1752 – February: First survey of Georgetown completed.[1]
1784 – October 7: Elbridge Gerry of Massachusetts motions “that buildings for the use of Congress be erected on the banks of the Delaware near Trenton, or of the Potomac, near Georgetown, provided a suitable district can be procured on one of the rivers as aforesaid, for a federal town”.[2]
1789 – Town of Georgetown, Maryland, chartered and incorporated; Georgetown University founded.[3]
L'Enfant Plan for design of the City of Washington introduced.[7]
September 9: Commissioners appointed by President Washington name the federal district as "The Territory of Columbia," and the federal city as the "City of Washington."[8]
1792 – Construction of White House (presidential residence) begins.
Second President John Adams travels south from former second national capital at Philadelphia and is the first chief executive to occupy the President's House (future White House) in November with his wife Abigail to the unfinished mansion. The Adamses occupy the house for only the last four months of his term, having been defeated for reelection by incumbent Vice President Thomas Jefferson in the Election of 1800 until Jefferson's inauguration the following year on March 4, 1801.
United States Capitol building construction continues with partial completion of the north Senate wing where the United States Congress meets for its first sessions in Washington. Construction continues on south House of Representatives south wing. The Senate wing, completed first temporarily provides spaces to be used by both houses of the Congress, the beginnings of the Library of Congress and the Supreme Court for several years of continued construction work.
^Kathleen Menzie Lesko; Valerie Babb; Carroll R. Gibbs (1991). Black Georgetown Remembered : A History Of Its Black Community From The Founding Of "The Town of George". Georgetown University Press. pp. 1–2. ISBN9781626163263. OCLC922572367.
^John Bassett McCleary (2004). "Anti-War Events". The Hippie Dictionary: A Cultural Encyclopedia of the 1960s and 1970s. Ten Speed Press. pp. 602+. ISBN978-1-58008-547-2.
Boyd, Elizabeth S.; Boyd, Andrew; Boyd, William Henry (1887). Boyd's Directory for the District of Columbia. Washington DC: Wm. H. Boyd. hdl:2027/mdp.39015074642748.
Boyd, Elizabeth S.; Boyd, Andrew; Boyd, William Henry (1909). Boyd's Directory for the District of Columbia. Washington DC: R.L. Polk & Co. hdl:2027/mdp.39015006986833.
Howard Furer (1975). Washington, a chronological & documentary history, 1790-1970. American Cities Chronology Series. Oceana Publications. ISBN0379006111.
Alan Lessoff (2000). "Washington, D.C". In Paul Finkelman (ed.). Encyclopedia of the United States in the Nineteenth Century. Charles Scribner's Sons. ISBN0684805006.
National Museum of African American History and Culture. "Collection Search: Washington, D.C." Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution. (Sortable by decade)