Three Sisters (District of Columbia)
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The Three Sisters, variously known as the Three Sisters Islands and the Three Sisters Island, are three rocky islands in the Potomac River in Washington, D.C., west of the Key Bridge. They represent the farthest point navigable by larger boats.
Various legends are associated with the Three Sisters. In one, three Roman Catholic nuns drowned in the river, which spewed them back as the three islands.
Another legend tells of three Indian sisters who were trying to escape a pursuing chieftain and tried to swim across the river; they drowned and were turned into the rocky islets by the Great Spirit. This legend was crafted by Native Americans to warn children of the deceptively calm Potomac River currents.
The Three Sisters are probably best known as the site of the proposed Three Sisters Bridge, which would have carried Interstate 266 across the river between the District of Columbia and Arlington County, Virginia. The highway and bridge were canceled due to community opposition in 1972.
They are also integral to the plot of Breena Clarke's best-selling novel River, Cross My Heart, (ISBN 0-316-89998-4,) set in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, D.C., in 1925.
[edit] In Pop Culture
The song The Three Fine Daughters of Farmer Brown by folk group Eddie from Ohio (a band local to the Washington, D.C. area) references a Three Sisters Island and attributes its formation to the loss of three sisters in the swift currents of an unnamed river. The song's story takes place in Halifax County, Virginia, however, well outside the D.C. area.