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Lyttonsville: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 39°00′05″N 77°03′45″W / 39.0015146°N 77.0626211°W / 39.0015146; -77.0626211
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History: 1930s
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Lyttonsville had about 60 Black households and 300 residents by 1930. Shops and houses sat along Brookville Road and Garfield Avenue, whose intersection hosted the Pilgrim Baptist Church and its cemetery. In 1917, the two-room Linden School for grades 1-7 was built on the north side of Garfield. "The school, which had no running water or plumbing, served the African American community until Montgomery County’s schools were integrated in 1955," the 2017 sector plan said.<ref name=":1" /> Brookville Road also hosted a beer hall named Ike’s Blue Moon.
Lyttonsville had about 60 Black households and 300 residents by 1930. Shops and houses sat along Brookville Road and Garfield Avenue, whose intersection hosted the Pilgrim Baptist Church and its cemetery. In 1917, the two-room Linden School for grades 1-7 was built on the north side of Garfield. "The school, which had no running water or plumbing, served the African American community until Montgomery County’s schools were integrated in 1955," the 2017 sector plan said.<ref name=":1" /> Brookville Road also hosted a beer hall named Ike’s Blue Moon.


The neighborhood lacked running water and paved streets until the late 1960s and early 1970s, when the Montgomery County government acted after years of lobbying by residents. Racist county policies "enabled poverty to set in and enabled environmental racism to run rampant through the community", according to the chair of the Montgomery County Historic Preservation Commission. By the time the County embarked on an urban renewal plan in the 1960s, Lyttonsville was "already suffering from substantial disinvestment, environmental pollution issues, and was desperately in need of assistance." Montgomery County urban renewal documents consistently identified Lyttonsville as the area most in need of assistance. The county seized much of Lyttonsville, including 60% of the residential area and one church, using [[eminent domain]]. The land was sold to developers, who built apartment complexes, an industrial park, a [[Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission]] service center, and a [[Ride On (bus)|Ride On]] bus depot.<ref name="WAPO profile 2021" />
The neighborhood lacked running water and paved streets until the late 1960s and early 1970s, when the Montgomery County government acted after years of lobbying by residents. Racist county policies had "enabled poverty to set in and enabled environmental racism to run rampant through the community", according to the chair of the Montgomery County Historic Preservation Commission. Lyttonsville was "already suffering from substantial disinvestment, environmental pollution issues, and was desperately in need of assistance"—indeed, county planning documents consistently identified Lyttonsville as the area most in need of assistance. The county decided to seize much of Lyttonsville, including 60% of the residential area and one church, using [[eminent domain]]. The land was sold to developers, who built apartment complexes, an industrial park, a [[Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission]] service center, and a [[Ride On (bus)|Ride On]] bus depot.<ref name="WAPO profile 2021" />


By 2012, the community had become ethnically and racially diversified. Although descendants of some of the original residents still live in the neighborhood, Lyttonsville is now home to residents from around the world, including Africa, Southeast Asia, and elsewhere. The arrival of the [[Purple Line (Maryland)|Purple Line]]'s [[Lyttonsville station]] by 2027 is expected to transform the neighborhood.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/realestate/neighborhood-profile-lyttonsville/2012/07/25/gJQAfgNICX_story.html |title=Neighborhood profile: Lyttonsville |publisher=[[The Washington Post]] |accessdate=2022-06-04}}</ref>
By 2012, the community had become ethnically and racially diversified. Although descendants of some of the original residents still live in the neighborhood, Lyttonsville is now home to residents from around the world, including Africa, Southeast Asia, and elsewhere. The arrival of the [[Purple Line (Maryland)|Purple Line]]'s [[Lyttonsville station]] by 2027 is expected to transform the neighborhood.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/realestate/neighborhood-profile-lyttonsville/2012/07/25/gJQAfgNICX_story.html |title=Neighborhood profile: Lyttonsville |publisher=[[The Washington Post]] |accessdate=2022-06-04}}</ref>

Revision as of 14:37, 17 November 2022

Lyttonsville
Neighborhood
Lyttonsville is located in Maryland
Lyttonsville
Lyttonsville
Location in Maryland
Coordinates: 39°00′05″N 77°03′45″W / 39.0015146°N 77.0626211°W / 39.0015146; -77.0626211
Country United States
State Maryland
County Montgomery
Unincorporated communitySilver Spring
ZIP Code
20910
Area codes301, 240

Lyttonsville is a mostly residential neighborhood of Silver Spring, Maryland. Established in the 1850s, it is among the oldest neighborhoods in Montgomery County and is a notable example of a community created by free African Americans before the Civil War. Today, Lyttonsville is a 68-acre[1], predominantly residential neighborhood mostly composed of modest single-family homes.

Location

Located in the Silver Spring CDP, Lyttonsville is bordered by East-West Highway (Maryland Route 410) to the south, beyond which is the neighborhood of Rock Creek Forest and, further south, Washington, D.C. Rock Creek Park and Chevy Chase are located to the west, Forest Glen Park to the north, and Woodside and Downtown Silver Spring to the east.

History

Before the establishment of Lyttonsville, the area was home to large tobacco plantations, including Edgewood and the Highlands. The landowners included the prominent Carroll and Brent families, who introduced a large slave population to the area.[2][3]

In 1853, Samuel Lytton, a free African-American man who worked in the nearby house of newspaper editor Francis Preston Blair, purchased more than four acres of land from a white farmer, Leonard Johnson, on the east side of Brookville Road near today's Garfield Avenue.[3] This tract became the center of Lyttonsville, one of the first Black communities in Montgomery County. Lytton is often erroneously referred to as a freed slave, but there is no historical evidence that he was ever enslaved.[1] Two churches and a two-room schoolhouse were long the heart of the tight-knit community. In the 1870s, the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad built the Metropolitan Branch line past, or perhaps through, the neighborhood. A bridge over the tracks at Talbot Avenue eventually connect the area to Silver Spring.[4] In 1918, the bridge over the railroad was replaced with the one-lane metal Talbot Street bridge.[4]

Lyttonsville had about 60 Black households and 300 residents by 1930. Shops and houses sat along Brookville Road and Garfield Avenue, whose intersection hosted the Pilgrim Baptist Church and its cemetery. In 1917, the two-room Linden School for grades 1-7 was built on the north side of Garfield. "The school, which had no running water or plumbing, served the African American community until Montgomery County’s schools were integrated in 1955," the 2017 sector plan said.[3] Brookville Road also hosted a beer hall named Ike’s Blue Moon.

The neighborhood lacked running water and paved streets until the late 1960s and early 1970s, when the Montgomery County government acted after years of lobbying by residents. Racist county policies had "enabled poverty to set in and enabled environmental racism to run rampant through the community", according to the chair of the Montgomery County Historic Preservation Commission. Lyttonsville was "already suffering from substantial disinvestment, environmental pollution issues, and was desperately in need of assistance"—indeed, county planning documents consistently identified Lyttonsville as the area most in need of assistance. The county decided to seize much of Lyttonsville, including 60% of the residential area and one church, using eminent domain. The land was sold to developers, who built apartment complexes, an industrial park, a Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission service center, and a Ride On bus depot.[1]

By 2012, the community had become ethnically and racially diversified. Although descendants of some of the original residents still live in the neighborhood, Lyttonsville is now home to residents from around the world, including Africa, Southeast Asia, and elsewhere. The arrival of the Purple Line's Lyttonsville station by 2027 is expected to transform the neighborhood.[5]

Transportation

Lyttonsville is served by Metrobus numbers J1 and J2, as well as by Ride On numbers 1, 2, 5, and 11. Washington Metro service is available on the Red Line in nearby Downtown Silver Spring, Forest Glen, and Wheaton. By 2027, Purple Line service will be available at the nearby Lyttonsville, 16th Street–Woodside station, and Silver Spring stations.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "Lyttonsville, one of Montgomery's oldest neighborhoods, braces for change". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2022-06-04.
  2. ^ "History of Greater Lyttonsville" (PDF). mcatlas.org. Retrieved 2022-06-04.
  3. ^ a b c "Greater Lyttonsville Sector Plan / May 2017" (PDF). Montgomery County, Maryland / Montgomery Planning. May 2017. Retrieved November 16, 2022.
  4. ^ a b "Maryland Inventory of Historic Properties Form / Inventory No. M: 36-30" (PDF). Maryland Historical Trust. April 3, 2001. Retrieved November 16, 2022.
  5. ^ "Neighborhood profile: Lyttonsville". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2022-06-04.