Gilbert Vanderwerken

Gilbert Vanderwerken

Gilbert Vanderwerken (5 February 1810 – 22 January 1894), [ [http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=ransum&id=I07187 RootsWeb's WorldConnect Project: VanDeWalker ] ] originally from Albany, New York, was most notably recognized for introducing the omnibus, an urban version of the stagecoach, in Newark, New Jersey, in 1826. With the bankruptcy of the first omnibus line in 1837 because of the national depression of that year, Vanderwerken relocated to Washington, D.C., between 1848 and 1850 to take personal control of Washington’s first successful omnibus line. The Vanderwerken Company line, closely following the horse-drawn coach routes of the early 1800s, traveled from Georgetown to the Navy Yard via M Street and Pennsylvania Avenue for a one-way fare of 12.5 cents. The omnibus, seating twelve passengers, bore the names of persons, historical events, or pictures of other fashionable modes of transportation on the side panels. The stables were located in a former tobacco warehouse at 3222 M Street in Georgetown. The Washington and Georgetown Railroad leased the omnibus line on July 1, 1862, and soon replaced it, donating the vehicles to the Army Medical Department. [Report of the president ond directors of the Washington and Georgetown Railroad to the stockholders, July 1863, printed in [http://books.google.com/books?id=VIQZAAAAIAAJ The Miscellaneous Documents of the Senate of the United States for the First Session Thirty-Eighth Congress] , Government Printing Office, 1864, document 11]

Living in Washington, D.C., Vanderwerken purchased 1,316 acres of Virginia property as pastureland for the horses. About 1852, Vanderwerken improved the farm by having a dwelling erected on "a hilltop in a grove of fine oak trees at the northwest corner of Little Falls and Glebe Roads." The dwelling was intended to be used as rental housing and as a summer retreat for the family.

On his property, he also established a quarry business, the Potomac Blue Stone Company. [ [http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/display.php?id=7327 Washington City Paper: The City: Cutter's Way ] ] The stone blasted from the palisades was used to build Healy Hall of Georgetown University and St. Elizabeths Hospital. [ [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/24/AR2007022401112.html John Kelly - Answer Man: This Relic Would've Rocked Your World - washingtonpost.com ] ]

During the Civil War, the Vanderwerken family remained in Georgetown, having agreed to allow Union General Winfield Scott Hancock use of the house known as Falls Grove as an army hospital. In return, Hancock guaranteed protection of the buildings and fine grove of trees. The General used the two-story carpenter shop as his headquarters. Because of the strategic location of the property, it also became the site of Fort Ethan Allen and Fort Marcy. The property on which Fort Ethan Allen was constructed was returned to the heirs of Gilbert Vanderwerken following the war. [http://www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/Counties/Arlington/NR_Arlington_FortEthanAllenParkHD_000-5819_text.pdf]

Fort Ethan Allen was ordered abandoned in the fall of 1865, and soon thereafter was dismantled. Much of what could be salvaged from the fort was sold by the government at public auction. The land under Fort Ethan Allen belonged throughout the war to Vanderwerken. After the war, as partial payment for the use of his land, Vanderwerken was given some of the lumber from the fort. The lumber reportedly was used to build Bellevue, the home of Vanderwerken’s daughter and son-in-law, Alfred and Jane Grunwell. Bellevue is located at 3311 N. Glebe Road.

References

External links

* http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/24/AR2007022401112.html
* http://www.bellevueforest.org/BFHistory.htm


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