F Street and 7th Street shopping districts


Parts of F Street and 7th Street, N.W. and nearby blocks have historically been the heart of the Washington, D.C. Downtown shopping district. In the first half of the 20th century there were numerous upscale large department stores along and near F Street, while 7th Street housed more economical emporia and large retail furniture stores. The F street corridor stretches west from Downtown's Penn Quarter and Gallery Place towards 15th Street, while the 7th Street corridor includes the neighborhoods of Penn Quarter, Chinatown and Mount Vernon Square, and extends up to the border of Shaw.

History

Center Market, the city's largest public market, opened in 1872, operating until 1931 on the site of today's National Archives Building. Its northern end faced Pennsylvania Avenue between 7th and 9th Streets. Transportation by Washington, D.C.'s streetcars, first horse-drawn, then electrified, notably the busy transfer point at F and 9th, helped solidify this area as D.C.'s most popular shopping district during that time.

Current retail

Although Macy's is the only traditional department store left, the district is home to four discount department stores, three small malls or shopping centers, and many on-street retail stores, including H&M, Anthropologie, and others.
From north to south and east to west:

Sites of department stores and other notable stores

From north to south and east to west:

7th Street furniture retailers

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, 7th Street north of F, as far as O Street in today's Shaw district, was home not only to several of the more economical large department stores such as Goldberg's and Harry Kaufman's, but to the city's concentration of furniture retailers. These included :
  • 1015 7th Street – Alperstein's Furniture, 1904–present
  • 932 7th Street – John Rudden's New Furniture, 1880s
  • National Furniture
  • 921 7th Street – House & Herrmann, 1886
  • Marlo Furniture, 1963
  • 915 7th Street – Jackson Brothers, 1903
  • 819 7th Street – Samuel W. Augenstein, pre-1891
  • Peter Grogan's Furniture Company, 1891–1933
  • Peerless Furniture Company, 1935–1968
  • Home Furniture and Appliance Company, May 1969 – 1972
  • 801 7th Street – John Rudden's New Furniture, 1899
  • 718 7th Street – Anton Eberly & Sons, 1868
  • Mayer Dodek, Dodek's Furniture & Clothing, 1898
  • 515 Seventh Street – Hecht's Department Store
  • 7th and D, southeast corner – The Hub Furniture Store, 1855

Map

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