Czech Row park and klingle roads nw
Like the Latino immigrants of recent times, Europeans left the political and economic hard- ships of home for a better life in the United States. Following the 1948 communist coup in Czecho- slovakia, an enclave known as “Czech Row” (or “Prague Road”) developed in the 2000 block of Park Road. Among its exiles were a four-star general and a former ambassador to Turkey. American Sokol, an offshoot of a Czech fitness movement, offered activities for all neighborhood children. Sokol had particular meaning for Czech expatriates as it was banned in Czechoslovakia during both the Nazi and communist eras. Czech Row’s residents reveled in their tall trees and lush views of the park, recalled Dagmar Hasalova White, the general’s daughter. Other European newcomers found a touch of home in this setting. Women from Armenia and Greece made stuffed grape leaves from vines in the alley behind nearby Irving Street, recalled former neighbors Mike Najarian and Bill Katopothis. Ruby Pelecanos, who lived on Irving Street in the 1940s, recalled the other Greek families living nearby who attended “Greek School” at St. Sophia’s Greek Orthodox Church. Ruby’s father immigrated to Washington in 1908 and operated a number of small restaurants downtown and in Chevy Chase. Her son George grew up to write thrillers set in Washington. During the 1960s, Mount Pleasant, like Dupont Circle and Adams Morgan, offered affordable housing that appealed to political activists, artists, and unconventional family groups. Blue Skies, a group house devoted to anti-war work and social justice, owned and occupied 1910 Park Road in the early 1970s.
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