114 Bulletin 1, Biological Society of Washington, 1918. 



Rand, McNally & Co. 



Pictorial Guide to Washington, including complete descriptions of 

 the Capitol, Library of Congress, White House, the Departments, 

 Mount Vernon, Arlington, and all other points of interest. 1909. 

 195 pp., 1 map. 



Rives, J. T. 



Old families and houses — Greenleaf's Point. 

 Records Columbia Hist. Soc. 5, 1902, pp. 54-63. 



Rogers, Wm. E. 



The Historic Potomac River. 



Records Columbia Hist. Soc. 16, 1913, pp. 25-63. 



Saul, John A. 



Tree Culture, or a sketch of nurseries in the District of Columbia. 

 Rec. Columbia Hist. Soc. 10, 1907, pp. 30-62, 6 pis. 



Shoemaker, Louis P. 



Historic Rock Creek. 



Records Columbia Hist. Soc. 12, 1909, pp. 38-52. 



Patterson Paper Mill just above P Street bridge, then known as 

 Paper Mill Bridge. A mill on Rock Creek just above Blagden's 

 was known as White's & Peter's Mill, and the surroundings as 

 Crystal Springs Tract. Pierce Mill was known also as Shoemaker 

 Mill. 



Snowden, W. H. 



Some old Historic Landmarks of Virginia and Maryland. Fourth 

 Edition, 1902. 124 pp. 



Standard Guide (cover title). Washington, the Nation's Capital, 

 1904, 167 text pp., 200 illus. 1 map. 



Stewart, John. 



Early maps and surveyors of the city of Washington, D. C. 

 Records of the Columbia Historical Society 2, 1895, pp. 48-71. 



Taggart, Hugh T. 



Old Georgetown. 



Rec. Columbia Hist. Soc. 11, 1908, pp. 120-224. 



Espiritu Santo, name of early Spanish voyagers for the Potomac. 



A map by Noel, London, shows the upper Potomac as a tributary 

 of Anacostia River and called Turkey Buzzard Run. The Point at 

 Arsenal was called Turkey Buzzard Point and since has been called 

 Youngs, Greenleafs and Arsenal Point. Anacostian Ids. included 



