|
Anacostia
Park - With over 1200 acres, Anacostia Park is one of
Washington, D.C.'s largest and most important recreation areas. Included
in Anacostia Park is Kenilworth Park and Aquatic Gardens and Kenilworth
Marsh. Hundreds of acres are available for ballfields, picnicing,
basketball, tennis, and the Anacostia Park Pavilion has some 3300 square
feet of space for roller scating and special events.
Battleground
National Cemetery - Battleground National Cemetery,
located at 6625 Georgia Avenue, NW, was established shortly after the
Battle of Fort Stevens in the summer of 1864. The battle, which lasted
two days (July 11 through July 12, 1864) marked the defeat of General
Jubal A. Early's Confederate campaign to launch an offensive action
against the poorly defended Nation's Capital.
Chesapeake
and Ohio Canal National Historic Park - The C&O
Canal follows the route of the Potomac River for 184.5 miles from
Washington, D.C. to Cumberland, MD. The canal operated from
1828-1924 as a transportation route, primarily hauling coal from western
Maryland to the port of Georgetown in Washington, D.C. Hundreds of
original structures, including locks, lockhouses, and aqueducts, serve
as reminders of the canal's role as a transportation system during the
Canal Era.
Constitution
Gardens - Constitution Gardens is a living legacy to
the founding of the republic as well as an oasis in the midst of a city
landscape. The 50 acres of the park were originally beneath the Potomac
River! A U.S. Army Corps of Engineers dredging project at the turn of
century created the land that became Potomac Park.
Ford's
Theatre National Historic Site - Ford's Theatre NHS
is the site of the nation’s first presidential assassination. An
unemployed actor angered by President Lincoln’s war policies, and the
Confederacy’s recent failures in the war decided to take things into
his own hands. Using the familiar ground of the theater, John Wilkes
Booth entered the theatre on the night of April 14, 1865 and shot the
President in the back of the head.
Franklin
Delano Roosevelt Memorial - Located along the famous
Cherry Tree Walk on the Tidal Basin near the national mall, this is a
memorial not only to FDR, but also to his times. Twelve years of
American history are traced through a sequence of four outdoor
rooms-each devoted to one of FDR's four terms in office.
Frederick
Douglas National Historic Site - From 1877 to 1895,
this was the home of Frederick Douglass, the Nation's leading
19th-century African American spokesman. Visitors to the site will learn
more about his efforts to abolish slavery and his struggle for Human
Rights, Equal Rights and Civil Rights for all oppressed people. Among
Frederick Douglass' other achievements, he was U.S. minister to Haiti in
1889.
Kenilworth
Park and Aquatic Gardens - Kenilworth Park and
Aquatic Gardens constitutes some 700 acres and is part of Anacostia
Park. The Park includes the "Gardens", Kenilworth Marsh,
ballfields and recreational facilities.
Korean
War Veterans Memorial - From 1950 to 1953, the United
States joined with United Nations forces in Korea to take a stand
against what was deemed a threat to democratic nations worldwide. At
war's end, a million and a half American veterans returned to a
peacetime world of families, homes, and jobs - and to a country long
reluctant to view the Korean War as something to memorialize. But to the
men and women who served, the Korean War could never be a forgotten war.
Lincoln
Memorial - The Lincoln Memorial is a tribute to
President Abraham Lincoln and the nation he fought to preserve during
the Civil War (1861-1865).
Mary
Mcleod Bethune Council House National Historic Site - The
Mary McLeod Bethune Council House National Historic Site commemorates
the life of Mary McLeod Bethune and the organization she founded, the
National Council of Negro Women.
National
Capital Parks-Central - NACC
preserves and interprets more than a dozen NPS areas including the
Vietnam Veterans Memorial, the Korean War Veterans Memorial, the
Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial, Ford's Theatre National Historic
Site and the House Where Lincoln Died (Petersen House), Pennsylvania
Avenue National Historical Park, the Old Post Office Tower, and numerous
smaller memorials.
|
|
National Capital Parks-East
- NCP-East offers a wide array of historic, natural,
and recreational areas of that are a part of Washington, D.C. and its
eastern environs. The park includes 12 major park areas at 98 locations.
Significant resources are as diverse as statuary, historic sites and
buildings, recreation areas, parkways, archeological sites, tidal and
non-tidal wetlands, meadows, and forests; and encompass over 8,000
acres.
National
Mall - The National Mall's origins are as old as the
capital city itself. The open space and parklands envisioned by Pierre
L'Enfant's plan, which was commissioned by George Washington, created an
ideal stage for national expressions of remembrance, observance and
protest.
Old
Post Office Tower - The Old Post Office is one of the
last remaining examples of Richardsonian Romanesque Architecture in
Washington, D.C. Dominant park feature is the spectacular view from the
270-foot tower observation level, which is one of the best of the
nation's capital. The Old Post Office Tower is also home to the bells of
the U.S. Congress.
Pierce
Mill - Peirce Mill was built in the 1820's, and
operated commercially until 1897. The United States Government acquired
the mill as part of Rock Creek Park in 1892. Currently the mill is not
operating. It is being preserved and ultimately will be made operable
again when sufficient funding for repairs is made available. Until then,
Peirce Mill remain's open to the public as a museum and ranger contact
station.
Pennsylvania
Avenue National Historic Site - Pennsylvania Avenue
is certainly among the world's most famous streets. While the Avenue
serves work-a-day Washington as a major east-west transit route, it is
known the world over as the heart of the Nation's Capital. America's
history has marched, paraded, promenaded, and protested its way up and
down the Avenue.
President's
Park (White House) - The White House at 1600
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, was originally constructed 1792-1800, the work
of James Hoban. It was reconstructed in 1815 after being burned by
British soldiers during the War of 1812. It has been the home of every
president of the United States since John Adams.
Potomac Heritage National Scenic Trail
- The designation of a Potomac Heritage National Scenic
Trail corridor, enacted and signed in 1983 as an amendment to the
National Trails System Act, is being used by communities in Virginia,
Maryland, the District of Columbia and Pennsylvania to develop and make
connections among trails, historic sites and a range of recreational and
educational opportunities.
Rock
Creek Park - Rock
Creek Park is one of the oldest national parks in the National Park
Service. It is also one of the largest forested urban parks in the
United States, containing a wide variety of natural, historical, and
recreational features in the midst of Washington, DC. There are
opportunities for picnicking, hiking, biking, skating, horseback riding,
tennis and golf.
The
Old Stone House - In the midst of Washington, D.C., a
city of grand memorials to national leaders and significant events,
stands an unassuming building commemorating the daily lives of ordinary
Americans who made this city, and this nation, unique. The Old Stone
House, one of the oldest known structures remaining in the nation's
capital, is a simple 18th century dwelling built and inhabited by common
people.
Thomas
Jefferson Memorial - Thomas Jefferson-political
philosopher, architect, musician, book collector, scientist,
horticulturist, diplomat, inventor, and third President of the United
States-looms large in any discussion of what Americans are as a people.
Jefferson left to the future not only ideas but also a great body of
practical achievements.
Vietnam
Veterans Memorial - The Vietnam Veterans Memorial
serves as a testament to the sacrifice of American military personnel
during one of this nation's least popular wars. By erecting this
memorial, it was hoped that the issue of the veterans and their
sacrifice could be separated from the U.S. policy in the war, thereby
creating a venue for reconciliation.
Washington
Monument - Alone among the Founders of the United
States George Washington earned the title "Father of his
Country" in recognition of his leadership in the cause of American
independence. With this monument the
citizens of the United States show their enduring gratitude and respect.
|