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The Washington Saengerbund was founded in April 1851 by a group of German-American men who sang in the choir of Concordia Evangelical Lutheran Church. Known for its secular music-making at its own concerts and special events around the area, the Saengerbund grew to become a major musical and social institution and brought together a veritable "Who's Who" of German-Americans here in the nation's capital. From 1874 to 1893, the Saengerbund met above "Baldy" Dismer's restaurant at 708 K St., NW. In 1894, the Saengerbund opened its own new clubhouse at 314 C Street NW, where it remained until 1928. Frank and Nancy Pierce's "The Washington Saengerbund: A History of German Song and German Culture in the Nation's Capital," published by the Saengerbund in 1981, gives a description of the C Street clubhouse taken from the Washington Post of 4 November 1894: "The present
home of the society is one of the finest occupied by any club in the
city. It is the handsome brownstone front structure at 314 C Street
northwest, having been recently purchased by the society at a cost of
$15,000. . . . The building was
razed in 1931. The US Court for the District of Columbia now occupies
the site of the society's long-time home in the old downtown. |
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