© 2001 Blue Heron Web Design
© 2001 Blue Heron Web Design
C&O Canal - Mile 0 - Georgetown!
Alpha and Omega
Canal Information Home
Access
Directions
Facilities
Attractions ·Barge Ride
·Visitor's Center What's Nearby?
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Natl. Park Service
Canal Run - The Beginning - Mile 0
Alpha and Omega - Mile 0
Rock Creek, Georgetown
 
Canal Barge and Key Bridge
Canal Barge and Key Bridge
National Park Service Tour Barge, Georgetown
Tour Barge - 31st. St &
Jefferson Place,
Georgetown
Townhouse Cats eat
Townhouse Rats
City Mules - Georgetown
Country Mules in Georgetown
 
National Park Service HQ -- Georgetown
National Park Service Visitor Center
Thomas Jefferson St.
Georgetown
Upriver
NPS Georgetown Townhouse

Park Svc. Headquarters
Georgetown

Fletcher's Boathouse --Mile 3

Chain Bridge, Mile 4

 
Georgetown was Omega, (the end) for coal-carrying Canal barges in the 19th Century, and Alpha (the beginning) for the return trip. Hopefully, but not always, the return barges would be filled with manufacturered goods, textiles and spices off-loaded from square-rigged tall ships at Georgetown's small wharf -- where Washington Harbor is located today. Revived after decades of neglect, the Georgetown waterfront bubbles nightly with hundreds of friendly Washingtonians and party boats tied three- and four-deep, whose onwers have motored in for a drink or dinner at Sequoia's, or to watch the crowds on a steamy summer night.

Now, Georgetown's "Mile 0" is the weekly destination for thousands of tourists, joggers, bikers, and couples seeking a short respite from Capital fever -- the fast-paced of life of modern Washington.

Georgetown also is the beginning and end for hiking and bike trips along the C&O towpath. Each year hundreds of Boy Scouts, teenagers, families, and friends roller-blade or bike down the Crescent Trail from Bethesda for lunch by the river, or trek in with dusty backpacks from Cumberland, Maryland, 184 miles away.

The Potomac River is an estuary, an arm of the Chesepeake Bay, and the river was deep enough for 18th and 19th Century shipt to navigate as far north as Georgetown. The end of the estuary and the "beginning" of the fresh-water river determined the location of Georgetown in the 1600s, and later the Nation's capital.

To learn more about Georgetown, an energetic 19th Century seaport and the trendy residence of Presidents, Senators and Cabinet, click here.

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Revised January 2001