Bethesda Chevy Chase Rug Cleaning and Restoration
The Bethesda Chevy Chase area has many beautiful rugs!

The Bethesda Chevy Chase area has many beautiful rugs that sometimes need cleaning and/or repairs. The experts at Oriental Rug Masters have been serving this area for decades. They know how to properly clean and repair the finest oriental rugs.
From rugs at the Chevy Chase Club and Columbia Country Club on Connecticut Avenue to the fine nearby homes on Oxford Street, Newlands Street, E Melrose Street, E Kirke Street, E Irving Street, Primrose Street, Quincy Street, Bradley Ln, Raymond Street. The experts at Oriental Rug Masters have the cleaning and restoration services available as needed. Don't trust your valuable, beautiful antique rugs to any other organization.

World-Class Homes have beautiful rugs!
Also see OrientalRugMasters.com

Pickup and delivery is available all over Montgomery County and beyond. Everyday we are in Bethesda, Chevy Chase, Potomac, Rockville, Silver Spring, Wheaton, Olney, Gaithersburg, Germantown and everywhere in between.
Bethesda (/bəˈθɛzdə/) is an unincorporated, census-designated place in southern Montgomery County, Maryland, United States, located just northwest of Washington, D.C. It takes its name from a local church, the Bethesda Meeting House (1820, rebuilt 1849), which in turn took its name from Jerusalem's Pool of Bethesda.[1] The National Institutes of Health main campus and the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center are in Bethesda, in addition to a number of corporate and government headquarters.
As an unincorporated community, Bethesda has no official boundaries. The United States Census Bureau defines a census-designated place named Bethesda whose center is located at 38°59′N 77°7′W, while the United States Geological Survey has defined Bethesda as an area whose center is at 38°58′50″N 77°6′2″W, slightly different from the Census Bureau's definition. Other definitions are used by the Bethesda Urban Planning District, the United States Postal Service (which defines Bethesda to comprise the ZIP Codes 20810, 20811, 20813, 20814, 20815, 20816, and 20817), and other organizations. According to the 2020 United States census, the community had a total population of 68,056.[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bethesda,_Maryland
Chevy Chase is the name of both a town and an unincorporated census-designated place (Chevy Chase (CDP), Maryland) that straddle the northwest border of Washington, D.C. and Montgomery County, Maryland, United States. Several settlements in the same area of Montgomery County and one neighborhood of Washington include Chevy Chase in their names. These villages, the town, and the CDP share a common history and together form a larger community colloquially referred to as Chevy Chase.
Primarily a residential suburb, Chevy Chase adjoins Friendship Heights, a popular shopping district. It includes the National 4-H Youth Conference Center, which hosts the National 4-H Conference, an event for 4-Hers throughout the nation to attend, and the National Science Bowl annually in either late April or early May.[1] Chevy Chase is also the home of the Chevy Chase Club and Columbia Country Club, private clubs whose members include many prominent politicians and Washingtonians.[2]
Chevy Chase was noted as "the most educated town in America" in a study conducted by the Stanford Graduate School of Education, with 93.5 percent of adult residents having at least a bachelor's degree.[3]
The name Chevy Chase is derived from Cheivy Chace, the name of the land patented to Colonel Joseph Belt from Charles Calvert, 5th Baron Baltimore on July 10, 1725. It has historic associations with a 1388 chevauchée — a French word describing a border raid — fought by Lord Percy of England and Earl Douglas of Scotland over hunting grounds, or a "chace", in the Cheviot Hills of Northumberland and Otterburn.[4] The battle was memorialized in "The Ballad of Chevy Chase".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chevy_Chase,_Maryland

