When the Atlantic building at 930 F Street NW was completed in 1888, it was on the cutting edge. Designed by James Hill Green, the supervising architect of the U.S. Treasury Department, it was the biggest commercial structure in the District and one of the first to feature a passenger elevator. Over time, however, it was gradually was overshadowed by newer, flashier modern buildings, and became a largely-forgotten bit of the District's architectural history... until the 1980s, when the building achieved new fame as the epicenter of the District's alternative music scene.
As the sun rose over Washington, D.C., on the morning of March 30, 1981, an excited tourist lay in his bed at the Park Central Hotel on 18th Street NW. He had arrived the night before on a Greyhound bus, and had a big day ahead. But unlike most other visitors to D.C., he didn't plan to see the Lincoln Memorial or the Capitol dome. He was going to try to kill the President of the United States.
Earl Lloyd was a rising basketball star at West Virginia State College, but little did he know how soon he would become an important part of sports history. Toward the end of Lloyd’s senior season he was heading to class with a classmate and she told him she heard his name on the radio that day. The Washington Capitols had drafted him. It would be a history-making homecoming.
In 1873, Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner published their novel The Gilded Age, both as a parody of contemporary popular novels and to criticize political and economic corruption. In chapter 24, Twain and Warner take the reader on a virtual tour of the nation’s capital. They didn't paint a pretty picture.
Today, it's common to see people wearing t-shirts emblazoned with Bob Marley's instantly recognizable likeness, and the reggae classics that he recorded with the Wailers are so iconic that they're used in TV commercials. But back on the afternoon of October 14, 1973, when the then-28-year-old singer with the dreadlocks and wispy beard and his band stepped out onto the stage at the U.S. Naval Academy's Halsey Field House, things were quite different.
When Abigail Adams came to Washington, D.C. on November 16, 1800, she arrived at an infant city, sparse and not fully formed. Having just left the comforts of old Philadelphia, this must have been quite a shock. To make matters worse, her trip south had seen been rough. So, it’s safe to assume that she was in an irritable mood when she finally made it to D.C. We should probably keep that in mind while reading her appraisal of the city.
With the decades of lackluster baseball teams in the nation's capital, the 34 years when D.C. didn't have a team at all, and the early struggles of the current Nationals franchise, it's probably hard for most fans to imagine what a baseball championship in the nation's capital looked like. Well, thanks to the Library of Congress, it just got a whole lot easier.
In Rock Creek Park, there's a granite bench on the trail near Beach Drive, just south of Peirce Mill, that bears a curious inscription: "Jusserand: Personal tribute of esteem and effection." It's a safe bet that most of the people who pass by the odd little 78-year-old memorial don't realize that it commemorates one of President Theodore Roosevelt's close friends, French ambassador Jean Jules Jusserand — one of few people in Washington who could keep up with Teddy on a hike.
The Roosevelt family's roots are in New York, but they clearly had a strong connection to Washington, D.C. Having two presidents and a first lady in the ranks will do that. In that sense, it's fitting that D.C. is home to one of the largest Roosevelt archives today. No, we're not talking about the Library of Congress or the National Archives. We're talking about The Eleanor Roosevelt project at The George Washington University, which includes the digitized If You Ask Me, advice column that Eleanor wrote for Ladies Home Journal and, later, McCall's magazine.
The Peacock Room at the Smithsonian's Freer Gallery was first designed by architect Thomas Jekyll in 1876 to serve as a dining room for the wealthy British shipping magnate Frederick Leyland, who planned to make James Whistler’s painting, Princesse du pays de la porcelaine the centerpiece of the room. Whistler, however, hijacked the project and repainted the room extravagantly, covering the walls with gilded patterns and ornate peacocks. So how did this treasure find its way to Washington? Well, it’s a little complicated, but we can thank Teddy Roosevelt.
In 1932, amid the Great Depression, thousands of WWI veterans marched on Washington demanding early pension payments. Their encampment near the Anacostia River and protests on Pennsylvania Avenue alarmed President Hoover, who ordered their forcible removal after Congress rejected their demands. The clash, dubbed the Battle of Washington, deeply impacted Eleanor Roosevelt and shaped her resolve to prevent future injustices.
Before she topped the charts and won Grammys, Roberta Flack was a humble music teacher from Arlington, Virginia with a velvet voice and fierce perfectionism. Discover how Capitol Hill nightclub Mr. Henry’s became the launchpad for her legendary career.