Entries from DCist tagged with 'monuments>'
October 29, 2008
You've only got a few hours left to get over to the Library of Congress to get a look at the original rough draft of the Declaration of Independence. The draft, which was written by Thomas Jefferson and edited by John Adams and Ben Franklin, is being cycled out of the “Creating the United States” exhibit at the end of the day today, for at least the next few years. It's being replaced by George......
Continue Reading "Draft of Declaration of Independence Cycling Out of LOC"September 12, 2008
Last night the Pentagon Memorial, which honors the lives of the 184 people who died when a hijacked airliner crashed into the Pentagon during the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, officially opened to the public. The permanent outdoor memorial, which is made up of 184 benches, each with a name of a victim, will now be open 24 hours a day, seven days a week. DCist photographer Meaghan Gay and many of our Flickr contributors were......
Continue Reading "Pentagon Memorial Opening in Photos"July 3, 2008
Afraid you'll run out of time to show off our city's most prominent phallus to your out of town guests? The Washington Monument is making it easier by extending visiting hours for the rest of the summer. Beginning Sunday and lasting through Labor Day, the monument will stay open until 10 p.m. every day. Normally the monument is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The National Park Service announced today it is able to......
Continue Reading "Washington Monument Visiting Hours Extended"June 3, 2008
Photo by brents pix The WWII Memorial just celebrated its fourth anniversary, and a little meme has popped up on several blogs over the last couple of days that paints a picture of almost universal loathing for its design. Arms and Influence kicked it off, condemning the monument for looking too much like a "Nazi memorial," then Matthew Yglesias picked it up, noting that it's difficult to illustrate what he sees as wrong with......
Continue Reading "Everyone Hates the WWII Memorial"April 3, 2008
If you’ve been down to the Tidal Basin to see the Cherry Blossoms, then you’ve probably already revisited the Jefferson Memorial. When we went down there the other day, we found the Memorial abuzz with a mix of tourists, regular locals, and locals who were hosting tourists. The weather was wet and gray, and the kids in a school group were shifting around to relieve their sore feet. Parents were flush, grandparents rested on the......
Continue Reading "Revisiting the Jefferson Memorial"April 3, 2008
Now here’s an interesting development: the Vietnam Veterans Memorial has gone online. Again. The last time the Memorial was in the news regarding the Internet was in September, when a “Turk Defacer” hacked into thewall-usa.com and used it to promulgate Turkish nationalism. And, in fact, the Memorial’s presence online has already been established through thewall-usa.com and other websites, where you can find tons of information on everything from the Memorial’s creation to the hometowns of......
Continue Reading "New Interactive Vietnam Veterans Memorial"February 22, 2008
When we went over to revisit the John Witherspoon statue at Connecticut and N Streets NW yesterday, someone had beaten us to it. An older man was reading the inscription at the base of the statue. When asked if he had ever seen it before, he acted as if he suddenly realized he was late for a super important meeting. “Yeah, I always knew it was here,” he said, fleeing. In fairness, the Witherspoon statue......
Continue Reading "Revisiting the John Witherspoon Monument"February 8, 2008
What’s weird about revisiting the Albert Einstein Memorial at the National Academy of Sciences is, shamefully, that we had never visited there in the first place. Maybe some of you are in the same boat. Maybe you’ve been to the Mall monuments so many times that you’ve developed a kind of over familiar path that you walk every trip you take there. We certainly do. And, well, we learned that it’s time for that path......
Continue Reading "Revisiting the Albert Einstein Memorial"December 21, 2007
When David Glasgow Farragut yelled, “Damn the torpedoes! Full speed ahead!” he probably didn’t think it would propel him into history. Actually, given the circumstances, it might not even have been the smartest of orders. But sure enough, Farragut’s ballsy command helped the naval commander get a huge statue and two metro stops plus a square named after him. It was December 12, 1862, and the ship at the front of the formation, the USS......
Continue Reading "Revisiting the Farragut Monument at Farragut Square"November 15, 2007
Roll Call had a subscriber-only story up yesterday about today's kick-off of an effort on the part of non-profit Trust for the National Mall to raise $350 million to revitalize Washington's top tourist destination. Students from Ann Beers Elementary School in Southeast are getting things going today by planting 3,000 daffodil bulbs in Constitution Gardens. Citing maintenance needs due to heavy use like cracked walkways and patchy grass, the Trust will be working alongside the......
Continue Reading "Nonprofit Kicks Off National Mall Revitalization Effort"November 12, 2007
We're pleased to congratulate the winners of the first ever WalkingTown DC Photo Contest, sponsored by DCist and Cultural Tourism DC. On September 29, the staff behind the twice yearly free walking tour weekends challenged local photographers to come out to their event and snap photos that best captured the spirit of WalkingTown, and then judged the entries to pick their top three. First place winner: David Pike won for his "walk on" shot......
Continue Reading "WalkingTown DC Photo Contest Winners Announced"November 1, 2007
Usually in our Revisiting Series, we like to talk about the monuments and memorials you pass on a regular basis; this time, by revisiting the District’s boundary stones, we thought we’d point out something you might never have even seen. In fairness, they’re easy to miss. Of the 40 original stones, two have been lost, and the rest have been marred and eroded from sitting outside for 216 years. Some sit in no trespassing zones,......
Continue Reading "Revisiting the D.C. Boundary Stones"October 12, 2007
Written by DCist contributor Benjamin Schuman-Stoler Last week in our “revisiting sites we’ve walked by a hundred times" series we presented the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. This week, we’ll look at that huge phallus in the exact center of the original D.C. map -- the Washington Monument. Screaming nothing but glory and testament, it is the classic D.C. monument. But we know its background isn’t as simple as its geometric profile. The National Park Service commissioned......
Continue Reading "Revisiting the Washington Monument"October 2, 2007
Thanks to a tipster for forwarding us an invite to a seemingly bizarre press conference to be held this Friday by Jeffrey S. Abramson, part of the Abramson clan who runs The Tower Companies, a relatively major local developer that was responsible for such projects as Washington Square at Farragut North and the Millennium Building at 19th and K. Abramson, it seems, would like to build a new monument. A monument to "Invincibility." From the......
Continue Reading "Development Company to Propose Hippie Monument "September 19, 2007
Written by DCist contributor Ben Schuman-Stoler. You have probably walked by the modest Old Stone House on M Street countless times while in Georgetown, perhaps wondering when it's going to be converted for the next Starbucks. The House, actually run by the National Park Service, has seen nearly two and a half centuries on what used to be known as Bridge Street during colonial years. The plot was purchased for one pound and ten shillings......
Continue Reading "Georgetown's Old Stone House"September 13, 2007
Via PreservationNation, the National Trust for Historic Preservation has started a campaign to save the original Tomb of the Unknowns, or Tomb of the Unknown Soldier as it's commonly called, at Arlington National Cemetery. Who would want to mess with the tomb? According to the National Trust, it's the folks who run Arlington National Cemetery themselves, as well as Sen. Jim Webb (D-Va.) -- perhaps one of the senate's most famous military veterans and fathers......
Continue Reading "Officials Want to Replace Tomb of the Unknown Soldier"August 20, 2007
A new statue is heading to the National Statuary Hall Collection in the U.S. Capitol -- but it's not either of the long-requested two statues to represent the District of Columbia. Alabama has decided to replace one of its two statues, of Jabez Lamar Monroe Curry, a former congressman, Confederate general and professor who advocated for free universal education, with one of Helen Keller, the famed Socialist Party activist and the first deaf and blind......
Continue Reading "Helen Keller Statue Heading to Capitol"August 15, 2007
Samuel Gompers is one of those names you vaguely remember from AP U.S. History, along with The Grange and the Know-Nothings. They fit in somehow, but you don't exactly remember why. While he may not be on the tips of people's tongues, he does have a rather large monument on Massachusetts Avenue NW near Mount Vernon Square. Gompers, born in London in 1850, was a major figure in the American labor movement, organizing and......
Continue Reading "The Samuel Gompers Monument"May 16, 2007
Preservation of the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. is something we've discussed on DCist a number of times before -- usually in reference to the library and street that share his name. One thing the city's still missing is a memorial to the civil rights hero. The memorial's design was approved in 2005, with the remaining hurdle that plagues so many projects of this nature: money. Fundraisers have been hard at work......
Continue Reading "MLK Memorial a Few Beats Closer to Reality"April 26, 2007
A new permanent exhibit at the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History is already making its own history as the first to require entrance fees. One part of Butterflies and Plants: Partners in Evolution, planned to open in November, will cost visitors about $5. Much of the exhibit will be free, but an admission fee will be attached to a two-tier butterfly pavilion, similar to New York's American Museum of Natural History butterfly habitat. We're......
Continue Reading "Smithsonian Butterflies Won't Come for Free"April 12, 2007
As we mentioned earlier this week, sometimes we don't envy Washington's urban planners. Their challenges often encompass issues as varied and complicated as economic development, land use planning, sustainability, design and social justice. Add to that the design politics associated with the symbolism invested in the nation's capital, and planning for D.C. becomes a unique urban problem to tackle. Not that it stops us from trying. Yesterday, the National Capital Planning Commission and the Commission......
Continue Reading "Planning the National Mall's Third Century"March 5, 2007
In a city of monuments to great Americans, it's easy to think that the more recent monumistas began the trend of honoring foreign heroes. But for nearly a century, a statue of Polish freedom fighter Casimir Pulaski has made its home at 13th St. and Pennsylvania Ave., in what is now known as D.C.'s Freedom Plaza. The plaza, designed in 1980, is mainly a tribute to Martin Luther King, Jr. and the civil rights movement,......
Continue Reading "Happy Pulaski Day!"February 6, 2007
Yesterday was Budget Day, which is one of those big deal days for official Washington that no one else notices. It's the day when the President formally submits his budget for the next fiscal year to Congress. Sexy, right? If you happen to work for an appropriator or one of the budget watchdog groups, it is. Each Department holds its own budget roll-out event complete with powerpoint, Secretarial speechifying, and usually some sort of bunting;......
Continue Reading "Park Service Budget Bump to Benefit D.C."January 8, 2007
When architects, developers, and laborers set about transforming the former Columbia Hospital for Women into the massive Columbia Residences complex at the intersection of 25th Street, L Street, and Pennsylvania Avenue NW, they placed the area within a protective cocoon of chain-link fences. Inside the fences, just across L Street from the back door of Marcel's restaurant, went a little-known monument commemorating a joint international agreement to reduce military forces patrolling the Great Lakes. With......
Continue Reading "Rush-Bagot Monument Comes Out of Hiding"January 4, 2007
Washington is full of monuments to famous people -- Washington, Jefferson, Einstein, Hahnemann. Hahnemann? Not a forgotten vice president or a general, Christian Friedrich Samuel Hahnemann was the founder of homeopathic medicine. His impressive monument, located at 16th and Massachusetts NW near Scott Circle, isn't too helpful -- it says "HAHNEMANN" on the top, as if everybody knows who he is. There are also a few Latin and German sayings (he was born in Saxony......
Continue Reading "The Homeopathy Monument"November 1, 2006
It's no secret — the National Mall, for all its historical significance, isn't exactly the prettiest place in the world. Broken water fountains, patchy grass, ugly security fences and totally nasty restrooms are amongst some of the many problems with what should really be a gorgeous space. The National Park Service is here to change that, and they're going all Web 2.0 on our asses through an online campaign asking the public their opinions on......
Continue Reading "A Mallful Web Site"August 4, 2006
The Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund announced yesterday that their proposed Visitor Center received the final go-ahead from the National Capitol Planning Commission, which oversees the approval and design of monuments and memorials in D.C. The privately funded, $100 million complex will supplement Maya Lin’s 1982 Memorial Wall, with exhibits and programs to tell the story of the Vietnam War and commemorate the soldiers who fought it. The Visitor Center will be built just west of......
Continue Reading "Vietnam Memorial Visitor Center Approved"June 29, 2006
Local blogger and Condoleezza Rice devotee Princess Sparkle Pony is wondering: Why on earth has the water at the U.S. Navy Memorial turned blue? Indeed, her majesty has turned up photographic evidence of the unnatural hue of the water in the Memorial's fountains. As always, the Pink Pony asks the tough questions: Is it intentional? A prank? One thing is for sure, it now resembles the Ty-D-Bol™ Memorial more than anything. Honey, listen, next time......
Continue Reading "The Ty-D-Bol™ Memorial"June 5, 2006
Last week may have been a prelude to summer humidity, but this week will offer a bit of a respite. According to Capital Weather, we're going to be blessed with weather that doesn't rise far beyond the 70s, though we may have a few showers here and there. Prisoners Escape, Caught Over Weekend: This DCist wasn't terribly happy with the news that two prisoners accused of murder had escaped from the D.C. jail over the......
Continue Reading "Morning Roundup: Weather Relief Edition"June 1, 2006
Arguments over where to put new monuments on the National Mall have grown increasingly frequent and divisive as the front lawn has filled up. In 2003, Congress banned new construction on the Mall's cross-axis, beyond what had already been approved. In 2004, the National Museum of the American Indian and the World War II Memorial opened, and recently, a trapezoidal spot just northeast of the Washington Monument was chosen as the location for the National......
Continue Reading "Mall Adjusted"
