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  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
A photograph hung on the wall of Ireland's Own (aka Pat Troy's) offer proof of President Ronald Reagan and Kil Patrick's surprise St. Patrick’s Day visit in 1988. The table they sat in and his order ticket are preserved under glass in "Reagan's Corner." Normally the restaurant is covered in photographs, but at the time the photo was made, the pub was being repainted.
    130820_Irelands_Own_Pub_121.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
The Willard claims to have introduced the famously southern libation, the Mint Julep, to Washingtonians. The minty drink is photographed in the hotel's Round Robin Bar.<br />
<br />
At this self-proclaimed ‘Residence of Presidents’, folklore has Ulysses S. Grant coining the term “lobbyists” as a label for those who loitered after him in the Willard’s lobby (never mind references to the verb “lobbying” from before The Willard opened its doors).
    130822_Round_Robin_Willard_Hotel_017.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
A photograph hung on the wall of Ireland's Own (aka Pat Troy's) offer proof of President Ronald Reagan and Kil Patrick's surprise St. Patrick’s Day visit in 1988. The table they sat in and his order ticket are preserved under glass in "Reagan's Corner."
    130820_Irelands_Own_Pub_118.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Martin's Tavern in the Georgetown area of  Washington, D.C. boasts to have served every president since Harry Truman before they became president -- except Obama. While Kennedy was a Senator he used to sit in the Rumble Seat and read his paper during brunch. Two tables over, next to the Nixon table, is where JFK allegedly proposed to Jacqueline Bouvier. The dugout, which is currently under renovation, where President Lyndon Johnson and House Speaker Sam Rayburn would sit and drink in the corner booth.<br />
<br />
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
    130820_Martins_Tavern_061.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
An ornate mirror serves as the backdrop for liquor at Martin's Tavern. <br />
Martin's Tavern in the Georgetown area of  Washington, D.C. boasts to have served every president since Harry Truman before they became president -- except Obama. While Kennedy was a Senator he used to sit in the Rumble Seat and read his paper during brunch. Two tables over, next to the Nixon table, is where JFK allegedly proposed to Jacqueline Bouvier. The dugout, which is currently under renovation, where President Lyndon Johnson and House Speaker Sam Rayburn would sit and drink in the corner booth.<br />
<br />
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
    130820_Martins_Tavern_042.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Ornate coat hooks in line the dugout wall at Martin's Tavern. <br />
<br />
Martin's Tavern in the Georgetown area of  Washington, D.C. boasts to have served every president since Harry Truman before they became president -- except Obama. While Kennedy was a Senator he used to sit in the Rumble Seat and read his paper during brunch. Two tables over, next to the Nixon table, is where JFK allegedly proposed to Jacqueline Bouvier. The dugout, which is currently under renovation, where President Lyndon Johnson and House Speaker Sam Rayburn would sit and drink in the corner booth.<br />
<br />
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
    130820_Martins_Tavern_015.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
The Tombs server Ellis Reilly, is an upcoming senior at Georgetown University. He joined The Tombs in the Summer and is originally from Hamden, CT. All servers at the Tombs are required to wear and know how to tie a bow tie. <br />
<br />
The Tombs is a beloved Georgetown basement bar known as one of President Bill Clinton's college haunts. <br />
<br />
in Washington, D.C. Tuesday, August 20, 2013.
    130820_The_Tombs_031.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
The Tombs is a beloved Georgetown basement bar known as one of President Bill Clinton's college haunts. <br />
<br />
in Washington, D.C. Tuesday, August 20, 2013.
    130820_The_Tombs_004.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
At this self-proclaimed ‘Residence of Presidents’, folklore has Ulysses S. Grant coining the term “lobbyists” as a label for those who loitered after him in the Willard’s lobby (never mind references to the verb “lobbying” from before The Willard opened its doors).<br />
The Willard claims to have introduced the famously southern libation, the Mint Julep, to Washingtonians.
    130822_Round_Robin_Willard_Hotel_142.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Portraits of presidents and other historic notables line the wall of the Round Robin Bar.<br />
At this self-proclaimed ‘Residence of Presidents’, folklore has Ulysses S. Grant coining the term “lobbyists” as a label for those who loitered after him in the Willard’s lobby (never mind references to the verb “lobbying” from before The Willard opened its doors).
    130822_Round_Robin_Willard_Hotel_034.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Phil Akers, from Alexandria, VA, sits down at the bar for a reuben at Ireland's Own (aka Pat Troy's) in Alexandria, Virginia Tuesday, August 20, 2013. <br />
<br />
President Ronald Reagan made a surprise St. Patrick’s Day visit in 1988. The table he sat at and his order ticket are preserved under glass in the "Reagan's Corner."
    130820_Irelands_Own_Pub_094.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Chris Holdt, dad of Ireland's Own (aka Pat Troy's) co-owner Scott Holdt, foreground left, serves customers, while (background L-R) Kellie Dixon, her mother, Patricia Dixon, and her aunt Mary Abell, eat lunch in Alexandria, Virginia Tuesday, August 20, 2013. <br />
<br />
President Ronald Reagan made a surprise St. Patrick’s Day visit in 1988. The table he sat at and his order ticket are preserved under glass in the "Reagan's Corner."
    130820_Irelands_Own_Pub_098.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Bartender/server Cara Mayberry, foreground, serves Phil Akers, from Alexandria, VA, background during lunch at Ireland's Own (aka Pat Troy's) in Alexandria, Virginia Tuesday, August 20, 2013. <br />
<br />
President Ronald Reagan made a surprise St. Patrick’s Day visit in 1988. The table he sat at and his order ticket are preserved under glass in the "Reagan's Corner."
    130820_Irelands_Own_Pub_093.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Ireland's Own (aka Pat Troy's) in Alexandria, Virginia Tuesday, August 20, 2013. <br />
<br />
President Ronald Reagan made a surprise St. Patrick’s Day visit in 1988. The table he sat at and his order ticket are preserved under glass in the "Reagan's Corner."
    130820_Irelands_Own_Pub_068.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
President Ronald Reagan made a surprise St. Patrick’s Day visit in 1988 to Pat Troy's (now known as Ireland's Own) in it's former location across Tavern Square in Old Town Alexandria, Virginia. The table he sat at and his order ticket are preserved under glass in the "Reagan's Corner." He ordered corn beef and cabbage and a Harp beer.
    130820_Irelands_Own_Pub_061.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
All the patches on the wall of Ireland's Own (aka Pat Troy's) are donated from members of the military and police officers.<br />
<br />
President Ronald Reagan made a surprise St. Patrick’s Day visit in 1988. The table he sat at and his order ticket are preserved under glass in the "Reagan's Corner."
    130820_Irelands_Own_Pub_020.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Chris Holdt, stands behind the bar of Ireland's Own (aka Pat Troy's) in Alexandria, Virginia Tuesday, August 20, 2013. Chris is the dad of Scott Holdt, the bar's new co-owner. Chris doesn't tend bar or wait tables, "I just help out," and jokes that this is his son's way of taking him out of retirement.<br />
<br />
President Ronald Reagan made a surprise St. Patrick’s Day visit in 1988. The table he sat at and his order ticket are preserved under glass in the "Reagan's Corner."
    130820_Irelands_Own_Pub_018.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Martin's Tavern bartender James Diaz blurs through the bar area Tuesday, August 20, 2013. <br />
<br />
Martin's Tavern in the Georgetown area of  Washington, D.C. boasts to have served every president since Harry Truman before they became president -- except Obama. While Kennedy was a Senator he used to sit in the Rumble Seat and read his paper during brunch. Two tables over, next to the Nixon table, is where JFK allegedly proposed to Jacqueline Bouvier. The dugout, which is currently under renovation, where President Lyndon Johnson and House Speaker Sam Rayburn would sit and drink in the corner booth.
    130820_Martins_Tavern_047.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Mismatched Tiffany lamps hang above the bar in Martin's Tavern. <br />
<br />
Martin's Tavern in the Georgetown area of  Washington, D.C. boasts to have served every president since Harry Truman before they became president -- except Obama. While Kennedy was a Senator he used to sit in the Rumble Seat and read his paper during brunch. Two tables over, next to the Nixon table, is where JFK allegedly proposed to Jacqueline Bouvier. The dugout, which is currently under renovation, where President Lyndon Johnson and House Speaker Sam Rayburn would sit and drink in the corner booth.<br />
<br />
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
    130820_Martins_Tavern_040.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Martin's Tavern in the Georgetown area of  Washington, D.C. boasts to have served every president since Harry Truman before they became president -- except Obama. While Kennedy was a Senator he used to sit in the Rumble Seat, a half-booth, and read his paper during brunch. Two tables over, next to the Nixon table, is the "Proposal Booth" where JFK allegedly proposed to Jacqueline Bouvier.
    130820_Martins_Tavern_026.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Framed Equestrian illustrations line the wall of Martin's Tavern. <br />
<br />
Martin's Tavern in the Georgetown area of  Washington, D.C. boasts to have served every president since Harry Truman before they became president -- except Obama. While Kennedy was a Senator he used to sit in the Rumble Seat and read his paper during brunch. Two tables over, next to the Nixon table, is where JFK allegedly proposed to Jacqueline Bouvier. The dugout, which is currently under renovation, where President Lyndon Johnson and House Speaker Sam Rayburn would sit and drink in the corner booth.<br />
<br />
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
    130820_Martins_Tavern_022.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Martin's Tavern in the Georgetown area of  Washington, D.C. boasts to have served every president since Harry Truman before they became president -- except Obama. While Kennedy was a Senator he used to sit in the Rumble Seat, far right, a half-booth, and read his newspaper during brunch. Two tables over, next to the Nixon table, is the "Proposal Booth" where JFK allegedly proposed to Jacqueline Bouvier.
    130820_Martins_Tavern_017.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Martin's Tavern in the Georgetown area of  Washington, D.C. boasts to have served every president since Harry Truman before they became president -- except Obama. Picture is a booth in The dugout -- which is currently under renovation -- where President Lyndon Johnson and House Speaker Sam Rayburn would sit and drink in the corner booth. Politicians would retreat to the dark back room to smoke, drink, play cards, and argue the way politicians do.<br />
<br />
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
    130820_Martins_Tavern_011.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
The Tombs is a beloved Georgetown basement bar known as one of President Bill Clinton's college haunts. <br />
<br />
in Washington, D.C. Tuesday, August 20, 2013.
    130820_The_Tombs_066.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
The Tombs regular Pete Cavanaugh, 65 sits down to lunch and the newspaper. The Tombs is a beloved Georgetown basement bar known as one of President Bill Clinton's college haunts. <br />
<br />
in Washington, D.C. Tuesday, August 20, 2013.
    130820_The_Tombs_063.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
The Tombs server Ellis Reilly, is an upcoming senior at Georgetown University. He joined The Tombs in the Summer and is originally from Hamden, CT. All servers at the Tombs are required to wear and know how to tie a bow tie. <br />
<br />
The Tombs is a beloved Georgetown basement bar known as one of President Bill Clinton's college haunts. <br />
<br />
in Washington, D.C. Tuesday, August 20, 2013.
    130820_The_Tombs_026.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
The Tombs is a beloved Georgetown basement bar known as one of President Bill Clinton's college haunts. The oars over the fireplace represent each year Georgetown won the Dad Vail rowing championships. <br />
<br />
in Washington, D.C. Tuesday, August 20, 2013.
    130820_The_Tombs_013.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
The Tombs is a beloved Georgetown basement bar known as one of President Bill Clinton's college haunts. <br />
<br />
in Washington, D.C. Tuesday, August 20, 2013.
    130820_The_Tombs_001.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Customers gather at Off the Record, the discrete basement bar in the Hay Adams Hotel in Washington, D.C. Thursday, August 22, 2013. The bar boasts the motto “be seen and not heard.”
    130822_Off_the_Record_Hay_Adams_045.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Customers gather at Off the Record, the discrete basement bar in the Hay Adams Hotel in Washington, D.C. Thursday, August 22, 2013. The bar boasts the motto “be seen and not heard.”
    130822_Off_the_Record_Hay_Adams_042.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Tight-lipped Off the Record veteran bartender John Boswell can boast to serving every president there since the late Gerald Ford. The discrete basement bar in the Hay Adams Hotel in Washington, D.C. boasts the motto “be seen and not heard.”<br />
<br />
Thursday, August 22, 2013.
    130822_Off_the_Record_Hay_Adams_038.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Customers gather at Off the Record, the discrete basement bar in the Hay Adams Hotel in Washington, D.C. Thursday, August 22, 2013. The bar boasts the motto “be seen and not heard.”
    130822_Off_the_Record_Hay_Adams_041.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Tight-lipped Off the Record veteran bartender John Boswell can boast to serving every president there since the late Gerald Ford. The discrete basement bar in the Hay Adams Hotel in Washington, D.C. boasts the motto “be seen and not heard.”<br />
<br />
Thursday, August 22, 2013.
    130822_Off_the_Record_Hay_Adams_032.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Tight-lipped Off the Record veteran bartender John Boswell can boast to serving every president there since the late Gerald Ford. The discrete basement bar in the Hay Adams Hotel in Washington, D.C. boasts the motto “be seen and not heard.”<br />
<br />
Thursday, August 22, 2013.
    130822_Off_the_Record_Hay_Adams_024.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Tight-lipped Off the Record veteran bartender John Boswell can boast to serving every president there since the late Gerald Ford. The discrete basement bar in the Hay Adams Hotel in Washington, D.C. boasts the motto “be seen and not heard.”<br />
<br />
Thursday, August 22, 2013.
    130822_Off_the_Record_Hay_Adams_016.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
At this self-proclaimed ‘Residence of Presidents’, folklore has Ulysses S. Grant coining the term “lobbyists” as a label for those who loitered after him in the Willard’s lobby (never mind references to the verb “lobbying” from before The Willard opened its doors).<br />
The Willard claims to have introduced the famously southern libation, the Mint Julep, to Washingtonians.
    130822_Round_Robin_Willard_Hotel_120.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
At this self-proclaimed ‘Residence of Presidents’, folklore has Ulysses S. Grant coining the term “lobbyists” as a label for those who loitered after him in the Willard’s lobby (never mind references to the verb “lobbying” from before The Willard opened its doors). The Willard claims to have introduced the famously southern libation, the Mint Julep, to Washingtonians.
    130822_Round_Robin_Willard_Hotel_110.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
A view of the Capital from the Willard Hotel's front steps.<br />
<br />
The Willard claims to have introduced the famously southern libation, the Mint Julep, to Washingtonians.<br />
<br />
At this self-proclaimed ‘Residence of Presidents’, folklore has Ulysses S. Grant coining the term “lobbyists” as a label for those who loitered after him in the Willard’s lobby (never mind references to the verb “lobbying” from before The Willard opened its doors).
    130822_Round_Robin_Willard_Hotel_053.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
An ornate light fixture at the Round Robin Bar inside the Willard Hotel.<br />
The Willard claims to have introduced the famously southern libation, the Mint Julep, to Washingtonians.<br />
<br />
At this self-proclaimed ‘Residence of Presidents’, folklore has Ulysses S. Grant coining the term “lobbyists” as a label for those who loitered after him in the Willard’s lobby (never mind references to the verb “lobbying” from before The Willard opened its doors).
    130822_Round_Robin_Willard_Hotel_038.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Jim Hewes, shaking a drink, has tended bar at the Round Robin for 27 years -- since opening at the the Willard Hotel.<br />
The Willard claims to have introduced the famously southern libation, the Mint Julep, to Washingtonians.<br />
<br />
At this self-proclaimed ‘Residence of Presidents’, folklore has Ulysses S. Grant coining the term “lobbyists” as a label for those who loitered after him in the Willard’s lobby (never mind references to the verb “lobbying” from before The Willard opened its doors).
    130822_Round_Robin_Willard_Hotel_027.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Jim Hewes, has tended bar at the Round Robin for 27 years -- since opening at the the Willard Hotel.<br />
<br />
The Willard claims to have introduced the famously southern libation, the Mint Julep, to Washingtonians. At this self-proclaimed ‘Residence of Presidents’, folklore has Ulysses S. Grant coining the term “lobbyists” as a label for those who loitered after him in the Willard’s lobby (never mind references to the verb “lobbying” from before The Willard opened its doors).
    130822_Round_Robin_Willard_Hotel_004.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Ireland's Own (aka Pat Troy's) in Alexandria, Virginia Tuesday, August 20, 2013. <br />
<br />
President Ronald Reagan made a surprise St. Patrick’s Day visit in 1988. The table he sat at and his order ticket are preserved under glass in the "Reagan's Corner."
    130820_Irelands_Own_Pub_131.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
A photograph hung on the wall of Ireland's Own (aka Pat Troy's) offer proof of President Ronald Reagan and Kil Patrick's surprise St. Patrick’s Day visit in 1988. The table they sat in and his order ticket are preserved under glass in "Reagan's Corner."
    130820_Irelands_Own_Pub_115.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Ireland's Own (aka Pat Troy's) in Alexandria, Virginia Tuesday, August 20, 2013. <br />
<br />
President Ronald Reagan made a surprise St. Patrick’s Day visit in 1988. The table he sat at and his order ticket are preserved under glass in the "Reagan's Corner."
    130820_Irelands_Own_Pub_071.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
President Ronald Reagan made a surprise St. Patrick’s Day visit in 1988 to Pat Troy's (now known as Ireland's Own) in it's former location across Tavern Square in Old Town Alexandria, Virginia. The table he sat at and his order ticket are preserved under glass in the "Reagan's Corner." He ordered corn beef and cabbage and a Harp beer.
    130820_Irelands_Own_Pub_050.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Cara Mayberry, bartender and server at Ireland's Own (aka Pat Troy's) opens the outdoor seating area before lunch in Alexandria, Virginia Tuesday, August 20, 2013. <br />
<br />
President Ronald Reagan made a surprise St. Patrick’s Day visit in 1988. The table he sat at and his order ticket are preserved under glass in the "Reagan's Corner."
    130820_Irelands_Own_Pub_010.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
An ornate mirror serves as the backdrop for liquor at Martin's Tavern. <br />
Martin's Tavern in the Georgetown area of  Washington, D.C. boasts to have served every president since Harry Truman before they became president -- except Obama. While Kennedy was a Senator he used to sit in the Rumble Seat and read his paper during brunch. Two tables over, next to the Nixon table, is where JFK allegedly proposed to Jacqueline Bouvier. The dugout, which is currently under renovation, where President Lyndon Johnson and House Speaker Sam Rayburn would sit and drink in the corner booth.<br />
<br />
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
    130820_Martins_Tavern_041.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Martin's Tavern in the Georgetown area of  Washington, D.C. boasts to have served every president since Harry Truman before they became president -- except Obama. John F. Kennedy allegedly proposed to Jacqueline Bouvier in booth #3.
    130820_Martins_Tavern_031.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Plaques of bartenders who worked at The Tombs for more than two years are immortalized on the bar. The Tombs is a beloved Georgetown basement bar known as one of President Bill Clinton's college haunts. <br />
<br />
in Washington, D.C. Tuesday, August 20, 2013.
    130820_The_Tombs_048.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
A ceiling of empty beer pitchers hang above The Tombs bar. The Tombs is a beloved Georgetown basement bar known as one of President Bill Clinton's college haunts. <br />
<br />
in Washington, D.C. Tuesday, August 20, 2013.
    130820_The_Tombs_021.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
The Tombs bartender Erin Claire, Georgetown Alumni '12, originally Burnsville, MN, works under a ceiling of empty beer pitchers, and is surrounded by vintage WW I posters.<br />
<br />
The Tombs is a beloved Georgetown basement bar known as one of President Bill Clinton's college haunts. <br />
<br />
in Washington, D.C. Tuesday, August 20, 2013.
    130820_The_Tombs_018.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
The Hay Adams Hotel in Washington, D.C. Thursday, August 22, 2013.
    130822_Off_the_Record_Hay_Adams_054.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Customers gather at Off the Record, the discrete basement bar in the Hay Adams Hotel in Washington, D.C. Thursday, August 22, 2013. The bar boasts the motto “be seen and not heard.”
    130822_Off_the_Record_Hay_Adams_051.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
A Pim's Cup sits on the bar at Off the Record, the discrete basement bar in the Hay Adams Hotel in Washington, D.C. Thursday, August 22, 2013. The bar boasts the motto “be seen and not heard.”
    130822_Off_the_Record_Hay_Adams_035.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Off the Record, the discrete basement bar in the Hay Adams Hotel in Washington, D.C. boasts the motto “be seen and not heard.” This booth located behind the bar offers the most privacy.<br />
<br />
Thursday, August 22, 2013.
    130822_Off_the_Record_Hay_Adams_030.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Off the Record, the discrete basement bar in the Hay Adams Hotel in Washington, D.C. boasts the motto “be seen and not heard.” This booth located behind the bar offers the most privacy.<br />
<br />
Thursday, August 22, 2013.
    130822_Off_the_Record_Hay_Adams_028.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Off the Record, the discrete basement bar in the Hay Adams Hotel in Washington, D.C. boasts the motto “be seen and not heard.”<br />
<br />
Thursday, August 22, 2013.
    130822_Off_the_Record_Hay_Adams_025.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
The Hay Adams Hotel in Washington, D.C. Thursday, August 22, 2013.
    130822_Off_the_Record_Hay_Adams_009.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
At this self-proclaimed ‘Residence of Presidents’, folklore has Ulysses S. Grant coining the term “lobbyists” as a label for those who loitered after him in the Willard’s lobby (never mind references to the verb “lobbying” from before The Willard opened its doors).<br />
The Willard claims to have introduced the famously southern libation, the Mint Julep, to Washingtonians.
    130822_Round_Robin_Willard_Hotel_148.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
At this self-proclaimed ‘Residence of Presidents’, folklore has Ulysses S. Grant coining the term “lobbyists” as a label for those who loitered after him in the Willard’s lobby (never mind references to the verb “lobbying” from before The Willard opened its doors).<br />
The Willard claims to have introduced the famously southern libation, the Mint Julep, to Washingtonians.
    130822_Round_Robin_Willard_Hotel_123.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
At this self-proclaimed ‘Residence of Presidents’, folklore has Ulysses S. Grant coining the term “lobbyists” as a label for those who loitered after him in the Willard’s lobby (never mind references to the verb “lobbying” from before The Willard opened its doors).<br />
The Willard claims to have introduced the famously southern libation, the Mint Julep, to Washingtonians.
    130822_Round_Robin_Willard_Hotel_117.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
At this self-proclaimed ‘Residence of Presidents’, folklore has Ulysses S. Grant coining the term “lobbyists” as a label for those who loitered after him in the Willard’s lobby (never mind references to the verb “lobbying” from before The Willard opened its doors). The Willard claims to have introduced the famously southern libation, the Mint Julep, to Washingtonians.
    130822_Round_Robin_Willard_Hotel_048.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Portraits of Charles Dickens and President Abraham Lincoln line the wall of the Round Robin Bar at the Willard Hotel in Washington DC.<br />
At this self-proclaimed ‘Residence of Presidents’, folklore has Ulysses S. Grant coining the term “lobbyists” as a label for those who loitered after him in the Willard’s lobby (never mind references to the verb “lobbying” from before The Willard opened its doors).
    130822_Round_Robin_Willard_Hotel_032.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Jim Hewes, has tended bar at the Round Robin for 27 years -- since opening at the the Willard Hotel.<br />
<br />
At this self-proclaimed ‘Residence of Presidents’, folklore has Ulysses S. Grant coining the term “lobbyists” as a label for those who loitered after him in the Willard’s lobby (never mind references to the verb “lobbying” from before The Willard opened its doors).
    130822_Round_Robin_Willard_Hotel_022.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
The Willard claims to have introduced the famously southern libation, the Mint Julep, to Washingtonians. The minty drink is photographed in the hotel's Round Robin Bar.<br />
<br />
At this self-proclaimed ‘Residence of Presidents’, folklore has Ulysses S. Grant coining the term “lobbyists” as a label for those who loitered after him in the Willard’s lobby (never mind references to the verb “lobbying” from before The Willard opened its doors).
    130822_Round_Robin_Willard_Hotel_015.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Customers gather at Ireland's Own (aka Pat Troy's) bar in Alexandria, Virginia Tuesday, August 20, 2013. <br />
<br />
President Ronald Reagan made a surprise St. Patrick’s Day visit in 1988. The table he sat at and his order ticket are preserved under glass in the "Reagan's Corner."
    130820_Irelands_Own_Pub_122.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
Fish n' Chips at Ireland's Own (aka Pat Troy's) in Old Town Alexandria, Virginia Tuesday, August 20, 2013. <br />
<br />
President Ronald Reagan made a surprise St. Patrick’s Day visit in 1988. The table he sat at and his order ticket are preserved under glass in the "Reagan's Corner."
    130820_Irelands_Own_Pub_074.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
Assignment ID: 30146508A<br />
<br />
President Ronald Reagan made a surprise St. Patrick’s Day visit in 1988 to Pat Troy's (now known as Ireland's Own) in it's former location across Tavern Square in Old Town Alexandria, Virginia. The table he sat at and his order ticket are preserved under glass in the "Reagan's Corner." He ordered corn beef and cabbage and a Harp beer.
    130820_Irelands_Own_Pub_048.JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
<br />
Chester Green a supervisor with the Baltimore City Department of Public Works Bureau of Water and Wastewater, talks to crew members while riding a backhoe into dig hole at the site of a water main break at the intersection of Yellowwood Ave. and Springfield Dr. in Baltimore, Maryland on Tuesday, May 07, 2013.
    130507_Baltimore_City_Bureau_Water_W...JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
<br />
Chester Green a supervisor with the Baltimore City Department of Public Works Bureau of Water and Wastewater, directs Kevin Koluch, backhoe operator, at a dig hole at the site of a water main break at the intersection of Yellowwood Ave. and Springfield Dr. in Baltimore, Maryland on Tuesday, May 07, 2013.
    130507_Baltimore_City_Bureau_Water_W...JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
<br />
Chester Green a supervisor with the Baltimore City Department of Public Works Bureau of Water and Wastewater, directs Kevin Koluch, backhoe operator, at a dig hole at the site of a water main break at the intersection of Yellowwood Ave. and Springfield Dr. in Baltimore, Maryland on Tuesday, May 07, 2013.
    130507_Baltimore_City_Bureau_Water_W...JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
<br />
Chester Green a supervisor with the Baltimore City Department of Public Works Bureau of Water and Wastewater, directs Kevin Koluch, backhoe operator, at a dig hole at the site of a water main break at the intersection of Yellowwood Ave. and Springfield Dr. in Baltimore, Maryland on Tuesday, May 07, 2013.
    130507_Baltimore_City_Bureau_Water_W...JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
<br />
Chester Green a supervisor with the Baltimore City Department of Public Works Bureau of Water and Wastewater, rides a backhoe into dig hole at the site of a water main break at the intersection of Yellowwood Ave. and Springfield Dr. in Baltimore, Maryland on Tuesday, May 07, 2013.
    130507_Baltimore_City_Bureau_Water_W...JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
<br />
Baltimore City Department of Public Works employee sweeps debris into a dig hole at a water main break site at the intersection of Yellowwood Ave. and Springfield Dr. in Baltimore, Maryland on Tuesday, May 07, 2013.
    130507_Baltimore_City_Bureau_Water_W...JPG
  • Photo by Matt Roth<br />
<br />
A Baltimore City Department of Public Works employee (Tyrone Rogers, who doesn't want to be identified) sits in a dig hole at a water main break at the intersection of Yellowwood Ave. and Springfield Dr. in Baltimore, Maryland on Tuesday, May 07, 2013.
    130507_Baltimore_City_Bureau_Water_W...JPG
  • (photo by Matt Roth).Friday, May 14, 2010..A student in the Baltimore Freedom Academy walks past a broken fence, while others walk under a giant hole in the ceiling. When it rains, the ceiling leaks.  The massive ceiling hole in the hallway becomes a hazard when it rains. The pipes, exposed by the ceiling break, are problematic, too. Elani Odeyale, programming assistant to Baltimore Freedom Academy's principal, Khalilah Harris,  reports that the water from the school's fountains are undrinkable because they are too high in lead, and asbestos makes fixing the pipes hazardous. ..The building housing the Baltimore Freedom Academy, a grade 6-12 Baltimore public charter school focusing in social justice, was built in 1960. Fifty years later, the school is in disrepair. Old pipes make water from the fountains undrinkable. Asbestos makes repairing/replacing the pipes a hazard. The school has no air conditioning which makes the year-round school unbearable in the summer. The most derelict area is the boys locker room, where students are not allowed.
    100514BaltimoreFreedomAcademy024.jpg
  • (photo by Matt Roth).Friday, May 14, 2010..Elani Odeyale, programming assistant to Baltimore Freedom Academy's principal, Khalilah Harris, stands under a massive ceiling hole in the hallway connecting to the gym. When it rains, this hole becomes a hazard. ..The building housing the Baltimore Freedom Academy, a grade 6-12 Baltimore public charter school focusing in social justice, was built in 1960. Fifty years later, the school is in disrepair. Old pipes make water from the fountains undrinkable. Asbestos makes repairing/replacing the pipes a hazard. The school has no air conditioning which makes the year-round school unbearable in the summer. The most derelict area is the boys locker room, where students are not allowed.
    100514BaltimoreFreedomAcademy005.jpg
  • (photo by Matt Roth).Friday, May 14, 2010..Baltimore Freedom Academy Child Study Team member Travis Watkins stands in a stair well. In front of him is a hole where a rail used to be. The building housing the Baltimore Freedom Academy, a grade 6-12 Baltimore public charter school focusing in social justice, was built in 1960. Fifty years later, the school is in disrepair. Old pipes make water from the fountains undrinkable. Asbestos makes repairing/replacing the pipes a hazard. The school has no air conditioning which makes the year-round school unbearable in the summer. The most derelict area is the boys locker room, where students are not allowed.
    100514BaltimoreFreedomAcademy214.jpg
  • (photo by Matt Roth).Friday, May 14, 2010..One of the stairwell rails has become unbolted from the wall. There are several more holes lining the school's stairs, marking where rails used to be. ..The building housing the Baltimore Freedom Academy, a grade 6-12 Baltimore public charter school focusing in social justice, was built in 1960. Fifty years later, the school is in disrepair. Old pipes make water from the fountains undrinkable. Asbestos makes repairing/replacing the pipes a hazard. The school has no air conditioning which makes the year-round school unbearable in the summer. The most derelict area is the boys locker room, where students are not allowed.
    100514BaltimoreFreedomAcademy207.jpg
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