We know D.C. Get our free newsletter to stay in the know.

Okay, that headline might be slightly disingenuous. But a couple of noteworthy home listings have shown up in that placid neighborhood lately.
First, I stumbled across this ad for 3703 Porter Street N.W., with the tantalizing blind item: “custom built for a prominent Washingtonian.” As agent Hans Wydler describes it, it’s a pretty special pad, with a passive solar heating system and two floor-to-ceiling fireplaces. The 4,300 square feet include four bedrooms, high vaulted ceilings with exposed wooden beams, and a twisting staircase made out of a single piece of wood.
So who is this prominent Washingtonian? None other than Victor Reuther, one of the three Reuther brothers to lead the United Auto Workers at the peak of their strength, who lost an eye in a 1949 assassination attempt. As the leader of the UAW international efforts, he protested the Vietnam War, crusaded against the Shah of Iran, and then criticized his own union in the 1980s for its closeness to corporations. Reuther had the house custom built in 1982, and much of the interior detailing bears the signatures of the artists and craftsmen who made it. He died in 2004, and sold the house a couple years later; it’s now on the market for the oddly precise price of $1,737,757.
For our second notable Cleveland Parker: Where does a grizzled Middle East correspondent and former Beirut bureau chief for the New York Times, who is still datelining from Damascus, decide to settle? Why, a pretty blue three-bedroom on 39th Street NW, which Robert F. Worth bought for $915,000 in late July. Should be nice to come home to.
This isn't a paywall.
We don't have one. Readers like you keep our work free for everyone to read. If you think that it's important to have high quality local reporting we hope you'll support our work with a monthly contribution.