Author Topic: Forum Happy Hour (for a good cause)!  (Read 10518 times)

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Re: Forum Happy Hour (for a good cause)!
« Reply #15 on: February 02, 2006, 03:04:00 pm »
i'd come, but i live near baltimore...and am therefore unhip

Re: Forum Happy Hour (for a good cause)!
« Reply #16 on: February 02, 2006, 03:12:00 pm »
You want unhip, try Springfield. I'll be home supporting the troops.
 
 
Quote
Originally posted by snarfle the garthog:
  i'd come, but i live near baltimore...and am therefore unhip

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Re: Forum Happy Hour (for a good cause)!
« Reply #17 on: February 02, 2006, 03:27:00 pm »
Quote
Originally posted by Charlie Nakatestes, Japanese Golfer:
  You want unhip, try Springfield. I'll be home supporting the troops.
I lived there too, so I know the unhip factor.  You should have seen Springfield in the 60's.  Where Der Springfield mall shopping paradise now stands, was only a lame strip mall in the 60s.

brennser

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Re: Forum Happy Hour (for a good cause)!
« Reply #18 on: February 02, 2006, 03:35:00 pm »
Quote
Originally posted by SalParadise:
  brennsito, my extra b&s ticket (night 2, you're welcome to roll with us) is yours if you still want it. i'll bring it with me tomorrow if this happy hour deal pans out.
thats fantastic - thanks Sal - we'll figure out details tomorrow

Venerable Bede

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Re: Forum Happy Hour (for a good cause)!
« Reply #19 on: February 02, 2006, 03:44:00 pm »
if i can find time out from packing up an apartment to move, i'll stop by afterwards.
OU812

Re: Forum Happy Hour (for a good cause)!
« Reply #20 on: February 02, 2006, 03:44:00 pm »
Yes, but now we have Whole Foods, Afghan Kabob, Trader Joe's, and...Jaxx!
 
 
Quote
Originally posted by snarfle the garthog:
   
Quote
Originally posted by Charlie Nakatestes, Japanese Golfer:
  You want unhip, try Springfield. I'll be home supporting the troops.
I lived there too, so I know the unhip factor.  You should have seen Springfield in the 60's.  Where Der Springfield mall shopping paradise now stands, was only a lame strip mall in the 60s. [/b]

kosmo vinyl

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Re: Forum Happy Hour (for a good cause)!
« Reply #21 on: February 02, 2006, 03:50:00 pm »
Ok so for those who can't make it for the museum open house what drinking establishment should we lower the character of, and from at what time forward do we definitely want to be occupying space in it.  We could always start at the DCist gathering and break off elsewhere...
T.Rex

HoyaSaxa03

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Re: Forum Happy Hour (for a good cause)!
« Reply #22 on: February 02, 2006, 04:23:00 pm »
i would humbly suggest the townhouse tavern on 17th and R (best jukebox in the neighborhood), but i'm not sure if i'll be able to make it ...
(o|o)

Herr Professor Doktor Doom

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Re: Forum Happy Hour (for a good cause)!
« Reply #23 on: February 02, 2006, 05:15:00 pm »
Townhouse is a good suggestion, and usually not too crowded...
_\|/_

Relaxer

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Re: Forum Happy Hour (for a good cause)!
« Reply #24 on: February 02, 2006, 05:54:00 pm »
Quote
Originally posted by brennser:
  Loons and loonettes
 
 Myself and Relaxer could even share 1 earbud each as we listen to The Woods?    :D  
 
I would totally be up for this, but it's the wife's night out so I'll be home teaching the boy how to chew and start fires.
oword

brennser

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Re: Forum Happy Hour (for a good cause)!
« Reply #25 on: February 02, 2006, 06:31:00 pm »
ok, it looks like we have a few interested parties
 
 people should definitely stop by Heurich house and donate, after that we can retire to Townhouse tavern
 
 Most of you seem to prefer lateish (8ish) for drinks. Anyone wanna do earlier....6 or 6.30ish, as I will have to attend to fatherly duties by 8
 
 Sal? Doom?
 
 oh, and Hoya, no excuses...be there!

SalParadise

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Re: Forum Happy Hour (for a good cause)!
« Reply #26 on: February 02, 2006, 06:35:00 pm »
6pm in front of the house?

brennser

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Re: Forum Happy Hour (for a good cause)!
« Reply #27 on: February 02, 2006, 06:59:00 pm »
yup
 
 
Quote
Originally posted by SalParadise:
  6pm in front of the house?

Jaguar

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Re: Forum Happy Hour (for a good cause)!
« Reply #28 on: February 03, 2006, 12:59:00 am »
Can't make it. Have a previous date with the Lilys, (the sounds of) Kaleidoscope and French Toast at the Black Cat. Been waiting too many years to see the Lilys again.
 
 Arlette, believe me, you have the wrong idea of us. LOL. We are just the everyday people you see around town.
#609

ggw

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Re: Forum Happy Hour (for a good cause)!
« Reply #29 on: February 03, 2006, 09:26:00 am »
Racing to Save a Victorian Gem
 

 Backers of D.C.'s 'Brewmaster's Castle,' Now a Museum, Must Raise Thousands
 
 By Sue Anne Pressley
 Washington Post Staff Writer
 Friday, February 3, 2006; B01
 
 At Christian Heurich's mansion, near Dupont Circle, it looks as if the German-born brewer just stepped away -- back in 1894. Little has changed inside, from the plush patterned carpets to the pale painted ceilings. But now the "Brewmaster's Castle," the site of many a wedding and other happy event, is facing a serious threat from the modern world.
 
 Unless supporters of the Victorian-era museum raise $250,000 by Feb. 15, the property, at 1307 New Hampshire Ave. NW, will face foreclosure and might be sold, according to Friends of the Castle, a group trying to save the facility.
 
 The sale of the mansion -- supporters fear it could become a restaurant, a law office or even an embassy -- would mean the loss of one of the last intact examples of late Victorian decor in the country and a showcase for a piece of D.C. history often overshadowed by the federal story.
 
 "This is the last grand splash of high Victoriana," said docent Mary Anne Hoffman as she led a visitor through the 31-room house, filled with the original furnishings -- gold mirrors, carved woodwork, bathrooms with gilded tubs. "It's a time capsule."
 
 Christian Heurich, orphaned as a boy, made his way to Washington in 1872, where he started a brewing company, one of the few industries in the District beyond the government. Heurich, as he prospered, had an understandable phobia -- his first two beer breweries burned to the ground -- so he decided to fireproof his new family home and outfit it with the latest technology. The house has 15 fireplaces, with elaborate mantelpieces reaching to the ceiling, in which no fire has ever been lighted.
 
 Built from 1892 to 1894 of reinforced steel and poured concrete, the mansion was considered a "smart house," with central heating, indoor plumbing, a burglar alarm and speaker tubes for summoning far-flung servants. The lot, the home and its furnishings cost $71,840, said Gary Heurich, Christian Heurich's grandson and a member of Friends of the Castle.
 
 By strict order, the decor remained frozen in time. The brewer, who outlived his first two wives, would not allow his third wife to change the furnishings purchased by his second wife, who was in charge when the home was built. "The toilet-paper holders are still there," said Kathryn Smith, a Washington historian, who called the site "of enormous value" in telling "a story of immigration in Washington, a story of small industry and also a story of a family."
 
 Christian Heurich died in 1945 at the age of 102.
 
 For almost 50 years, the mansion was home to what is now the Historical Society of Washington. In 2003, the castle was about to be sold and turned into a restaurant, Gary Heurich said, when the nonprofit Heurich House Foundation was formed and borrowed $5.5 million to buy the property.
 
 Although the museum, which attracts about 8,400 visitors a year, is now self-supporting, interest payments have increased by $150,000 a year, he said. That has broken the budget and forced the Feb. 15 deadline for a debt payment of $250,000. Because the mansion is on the National Register of Historic Places, the exterior cannot be altered, Heurich said, but the contents are unprotected.
 
 As one of its pleas, Friends of the Castle has sent e-mails to about 2,000 area residents detailing "the crisis at the Brewmaster's Castle" and asking recipients to pass the word "to five or more people" who "share your concern." The effort has raised more than $17,000, Heurich said. Auctions and other fundraisers are in the works.
 
 "The real loss," he said, "would be if it is no longer open to the public."
 
 For residents such as Sarah McKechnie, there is no need to explain the value and beauty of the Brewmaster's Castle. McKechnie, a clinical exercise specialist, was married there last year to Mark Sakaley, a Justice Department analyst, in a ceremony filled with candlelight and poetry readings.
 
 "It was fabulous," she said. "It really is a romantic oasis in the heart of D.C."