Smithsonian American Art Museum
Mouth of James Creek by De Lancey Gill
Library of Congress
View of the City of Washington in 1792, showing James Creek

James Creek was a tributary of the Anacostia River in the southwest quadrant of Washington, D.C., once known as St. James' Creek and perhaps named after local landowner James Greenleaf.

It arose from several springs just south of Capitol Hill. Its course ran through land owned by James Greenleaf, roughly parallel to the route of present-day Delaware Avenue, SW,[1] emptying into a cove along the Anacostia River at present-day 1st Street SW, between Greenleaf Point to the west and Buzzard Point to the east. South of I Street SW, it flowed through an area of tidal marshes.

By 1815, its upstream reach was subsumed into the Washington City Canal, together with the main stem of Tiber Creek. From 1866 to 1876, its tidal lower reach was converted into the James Creek Canal, which was buried in 1916โ€“1917.[2]

Two present-day sites are named after the creek: James Creek, a District of Columbia Housing Authority property, and the James Creek Marina, which is located within what was the creek's mouth.

References and notes

  1. โ†‘ Ramos, David (2013-07-07). "DC streams in 1859, plotted on a modern map". Imaginary Terrain. Archived from the original on 2014-10-25.
  2. โ†‘ Williams, Garnett P. (1977). "Washington D.C.'s Vanishing Springs and Waterways: Geological Survey Circular 752" (PDF). United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved 2015-03-15.


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