Tuesday, October 31, 2023

Strong-arm robbery at Davis Library in Bethesda


Montgomery County police responded to a report of a strong-arm robbery at the Davis Library at 6400 Democracy Boulevard in Bethesda yesterday morning, October 30, 2023. The robbery was reported at the public library at 10:15 AM Monday. That's 15 minutes after the library opened, on its regular Monday schedule.

Anthropologie & Co. ready for Christmas at Bethesda Row (Photos)


Today is only Halloween, but Anthropologie & Co. at Bethesda Row is already looking past Thanksgiving to the holiday shopping season. Their 4801 Bethesda Avenue showroom is decked out for Christmas, and highlighting seasonal decor in the windows. "Making merry" is the phrase applied to a display windowpane, which apparently rhymes with cherry, as two giant maraschinos behind the glass attest. Premium holiday lights from Stargazer Garden Lights, and the brand's 8" hanging Lightorb sphere, are among the decorating options in stock. From the Voluspa Noble Fir Garland Glass Candle to Cecilia Pettersson flannel pajamas to a London-themed Holiday in the City mug, Anthropologie is calling its winter 2023 lineup "our most decadent holiday collection yet."







Hate crime report filed with USDOJ regarding desecrated Bethesda cemetery


A protest of a Democratic Party fundraiser in Potomac this past weekend by advocates for the desecrated Moses African Cemetery in Bethesda has borne political fruit. The Bethesda African Cemetery Coalition announced today that it has filed a hate crime report with the U.S. Department of Justice, as advised by U.S. Congressman Jamie Raskin (D - 8th District). Raskin, who along with Maryland Gov. Wes Moore was one of the targets of the protest at the Saturday event, has told the BACC that he will follow up with the DOJ to "ensure the report is reviewed," the organization claimed in a statement. 

Moses African Cemetery, located largely on the Westwood Tower property in Bethesda, was first desecrated in the late 1960s by workers building the apartment tower. The rest of the graves were paved over for a parking lot, and the matter was covered up by Montgomery County officials for decades. A potential sale of the Westwood Tower property, including the graveyard, by owner Housing Opportunities Commission of Montgomery County is stalled in a legal battle that is now moving to the Maryland Supreme Court. BACC has alleged that the HOC violated Maryland law by entering a sale agreement of a burial site without contacting the descendants of those interred there.

Over 200 bone fragments from a construction site directly adjacent to the cemetery have been trucked to a warehouse in Virginia over objections by the BACC, which has asked the private developer and County officials to allow their independent expert to examine them. Neither has agreed to date to allow the review.

"The report provides a detailed overview of the desecration of Moses, detailing the crimes, the criminals, and their accomplices," BACC said in today's statement. "Despite years of advocacy and appeals by BACC and our legal team to end the pillaging of funerary objects, tombstones, and possible human remains, we have seen no action from local officials. As we have documented and shared with the public, it is clear that many of these officials are themselves deeply involved in this hate crime and subsequent cover-up. They have been named in the report.

"BACC will continue to demand the return of all funerary objects, possible human remains (for independent testing by Dr. Michael Blakey), and ultimately the return of Moses Cemetery to the descendant community for proper stewardship. The county and the developers it has provided permits to (which they have failed to comply with) should not be responsible for our ancestors, whom they have dug up and disrespected time and time again."

A series of rallies outside the U.S. Department of Justice are being planned by BACC. The organization is hopeful that the report they have filed will result in a long-sought federal investigation into the known crimes and alleged crimes that have taken place at the historic Black cemetery over the last six decades. Maryland's Supreme Court is expected to take up the BACC's case against the HOC in January.

Monday, October 30, 2023

The Phantom of the Shady Grove Metro station


Montgomery County Halloween Countdown

Tomorrow is Halloween, and what is Halloween without a ghost? There's one who haunts the area around the Shady Grove Metro station in Derwood, and has since his untimely death there in 1864. Walter "Wat" Bowie was among many Marylanders who were Confederate sympathizers during the Civil War. Like some, such as Bethesda plantation owner Nathan Loughborough, Bowie couldn't resist getting in on the fighting action himself despite living in a state that hadn't seceded from the Union. And yes, Wat Bowie was a member of that Bowie family, whose home turf is now a fast-growing city in Prince George's County.


Bowie's final adventure began on an ambitious note: a botched plan to kidnap the governor of Maryland. Retreating back to Virginia from Annapolis via Montgomery County, Bowie made the mistake of trying to loot a store in Sandy Spring. Tired after previous pillaging by earlier Confederate raiders, the store owner rounded up a posse, and pursued Bowie and his men as they traveled toward Poolesville. 


The vigilantes caught up with Bowie in Derwood, near the site of today's Metro station. His party escaped, but Wat himself wasn't as lucky. Bowie was shot off his horse with a shotgun blast. Historian Earl Eisenhart pinpoints the exact location as being next to the Metro tracks off Somerville Road, by the McDonald's. Bowie's ghost is said to haunt that area to this day.


Sources:

AmericanCivilWar.com

MontgomeryGhosts

FindAGrave

Montgomery Parks seeks input on future of Capital Crescent Trail in Bethesda


Montgomery Parks is seeking public input on potential alterations and renovations to the portion of the Capital Crescent Trail between Bethesda Avenue and the Washington, D.C. line. Two meetings will be held for this purpose. One will be in-person, on Thursday, November 2, 2023 from 7:00 - 8:30 PM in the All-Purpose Room at Somerset Elementary School at 5811 Warwick Place in the Town of Somerset. The second meeting will be a virtual Zoom meeting on Wednesday, November 8, 2023 from 12:00 - 1:30 PM. The content of both meetings will be identical. Registration is optional, but you can register online for either meeting if you want to ensure that you receive email updates about the project over the coming years (you'll have to utilize that web page if you want to join the Zoom meeting).

What sort of changes or updates are under consideration for what Montgomery Parks is calling "Capital Crescent Trail 2.0?" First on the list is the potential widening of the trail, which has been discussed for many years, as pedestrians using the trail have been struck or nearly struck by cyclists on the narrow route. New signage, access points, improved connectivity and new amenities round out the list the department has provided. But improvements and changes could include ones that residents like you propose that planners haven't thought of, if you provide your thoughts at one of these meetings.

Sunday, October 29, 2023

PacSun closes at Montgomery Mall in Bethesda


PacSun
has permanently closed at Westfield Montgomery Mall in Bethesda. Signage has been removed from above the storefront. PacSun, a.k.a. Pacific Sunwear, started as a small surf shop in Seal Beach, California in 1980. It had a long run at Montgomery Mall. The closure is the latest sign of a moribund Montgomery County economy, as PacSun has recovered from its 2016 bankruptcy filing, and more recently has been opening or remodeling stores rather than closing them. 

Saturday, October 28, 2023

Psychic of Bethesda cleared out in Woodmont Triangle


The Psychic of Bethesda may have misread the signs. Clairvoyance or not, the space at 4825 Fairmont Avenue looks like it's been totally vacated. The Psychic of Bethesda opened here in June. Perhaps another move to a new space is in the cards?



Bethesda African Cemetery Coalition to protest Maryland governor, congressman at Potomac fundraiser

BACC President Marsha Coleman-Adebayo at
a 2017 protest regarding Moses African Cemetery

The Bethesda African Cemetery Coalition will protest outside a Maryland Democratic Party fundraiser in Potomac today, an event Maryland Gov. Wes Moore (D) and Congressman Jamie Raskin (D - 8th District) are expected to attend. Leaders of the BACC are demanding Moore and Raskin take action to end the desecration of the Moses African Cemetery in Bethesda, and force the release the over 200 bone fragments that were exhumed on a construction site adjacent to the graveyard for testing, to determine if they are human remains. Those remains were trucked out of state to a Virginia warehouse, and neither Montgomery County nor the private developer of the site has agreed to make them available for independent testing. Raskin visited the graveyard site in-person, and was asked to act at the federal level to address the cemetery issues, but later said he would defer to Montgomery County officials on the matter and ceased correspondence with BACC.

Today's protest will take place between 12:15 and 2:30 PM outside 9400 Persimmon Tree Road in Potomac. This appears to be a private mansion. According to the website of the Montgomery County Democratic Party, the "Afternoon of Elegance" event will be held from 2:00 to 4:00 PM today.

Friday, October 27, 2023

Route 666, the real-life Highway to Hell, is in Montgomery County


Montgomery County Halloween Countdown

Did you know there is a real Route 666, and it is located in Kensington, Maryland? The Satanic-numbered Maryland highway designation was given to Armory Avenue, a portion of Howard Avenue, and St. Paul Street, when they served as the original route to cross the Baltimore & Ohio (now CSX) Railroad tracks in Kensington. Today, the newer Connecticut Avenue serves that purpose to the west, with a grade-separated bridge crossing. The controversial 666 route number was removed in 1958, but you can still drive the real-life "Highway to Hell" today. However, the only way to travel the entire length continously is on foot, by using the pedestrian crossing at the Kensington railroad station. 

Signage installed at Mandi Mediterranean in Bethesda


An awning has been installed with the logo of Mandi Mediterranean Bar Grill Lounge at 4906 St. Elmo Avenue in Bethesda. This was formerly the home of Bangkok Garden, which closed in 2021 after 37 years in business. Mandi will serve halal cuisine, and specialities will include falafel, shawarma, gyros and kabobs. The restaurant has a website up, but other than the name and address of the business, it is currently in a website-creation-template form with gibberish content under each section.


Chip City Bethesda construction update (Photos)


Chip City
is scheduled to open November 3, 2023 at 4939 Elm Street at the Shoppes of Bethesda next week. Here's a look at the final days of construction inside the future cookie bakery shop. A neon logo sign and images of the Chip City mascot now grace the walls of the former Fancy Cakes by Leslie space. Operating hours are now posted on the door. Sorry, Garfield - - service animals only!






Thursday, October 26, 2023

The creepiest license plate in Bethesda


Montgomery County Halloween Countdown

Today on the Montgomery County Halloween Countdown, we have the creepiest license plate you're likely to find in MoCo. "Casket" is the vanity tag for a Chrysler 300 sedan staff vehicle at the Robert A. Pumphrey Funeral Home in downtown Bethesda. The black car also features the flashing emergency lights for funeral processions that have become standard on most funeral home hearses in recent years. Don't expect an actual casket to fit into a Chrysler 300, despite the spine-chilling tags.

Sidewalk repairs (and closures) expand to Elm Street in Bethesda (Photos)


Pedestrians beware: the sidewalk closures for repairs have expanded across town to the Bethesda Row/Shoppes of Bethesda area on Elm Street. There are several closures on the Shoppes of Bethesda side of Elm Street between Arlington Road and Woodmont Avenue. Unlike the closures on St. Elmo Avenue, where pedestrians are entering the roadway to get down the street, the sidewalk on the Bethesda Row side of the street remains open.






Wednesday, October 25, 2023

The Rockville Mall had a newspaper, and it could be as creepy as the mall was (Photos)




Montgomery County Halloween Countdown

Today, as we count down the final days to Halloween, let's take a look at the Halloween 1976 edition of The Rockville Mall Times. Yes, Rockville's ill-fated dead mall of the 1970s and 80s had its own newspaper, and it could be as creepy as many considered the mall to be. Especially the Halloween edition. Who was Mr. Barfly, and was he a denizen of the shadows of the mall? Are you encouraged, or discouraged, to visit Ransom's, with Mr. Barfly as the face of the business? His disturbing visage suggests a ransom may indeed be involved to secure your release from his clutches, and from the mall's infamous dark parking garage.

Mr. Barfly, a denizen of the darkest
corners of the Rockville Mall

"Hey, kids! Let's all pile into the station wagon and pick up a copy of Adolf Hitler by John Toland at Waldenbooks at the Rockville Mall." With Roots as the other choice highlighted, talk about a stark contrast in offerings. Some lighthearted reading for the whole family at Waldenbooks.


Name-brand leisure suits were 50% off - if Herb Tarlek didn't get to Crane's Men's Shop first and clean 'em out. It's hard to get more 70s than leisure suits. But Beyda's gave it the old college try with corduroy, gabardine and velveteen pantsuits.


The front-page story in the Halloween 1976 edition of the The Rockville Mall Times looked back at the tragic demolition of the Rockville's historic town center with an almost-giddy glee. Vinson's drugstore and the Milo theater are visible in a bustling scene from 1945. Thirty years later, the Rockville Mall fills the field of view from the same photographic vantage point (and only 20 years later, the mall itself would be demolished). 


"Progress comes to Rockville," the headline reads. "Shopping sure has changed in Rockville," the article begins. The uncredited reporter made sure to thank the city politicians who approved the demolition of most of the original, historic buildings in downtown Rockville. "During this week, Rockville Mall also salutes the City of Rockville for the many years of progressive city planning that has made Rockville a model city for responsive government, and a convenient place for residents to shop."


A 1976 mall directory shown lists more than 30 tenants. But in a sign of the mall's struggles, previous department store anchors Lansburgh and Lit Brothers were already conspicuously missing from the roster. The interesting names among the remaining tenants were Roy Rogers, Franklin Simon department store and W&J Sloane furniture (both from the same ownership group as Lansburgh and Lit Brothers, coincidentally), King's Court (an original tenant when the mall opened, the restaurant closed in 1984 when its space was replaced with an elevator shaft in the "Rockville Metro Center" makeover of the mall), Friendly's Ice Cream and Real Rich Ice Cream (2 ice cream shops! Which one was better?), Masi's Fun House (was Mr. Barfly ever lurking in there, as well?), Kurly's (what's that?), Empress Restaurant and Waxie Maxie's record store. 


In case shoppers didn't already have it penciled in on their calendars, The Rockville Mall Times noted that National Alcoholism Week was rapidly approaching on November 12. But just when the gloom became too much, the Times promised that "Santa arrives at Rockville Mall Friday, November 26 at 10 AM." After a reminder to "Support your local Rockville Mall merchant who supports you with low prices," the front page ends with the mall's 70s logo, and the tagline "GOOD NEWS/GOOD TIMES."






Sidewalk work blocks both sides of St. Elmo Avenue in Bethesda


Some sidewalk repairs are underway in the Woodmont Triangle on St. Elmo and Norfolk Avenues. A sign says to cross to the other side on St. Elmo Avenue, but that sidewalk is also blocked at the Sophia Bethesda construction site. As a result, there is currently no safe through-route for pedestrians on St. Elmo sidewalks between Old Georgetown Road and Norfolk Avenue. 






Bethesda Row Trick or Treat 2023 tonight, October 25, 5:30 - 7:30 PM


Bethesda Row's annual Trick or Treat event will be held tonight, October 25, 2023, from 5:30 to 7:30 PM. Tickets must be purchased in advance and are available online for $5.00 per child. All proceeds will go to Manna Food Center. Kids are encouraged to arrive in costume, and interact with Bethesda Row businesses and costumed characters. Treats and surprises are in store, as are photo opportunities.

Maryland Governor Wes Moore endorses Angela Alsobrooks in U.S. Senate race


Maryland Democrats suddenly have a barnburner of a primary race on their hands in the U.S. Senate race to replace retiring Senator Ben Cardin in the 2024 election. Prince George's County Executive Angela Alsobrooks' candidacy got a twin jolt of energy when primary opponent Will Jawando dropped out of the race and endorsed her, and Maryland Governor Wes Moore unexpectedly weighed in on the contest in her favor. Moore appeared free to move once Jawando, a friend, ended his campaign. But Moore's endorsement of Alsobrooks is a risky political move, as Alsobrooks' top rival David Trone is a wealthy fundraiser who counts former president Barack Obama among his political allies.

Trone not only handily funds his own campaigns with his Total Wine fortune, but is a powerhouse fundraiser for Democrats nationally, including Obama. He has hosted Obama for fundraisers at his Montgomery County home in the past. But Obama endorsed Moore in his successful 2022 gubernatorial campaign, and Moore's name entered the 2028 presidential race discussion before he had even been sworn in as Maryland's first Black governor in January. Along with Moore's central casting persona, and stellar resume, the fallout for the rookie governor may be minimal.

The Moore and Jawando tag-team endorsement has potentially united the Black vote in the race behind Alsobrooks. She leads the second-wealthiest majority-Black jurisdiction in the nation, and the wealthiest - Charles County - is also in Maryland. The Black vote is critical to victory in the state, although that didn't help Donna Edwards in her U.S. Senate race against eventual winner Chris Van Hollen. Trone is popular among independents, and among the growing number of Republicans who switch to the Democratic party for primary elections in Maryland. Even many conservatives respect his business acumen and success.

Former state legislator Robin Ficker is the only current Republican candidate in the race with any statewide name recognition. Former Gov. Larry Hogan was well-positioned to run - and had an outside chance to win. But he chose to focus on a potential presidential campaign instead, and remains among those rumored to be under consideration for the No Labels independent ticket, should it materialize next year. Fantasy GOP candidates like Cal Ripken and Pat Sajak have shown no interest in running, and the Republican farm team is virtually non-existent. The absence of a prominent MAGA Republican candidate in the race means there is a wide lane open for a Hogan-style moderate GOP candidate to enter the race.

Tuesday, October 24, 2023

USPS to remove mailbox in 7500 block of Wisconsin Avenue in Bethesda


The United States Postal Service has announced it intends to remove the mailbox outside 7514 Wisconsin Avenue in downtown Bethesda on November 23, 2023. A sticker announcing the planned removal was attached to the mailbox yesterday. It does not cite a reason for the removal of this particular mailbox. However, it provides a phone number to call, if you would like to contest the plan to remove it: 301-767-1742.

Removal of USPS mailboxes has been a controversial topic, since I first started writing about them many years ago. Arguments change, but the level of controversy remains the same. When the USPS began removing Bethesda neighborhood mailboxes in places like Sumner, my reports generated a few critical comments from people who said, "nobody uses mailboxes anymore." My reports on thefts from Bethesda and Chevy Chase mailboxes proved that theory wrong, as numerous residents reported having their mail stolen and checks washed. Finally, when mailboxes across the country began disappearing in the run-up to the 2020 presidential election, many Americans and news outlets declared this a conspiracy masterminded by Postmaster General Louis DeJoy to deter the return of ballots by mail. It turns out that mailboxes are still important after all!