Canal was notoriously stinky. It had become an open sewer. When Alexander "Boss" Shepherd joined the Board of Public Works in 1871, he and the Board engaged in a massive, albeit uneven, series of infrastructure improvements, including grading and paving streets, planting trees, installing sewers and laying out parks. One of the projects undertaken by the Board of Public Works was to enclose Tiber Creek/Washington City Canal. A german immigrant engineer named Adolf Cluss, also on the Board, is credited (by the German American Historical Society website) with constructing a tunnel from Capitol Hill to the Potomac "wide enough for a bus to drive through to put Tiber Creek underground." An article in the Engineering News and American Railway Journal, from Febraury 8, 1894, entitled "The Tiber Creek Sewer Flush Gates, Washington, D.C." also gives a short description of this process. Many of the buildings on the north side of Consitution apparently are built on top of Tiber Creek, including the IRS building, part of which is built on wooden piers sunk into the wet groung along Tiber Creek. In fact, until the mid 1990's that part of Washington around the intersection of 14th and Constitution was an open parking lot because the underground water was too difficult to deal with. During construction of the Ronald Regan building, the engineers figured out how to divert the water. But that dewatering then reduced the water level underneath the IRS building which caused the wooden piers to loose stability and part of the IRS building foundation to sink. A [[public house|pub]] near Tiber Creek's historic course has been named after it.
| name_native =
| name_native_lang =
| name_other = {{plainlist|
* Tyber Creek
* Goose Creek}}
| name_etymology = [[Tiber|Tiber River]] in [[Rome]], [[Italy]]
| image = White Lot during the war, Washington D.C. Shows Tiber River, now "B" St. - NARA - 529253.jpg
| image_size = 300px
| image_caption = <sup>[[National Archives at College Park]]</sup><br>''White Lot during the war, Washington D.C. Shows Tiber River, now [[Constitution Avenue|"B" St.]]'', {{circa|1860–1865}}.
| image_alt =
| map =
| map_size =
| map_caption =
| map_alt =
| pushpin_map =
| pushpin_map_size =
| pushpin_map_caption=
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| subdivision_type1 = Country
| subdivision_name1 = U.S.
| subdivision_type2 = District
| subdivision_name2 = [[Washington County, D.C.|District of Columbia]]
| subdivision_type3 = City
| subdivision_name3 = [[Washington, D.C.]]
| subdivision_type4 =
| subdivision_name4 =
| subdivision_type5 =
| subdivision_name5 =
<!---------------------- PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS -->
| length =
| width_min =
| width_avg =
| width_max =
| depth_min =
| depth_avg =
| depth_max =
| discharge1_location=
| discharge1_min =
| discharge1_avg =
| discharge1_max =
<!---------------------- BASIN FEATURES -->
| source1 =
| source1_location = [[Shaw (Washington, D.C.)|Shaw]] neighborhood
|source1_coordinates={{coord|38.9155556|-77.0202778|format=dms|type:landmark_region:US-DC|display=inline}}<ref name=gnis />
| source1_elevation =
| mouth =
| mouth_location = [[National Mall]]
|mouth_coordinates={{coord|38.8906675|-77.0391435|format=dms|type:landmark_region:US-DC|display=inline,title}}<ref name=gnis>{{cite gnis|id=531312|name=Tiber Creek (historical)|entrydate=April 1, 1993|access-date=December 18, 2019}}</ref>
| mouth_elevation =
| progression =
| river_system = [[Potomac River]]
| basin_size =
| basin_landmarks =
| basin_population =
| tributaries_left =
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| waterbodies =
| waterfalls =
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| custom_label =
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}}


{{refimprove|date=October 2020}}
==References and notes==
'''Tiber Creek''' or '''Tyber Creek''', originally named '''Goose Creek''', is a [[tributary]] of the [[Potomac River]] in [[Washington, D.C.]] It was a free-flowing creek until 1815, when it was channeled to become part of the [[Washington City Canal]]. Presently, it flows under the city in tunnels, including under [[Constitution Avenue]] NW.
<references />


==History==
[[Category:History of Washington, D.C.]]
[[File:Tiber Creek north-east of the Capitol. Washington, D.C. LCCN2004662005.jpg|thumb|Landscape showing a train crossing Tiber Creek, northeast of the Capitol (not pictured) in Washington, DC in 1839]]
[[Category:Rivers of the District of Columbia]]
Originally named Goose Creek, it was renamed during the late 1600s by settler Francis Pope, who owned a {{convert|400|acre|km2|sing=on}} farmstead along the banks of the creek. Dubbing his land "[[Rome]]", Pope renamed the creek after the Italian city's [[Tiber|river]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2014-02-11 |title=Washington Was Originally Named Rome, Maryland |url=https://ghostsofdc.org/2014/02/11/washington-originally-called-rome/ |access-date=2021-12-23 |website=Ghosts of DC}}</ref>
[[Category:Chesapeake Bay Watershed]]
[[Category:Potomac River Watershed]]


Using the original Tiber Creek for commercial purposes was part of [[Pierre Charles L’Enfant|Pierre (Peter) Charles L'Enfant's]] 1791 "Plan of the city intended for the permanent seat of the government of the United States . . .".<ref>[https://www.loc.gov/exhibits/treasures/tri001.html "Original Plan of Washington, D.C."] U.S. Library of Congress. Accessed 2009-09-16.</ref> The idea was that the creek could be widened and channeled into a canal to the Potomac. By 1815 the western portion of the creek became part of the [[Washington City Canal]], running along what is now [[Constitution Avenue]].<ref>Cornelius W. Heine (1953). [https://www.jstor.org/pss/40067664 "The Washington City Canal."] ''Records of the Columbia Historical Society of Washington, D.C.'' '''53-56''' (1953-56) 1-27. Now called [http://www.historydc.org/media/publications/ Historical Society of Washington, DC.] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091207014533/http://www.historydc.org/media/publications/ |date=2009-12-07 }}</ref> By the 1840s, when Washington had no separate storm drain and sewer system, the Washington City Canal had become a notorious open sewer. When [[Alexander "Boss" Shepherd]] joined the D.C. Board of Public Works in 1871, he and the Board engaged in a massive, albeit uneven, series of infrastructure improvements, including grading and paving streets, planting trees, installing sewers and laying out parks. One of these projects enclosed Tiber Creek and the Washington City Canal. A German immigrant engineer named [[Adolf Cluss]], also on the Board, is credited with constructing a tunnel from Capitol Hill to the Potomac "wide enough for a bus to drive through to put Tiber Creek underground."<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20090808115930/http://geocities.com/garygrassl@verizon.net/index.html German-American Heritage Society of Washington, D.C.] Accessed 2009-09-16.</ref><ref>{{usurped|1=[https://archive.today/20120910025134/http://www.sewerhistory.org/articles/compon/1894_aen03/index.htm "The Tiber Creek Sewer Flush Gates, Washington, D.C."]}}, ''Engineering News and American Railway Journal'', February 8, 1894.</ref>


Many of the buildings on the north side of Constitution Avenue apparently are built on top of the creek, including the [[Internal Revenue Service Building]] (IRS), part of which is built on wooden piers sunk into the wet ground along the creek course. The low-lying topography there contributed to the flooding of the [[National Archives and Records Administration#National Archives Building|National Archives Building]] (Archives I in Washington, D.C.), IRS headquarters, and [[William Jefferson Clinton Federal Building]] that forced their temporary closure beginning in late June 2006. Until the mid-1990s, land near the intersection of [[14th Street Northwest and Southwest (Washington, D.C.)|14th Street]] and Constitution Avenue was a parking lot because the underground water was too difficult to deal with. During construction of the [[Ronald Reagan Building]] (1990–98), the engineers diverted the water. The dewatering then reduced the water level underneath the IRS building which caused the wooden piers to lose stability and part of the IRS building foundation to sink.{{Citation needed|date=May 2022}}
{{DC-stub}}

A [[public house|pub]] near Tiber Creek's historic course north of Capitol Hill was named after it. The Bistro Bis restaurant now occupies the Tiber Creek Pub's former location.<ref>Goldreich, Samuel (1998). [https://www.questia.com/read/1G1-56758917 "Bistro Bis succeeds Capitol Hill pub as welcoming lunch option."] ''Washington Times.'' 1998-10-12.</ref> A [[Lockkeeper's House, C & O Canal Extension|lock keeper's house]] from the Washington branch of the [[Chesapeake and Ohio Canal]] remains at the southwest corner of Constitution Avenue and 17th Street, NW, near the former mouth of Tiber Creek, and the western end of the Washington City Canal.<ref>dcMemorials.com. [http://dcmemorials.com/index_indiv0001032.htm Plaque beside the Lockkeeper's House marking the former location in Washington, D.C.] Accessed 2009-09-16.</ref><ref>HMdb.org: The Historical Marker Database. [http://www.hmdb.org/marker.asp?marker=209 "Lock Keeper’s House Marker."] Accessed 2009-09-16.</ref><ref>Coordinates of lock keeper's house: {{coord|38.8919305|-77.0397498|scale:1000|name=Lockkeeper's house from Washington branch of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal}}</ref>

According to General James Wilkinson's memoirs, "I may be excused for mention another incident, which deeply interested [...] my family. My father, to preserve his health and property, purchased 500 acres of land lying on the Tyber and Potomack, which probably comprises the President's house; but at the time, about 1762, the present seat of government was considered so remote from the early settlements of the province, that my mother objected to the removal on accounts of the distance, and my father transferred the property to Thomas Johns, esq. a friend and contemporary, of his neighborhood, to whose family it proved an auspicious contract; but in this case, the benefactor did not long enjoy the prosperity he had promoted."<ref>Memoirs of My Own Times, General James Wilkinson. Pg 9.</ref>

Presently, the stream flowing under the city is often referred to as ''Tiber Creek'' though its common past with the Canal is acknowledged.<ref>[https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/what-youd-see-in-washingtons-tiber-creek-sewer--if-you-dared/2013/08/28/cb3a2876-0fe4-11e3-85b6-d27422650fd5_story.html What you’d see in Washington’s Tiber Creek sewer — if you dared to go] - The Washington Post - John Kelly - August 28, 2013</ref>

{{See also|Washington City Canal}}

<gallery mode="packed" heights="150">
Image:DC-old-and-new.jpg|Tiber/Goose Creek around 1800, and the modern shorelines of the Potomac River
Image:L'Enfant plan.svg|[[Andrew Ellicott|Andrew Ellicott's]] revision of L'Enfant's Plan, showing Washington City Canal
File:(Survey_of_the_original_landholdings_in_Washington_D.C._in_the_area_bounded_by_The_Mall,_North_Capitol_St.,_Tiber_Creek,_N_St._N.W.,_and_Seventh_St._N.W.)_LOC_87694238.jpg|Survey map showing Goose Creek running along North Capitol Street in 1855
</gallery>

==Location and Course==
It lay southeast of then [[Georgetown, Washington, D.C.|Georgetown]], [[Maryland]], amid lands that were selected for the City of Washington, the new capital of the [[United States]].<ref name="Mr Jenkins">{{Cite web|date=2018-10-10|title=The Mysterious Mr. Jenkins of Jenkins Hill|url=http://www.capitolhillhistory.org/library/04/Jenkins%20Hill.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181010024821/http://www.capitolhillhistory.org/library/04/Jenkins%20Hill.html|archive-date=October 10, 2018|access-date=2020-10-22}}</ref> Presently this land is the [[National Mall]].

Several small streams flowed from the north and south meeting at the base of [[United States Capitol|Capitol Hill]] then heading west to flow into the [[Potomac River]] near [[Jefferson Pier]]. The overall course of the creek was kept when the Canal was built during 1815.

==References==
{{Reflist}}

==Further reading==
*{{cite web|last1=Ramos|first1=David|title=DC streams in 1859, plotted on a modern map|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141025102642/http://imaginaryterrain.com/blog/2013/07/streams/|archive-date=October 25, 2014|url=http://imaginaryterrain.com/blog/2013/07/streams/|work=Imaginary Terrain|date=July 7, 2013}}
*{{cite web|last1=Williams|first1=Garnett P.|title=Washington D.C.'s Vanishing Springs and Waterways: Geological Survey Circular 752|url=http://pubs.usgs.gov/circ/1977/0752/report.pdf|location=Washington, D.C.|publisher=[[United States Department of the Interior]]|date=1977|access-date=March 15, 2015}}

==External links==
* {{Commons category-inline}}
* [https://www.whitehousehistory.org/photos/painting-of-john-quincy-adams-on-tiber-creek Painting of John Quincy Adams on Tiber Creek], by Peter Waddell, 2009, at the [[White House Historical Association]]
* [http://mallhistory.org/items/show/40 "Tiber Creek"] at ''Histories of the National Mall''
{{Authority control}}

{{Potomac River System}}

[[Category:History of Washington, D.C.]]
[[Category:Rivers of Washington, D.C.]]
[[Category:Tributaries of the Potomac River]]
[[Category:Former rivers]]
[[Category:Subterranean rivers of the United States]]

Latest revision as of 03:04, 22 December 2024

Tiber Creek
  • Tyber Creek
  • Goose Creek
National Archives at College Park
White Lot during the war, Washington D.C. Shows Tiber River, now "B" St., c. 1860–1865.
Map
EtymologyTiber River in Rome, Italy
Location
CountryU.S.
DistrictDistrict of Columbia
CityWashington, D.C.
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationShaw neighborhood
 • coordinates38°54′56″N 77°01′13″W / 38.9155556°N 77.0202778°W / 38.9155556; -77.0202778[1]
Mouth 
 • location
National Mall
 • coordinates
38°53′26″N 77°02′21″W / 38.8906675°N 77.0391435°W / 38.8906675; -77.0391435[1]
Basin features
River systemPotomac River

Tiber Creek or Tyber Creek, originally named Goose Creek, is a tributary of the Potomac River in Washington, D.C. It was a free-flowing creek until 1815, when it was channeled to become part of the Washington City Canal. Presently, it flows under the city in tunnels, including under Constitution Avenue NW.

History

[edit]
Landscape showing a train crossing Tiber Creek, northeast of the Capitol (not pictured) in Washington, DC in 1839

Originally named Goose Creek, it was renamed during the late 1600s by settler Francis Pope, who owned a 400-acre (1.6 km2) farmstead along the banks of the creek. Dubbing his land "Rome", Pope renamed the creek after the Italian city's river.[2]

Using the original Tiber Creek for commercial purposes was part of Pierre (Peter) Charles L'Enfant's 1791 "Plan of the city intended for the permanent seat of the government of the United States . . .".[3] The idea was that the creek could be widened and channeled into a canal to the Potomac. By 1815 the western portion of the creek became part of the Washington City Canal, running along what is now Constitution Avenue.[4] By the 1840s, when Washington had no separate storm drain and sewer system, the Washington City Canal had become a notorious open sewer. When Alexander "Boss" Shepherd joined the D.C. Board of Public Works in 1871, he and the Board engaged in a massive, albeit uneven, series of infrastructure improvements, including grading and paving streets, planting trees, installing sewers and laying out parks. One of these projects enclosed Tiber Creek and the Washington City Canal. A German immigrant engineer named Adolf Cluss, also on the Board, is credited with constructing a tunnel from Capitol Hill to the Potomac "wide enough for a bus to drive through to put Tiber Creek underground."[5][6]

Many of the buildings on the north side of Constitution Avenue apparently are built on top of the creek, including the Internal Revenue Service Building (IRS), part of which is built on wooden piers sunk into the wet ground along the creek course. The low-lying topography there contributed to the flooding of the National Archives Building (Archives I in Washington, D.C.), IRS headquarters, and William Jefferson Clinton Federal Building that forced their temporary closure beginning in late June 2006. Until the mid-1990s, land near the intersection of 14th Street and Constitution Avenue was a parking lot because the underground water was too difficult to deal with. During construction of the Ronald Reagan Building (1990–98), the engineers diverted the water. The dewatering then reduced the water level underneath the IRS building which caused the wooden piers to lose stability and part of the IRS building foundation to sink.[citation needed]

A pub near Tiber Creek's historic course north of Capitol Hill was named after it. The Bistro Bis restaurant now occupies the Tiber Creek Pub's former location.[7] A lock keeper's house from the Washington branch of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal remains at the southwest corner of Constitution Avenue and 17th Street, NW, near the former mouth of Tiber Creek, and the western end of the Washington City Canal.[8][9][10]

According to General James Wilkinson's memoirs, "I may be excused for mention another incident, which deeply interested [...] my family. My father, to preserve his health and property, purchased 500 acres of land lying on the Tyber and Potomack, which probably comprises the President's house; but at the time, about 1762, the present seat of government was considered so remote from the early settlements of the province, that my mother objected to the removal on accounts of the distance, and my father transferred the property to Thomas Johns, esq. a friend and contemporary, of his neighborhood, to whose family it proved an auspicious contract; but in this case, the benefactor did not long enjoy the prosperity he had promoted."[11]

Presently, the stream flowing under the city is often referred to as Tiber Creek though its common past with the Canal is acknowledged.[12]

Location and Course

[edit]

It lay southeast of then Georgetown, Maryland, amid lands that were selected for the City of Washington, the new capital of the United States.[13] Presently this land is the National Mall.

Several small streams flowed from the north and south meeting at the base of Capitol Hill then heading west to flow into the Potomac River near Jefferson Pier. The overall course of the creek was kept when the Canal was built during 1815.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Tiber Creek (historical)". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior. April 1, 1993. Retrieved December 18, 2019.
  2. ^ "Washington Was Originally Named Rome, Maryland". Ghosts of DC. February 11, 2014. Retrieved December 23, 2021.
  3. ^ "Original Plan of Washington, D.C." U.S. Library of Congress. Accessed 2009-09-16.
  4. ^ Cornelius W. Heine (1953). "The Washington City Canal." Records of the Columbia Historical Society of Washington, D.C. 53-56 (1953-56) 1-27. Now called Historical Society of Washington, DC. Archived 2009-12-07 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ German-American Heritage Society of Washington, D.C. Accessed 2009-09-16.
  6. ^ "The Tiber Creek Sewer Flush Gates, Washington, D.C."[usurped], Engineering News and American Railway Journal, February 8, 1894.
  7. ^ Goldreich, Samuel (1998). "Bistro Bis succeeds Capitol Hill pub as welcoming lunch option." Washington Times. 1998-10-12.
  8. ^ dcMemorials.com. Plaque beside the Lockkeeper's House marking the former location in Washington, D.C. Accessed 2009-09-16.
  9. ^ HMdb.org: The Historical Marker Database. "Lock Keeper’s House Marker." Accessed 2009-09-16.
  10. ^ Coordinates of lock keeper's house: 38°53′31″N 77°02′23″W / 38.8919305°N 77.0397498°W / 38.8919305; -77.0397498 (Lockkeeper's house from Washington branch of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal)
  11. ^ Memoirs of My Own Times, General James Wilkinson. Pg 9.
  12. ^ What you’d see in Washington’s Tiber Creek sewer — if you dared to go - The Washington Post - John Kelly - August 28, 2013
  13. ^ "The Mysterious Mr. Jenkins of Jenkins Hill". October 10, 2018. Archived from the original on October 10, 2018. Retrieved October 22, 2020.

Further reading

[edit]
[edit]