Reminder: Free history walking tour of LeDroit Park this weekend
Come on out Saturday or Sunday for a free history walking tour of LeDroit Park. I conduct this tour annually as part of WalkingTown DC.
The tours will be on Saturday, October 5 at 1 pm and again on Sunday, October 6 at 10 am. Meet me at the arch at 6th Street and Florida Avenue NW. The tours are free and open to the public. No reservations are required.
We’ll cover
- The neighborhood’s founding
- Relationship with the Howard Theatre
- Architectural history
- The Park at LeDroit
- Walter Washington
- Ernest Everett Just
- Robert & Mary Church Terrell
- Anna Julia Cooper
- William Birney
- Edward Brooke
- Octavius Williams
- Oscar De Priest
- Griffith Stadium
Get a free history tour of LeDroit Park on Oct. 5 & 6
How was LeDroit Park established and who built all those unique homes on U Street? Why did the neighborhood start as exclusively white but become important to black history? As part of the annual WalkingTown DC event, I will lead two free walking tours of the neighborhood.
The tours will be on Saturday, October 5 at 1 pm and again on Sunday, October 6 at 10 am. Meet me at the arch at 6th Street and Florida Avenue NW. The tours are free and open to the public.
We’ll cover
- The neighborhood’s founding
- Relationship with the Howard Theatre
- Architectural history
- The Park at LeDroit
- Walter Washington
- Ernest Everett Just
- Robert & Mary Church Terrell
- Anna Julia Cooper
- William Birney
- Edward Brooke
- Octavius Williams
- Oscar De Priest
- Griffith Stadium
Get a free history tour of LeDroit Park on Sept. 30
How was LeDroit Park established and who built all those unique homes on U Street? Why did the neighborhood start as exclusively white but become so important to black history? As part of the annual WalkingTown DC event, I will lead two free walking tours of the neighborhood.
The tours will be on Sunday, September 30 at 1 pm and again at 3:30 pm. Meet me at the arch at 6th Street and Florida Avenue NW. The tours are free and open to the public.
We’ll cover
- The neighborhood’s founding
- Relationship with the Howard Theatre
- Architectural history
- The Park at LeDroit
- Walter Washington
- Ernest Everett Just
- Robert & Mary Church Terrell
- Anna Julia Cooper
- William Birney
- Edward Brooke
- Octavius Williams
- Oscar De Priest
- Griffith Stadium
Name the New Park
Park construction is underway, but when the park is ready in the coming months, what should we call it? The ultimate decision is up to the DC Council, but Councilmember Jim Graham (D – Ward 1) has assured us that the Council will strongly consider any three names that neighbors finally settle on.
You can submit your suggestions online. Anyone may submit names and you may submit as many as you like. The LeDroit Park Civic Association will gather the names and allow the public to vote for the names. The top three winners will be forwarded to the Council.
What would you like to call the park?
If we want to honor notable residents, here are a few famous figures from the neighborhood’s history:
- Walter Washington – 408 T Street – First elected mayor of DC.
- Paul Laurence Dunbar – 321 U Street – Notable poet.
- Mary Church Terrell – 326 T Street – Notable civil rights activist.
- Oscar De Priest – 419 U Street – First black Congressman elected since Reconstruction.
We have excluded Duke Ellington since he lived here for only one year and since he already has several civic works dedicated to him. We also excluded living people since their histories are still being written. We also left out Anna J. Cooper since she already has the circle park named after her.
One other deceased person who might merit distinction is Theresa Brown, who died in 2009. Ms. Brown was instrumental in establishing the LeDroit Park Historic District and protecting the neighborhood’s unique architecture from the wrecking ball. Without her, the neighborhood we know today may have been turned into parking lots.
Most parks operated by the Department of Parks and Recreation end their names with “Recreation Center”, a suffix with as much charm as the tax code. Perhaps Playground, Gardens, Park, or Field would set off our park from other projects.
What would you like to name the park?
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