7th & I Streets NW
Deutsche Spuren in Washington

  • East Side of 7th Street Looking North from H Street NW, August 2010.	Photo credit: Goethe-Institut Washington/William Gilcher
    East Side of 7th Street Looking North from H Street NW, August 2010.
  • West Side of 7th Street Looking North from H Street NW, August 2010.	Photo credit: Goethe-Institut Washington/William Gilcher
    West Side of 7th Street Looking North from H Street NW, August 2010.
  • Chinese lettering on historically German-American buildings are a standard in the neighborhood today (photo 2000).	Photo credit: Goethe-Institut Washington/William Gilcher
    Chinese lettering on historically German-American buildings are a standard in the neighborhood today (photo 2000).
  • The Chinatown Gate is located on H Street, just east of 7th Street. The characters on the archway, read from right to left as zhongguo cheng, mean Chinese city or Chinese quarters - that this is Chinatown (photo 2000).	Photo credit: Goethe-Institut Washington/William Gilcher
    The Chinatown Gate is located on H Street, just east of 7th Street. The characters on the archway, read from right to left as zhongguo cheng, mean Chinese city or Chinese quarters - that this is Chinatown (photo 2000).
  • Bay window on 2nd floor of Germuiller building at 800 7th St NW, 2000.	Photo credit: Goethe-Institut Washington/William Gilcher
    Bay window on 2nd floor of Germuiller building at 800 7th St NW, 2000.
  • West Side of 7th Street Looking North from H Street NW, August 2000.	Photo credit: Goethe-Institut Washington/William Gilcher
    West Side of 7th Street Looking North from H Street NW, August 2000.
  • North Side of H Street Looking West from 7th Street NW, August 2000.	Photo credit: Goethe-Institut Washington/William Gilcher
    North Side of H Street Looking West from 7th Street NW, August 2000.
  • West Side of 7th Street Looking North from H Street NW, August 2000.	Photo credit: Goethe-Institut Washington/William Gilcher
    West Side of 7th Street Looking North from H Street NW, August 2000.
  • West Side of 7th Street Looking North from H Street NW, 1949.	Photo credit: Historical Society of Washington, DC, John P. Wymer Collection
    West Side of 7th Street Looking North from H Street NW, 1949.
  • East Side of 7th Street Looking North from H Street NW. The street as it looked on October 23, 1949. Julius Germuiller's building at 819-821, once Grogan's Furniture, has become Peerless Furniture by 1949.	Photo credit: Historical Society of Washington, DC, John P. Wymer Collection
    East Side of 7th Street Looking North from H Street NW. The street as it looked on October 23, 1949. Julius Germuiller's building at 819-821, once Grogan's Furniture, has become Peerless Furniture by 1949.
Blick von der H Street NW in nördlicher Richtung auf die Westseite der 7th Street. Das Schuhgeschäft an der Ecke ist von einer Starbucks-Filiale ersetzt worden (das Gebäude wurde von Julius Germuiller entworfen), und G.C. Murphy’s 5 & 10 befindet sich südlich von der Stelle, wo heute das Goethe-Institut zu finden ist.