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One of Georgetown’s oldest row houses goes on market for $2.4 million

One of the few remaining pre-1800 row houses in Georgetown has been listed for sale for $2.395 million. (Courtesy HRL Partners at Washington Fine Properties)
One of the few remaining pre-1800 row houses in Georgetown has been listed for sale for $2.395 million. (Courtesy HRL Partners at Washing)
The three-level home has three bedrooms and two and a half baths, and a deep, private rear garden, on a lot that is 120 feet in length -- unusual for Georgetown.
The three-level home has three bedrooms and two-and-a-half baths, and a deep, private rear garden, on a lot that is 120 feet in length — unusual for Georgetown. (Courtesy HRL Partners at Washing)
The 1780 house has also undergone a top-to-bottom 21st-century renovation by Akseizer Residential. (Courtesy HRL Partners at Washington Fine Properties)
The 1780 house has undergone a top-to-bottom 21st-century renovation by Akseizer Residential. (Courtesy HRL Partners at Washing)
The house was first owned by Nicholas Hedges, a contractor who built the nearby Evermay Estate, HRL Partners says.
The house was first owned by Nicholas Hedges, a contractor who built the nearby Evermay Estate, HRL Partners says. (Courtesy HRL Partners at Washing)
The 1780 house has also undergone a top-to-bottom 21st-century renovation by Akseizer Residential.
The 1780 house has also undergone a top-to-bottom 21st-century renovation by Akseizer Residential. (Courtesy HRL Partners at Washing)
The house was first owned by Nicholas Hedges, a contractor who built the nearby Evermay Estate, HRL Partners says.
The house was first owned by Nicholas Hedges, a contractor who built the nearby Evermay Estate, HRL Partners says. (Courtesy HRL Partners at Washing)
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One of the few remaining pre-1800 row houses in Georgetown has been listed for sale for $2.395 million. (Courtesy HRL Partners at Washington Fine Properties)
The three-level home has three bedrooms and two and a half baths, and a deep, private rear garden, on a lot that is 120 feet in length -- unusual for Georgetown.
The 1780 house has also undergone a top-to-bottom 21st-century renovation by Akseizer Residential. (Courtesy HRL Partners at Washington Fine Properties)
The house was first owned by Nicholas Hedges, a contractor who built the nearby Evermay Estate, HRL Partners says.
The 1780 house has also undergone a top-to-bottom 21st-century renovation by Akseizer Residential.
The house was first owned by Nicholas Hedges, a contractor who built the nearby Evermay Estate, HRL Partners says.

One of the few remaining pre-1800 row houses in Georgetown has been listed for sale for $2.395 million.

D.C. property records show the house, at 1232 30th St. NW, dates to 1780, according to , which is marketing the property.

The house has also undergone a top-to-bottom 21st-century renovation by .

The house was first owned by Nicholas Hedges, a contractor who built the nearby Evermay Estate, HRL Partners says.

The three-level home has three bedrooms and two-and-a-half baths, and a deep, private rear garden, on a lot that is 120 feet in length — unusual for Georgetown.

“This home has been a Georgetown landmark for over 200 years,” said designer Jeff Akseizer. “It was an honor to bring it back to life at a level befitting its historical significance.”

The home is two doors away from the historic Gray-Pyne Estate, which was recently contracted three days after coming on the market with a list price of $8.95 million.

Jeff Clabaugh

Jeff Clabaugh has spent 20 years covering the Washington region's economy and financial markets for ²ÝÝ®´«Ã½ as part of a partnership with the Washington Business Journal, and officially joined the ²ÝÝ®´«Ã½ newsroom staff in January 2016.

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