Tales of the Chesapeake eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 336 pages of information about Tales of the Chesapeake.

Tales of the Chesapeake eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 336 pages of information about Tales of the Chesapeake.

          “the pibroch’s music, thrills
    To the heart of those lone hills,”

the dreary banks and bluffs of the Eastern Branch will show more frequent signs of habitation and visitation.

To visit the poor-house one must have a “permit” from the mayor, physician, or a poor commissioner.  Provided with this, he will follow out Pennsylvania Avenue over Capitol Hill, until nearly at the brink of the Anacostia or Eastern Branch, when by the oblique avenue called “Georgia” he will pass to his right the Congressional burying-ground, and arriving at the powder magazine in front, draw up at the almshouse gate, a mile and a quarter from the palace of Congress.

It is a smart brick building, four stories high, with green trimmings, standing on the last promontory of some grassy commons beloved of geese and billygoats.  The short, black cedars, which appear to be a species of vegetable crape, give a stubby look of grief to the region round the poor-house, and, thickest at the Congressional Cemetery, screen from the paupers the view of the city.  Across the plains, once made populous by army hospitals, few objects move except funeral processions, creeping toward the graveyard or receding at a merry gait, and occasional pensioners, out on leave, coming home dutifully to their bed of charity.  The report of some sportsman’s gun, where he is rowing in the marshes of the gray river, sometimes raises echoes in the high hills and ravines of the other shore, where, many years ago, the rifles of Graves and Cilley were heard by every partisan in the land.  Now the tall forts, raised in the war, are silent and deserted; the few villas and farm-houses look from their background of pine upon the smart edifice on the city shore, and its circle of hospitals nearer the water, and its small-pox hospital a little removed, and upon the dead-house and the Potter’s Field at the river brink.  We all know the melancholy landscape of a poor-house.

The Potter’s Field preceded the poor-house on this site by many years.  The almshouse was formerly erected on M Street, between Sixth and Seventh, and, being removed here, it burned to the ground in the month of March, fourteen years ago, when the present brick structure was raised.  The entire premises, of which the main part is the almshouse garden, occupy less than fifty acres, and the number of inmates is less than two hundred, the females preponderating in the proportion of three to one.  Under the same roof are the almshouse and the work-house, the inmates of the former being styled “Infirmants,” and of the latter “Penitents.”  The government of the institution is vested in three commissioners, to whom is responsible the intendent, Mr. Joseph F. Hodgson, a very cheerful and practical-looking “Bumble.”

Every Wednesday the three commissioners meet at this almshouse and receive the weekly reports of the intendent, physician, and gardener.  Once every year these officers, and the matron, wagoner, and baker are elected.  Sixteen ounces of bread and eight ounces of beef are the ration of the district pauper.  The turnkey, gate-keeper, chief watchmen, and chief nurses, are selected from the inmates.  The gates are closed at sunset, and the lights go out at eight P.M. all winter.  The inmates wear a uniform, labelled in large letters “Work-house,” or “Washington Asylum.”

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Tales of the Chesapeake from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.