Travel Secrets September - October 2015 | Page 32

The Narrowest House In America Award-winning author Juliet Philip takes you there T he blue house at Old Town Alexandria abounds with secrets. At seven feet wide, thirty-six feet tall and sandwiched between one red and another white house, the house is the narrowest house in America and although cutesy, John Hollensbury built the house out of spite. As legend has it, Hollensbury’s backstreet attracted horse-drawn wagons and other passers-by. To keep the loiterers away, Hollensbury enclosed the space and constructed a play house for his daughters Julia and Harriett. It was Hollensbury’s way of saying, “Get off my property.” One humid afternoon, after completing a project at my first corporate job, I wanted to go see the house.The blue house was the first place I had wanted to visit after graduating and landing my first job in America. The blue house did not seem like a place locals visited multiple times, or a place to brag about in retrospect, or to post on Facebook and roll up a small fortune of “Likes.” The little blue house seemed a to-do but not an iconic hyped about must-see on travel bustle channels. Old Town Alexandria is about ten miles away from where I worked. I had two options of commute: a bus to the metro station, and from the station another bus to my destination or I could drive. I chose to drive. At Old Town Alexandria, I could do a twohour free street parking or pay a $5 fee per hour for another spot. I saw an empty parking space on Pendleton Street and took it. I walked to the end of Pendleton St and before I made a left on N Washington St, as if somebody took a wet sponge and squeezed it right above my head. It had started, out of nowhere, to pour. I felt a pang of regret for not checking the weather earlier. I saw a sheltered bus stop, ran toward it and sat on a bench. The weather app on my phone with fifty percent certainty said it would stop raining in half hour, so I waited.While I did, I watched my smart phone die. Beside me, an elderly 32  Travel Secrets September-October 2015