Washington, DC was designed by a Frenchman who grew up in Paris. I see some similarities in the layout, grand monuments and landscaping. I have been to DC countless times, but there is always more to see.
This time I spent SIX HOURS in the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture. There is so much to read and learn. I keep getting more pieces of that puzzle. Like a 1807 law banned import of slaves into the U.S., and how the resulting accelerated domestic slave trade increased tearing enslaved families apart. Or how the invention of the cotton gin put even more pressure on enslaved agricultural workers to produce cotton quickly enough for the machines. Or the particularly nuanced sociology of the mid-Atlantic states where free and enslaved black people worked side by side and intermarried.
The African American museum is laid out very symbolically, with visitors descending underground to the lowest of the eight floors dealing with the early years of slavery, then working their way up the floors through the Civil War, Reconstruction, Jim Crow Laws, the Civil Rights Movement, and more recent history. It is important American history. The Museum is still fairly new, so it is difficult to get it during the summer and on weekends. Look online for timed-entry passes. Or do what I did, go in the dead of winter on a weekday.
St. John’s Lafayette Square is not only across the street from the White House, and known as “The Church of the Presidents” since every President since Madison has attended a service there – it is also where my parents got married!
Washington Monument and Reflecting Pool
Lincoln Memorial
Abraham Lincoln, Lincoln Memorial
Me and my friend Tom. The Great Peace March that Tom and I were part of in 1986 finished its 3,700 mile march from Los Angeles at the Lincoln Memorial.
From the Gettysburg Address: “This nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom — and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.”
Vietnam Veterans Memorial and Washington Monument
Vietnam Veterans Memorial
Washington Monument and National Museum of African American History & Culture
National Museum of African American History & Culture
“We are determined to work and fight… until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.” – MLK, National Museum of African American History & Culture
Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial
MLK Memorial
Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial
FDR Memorial
Sculpture of a breadline during the Great Depression, FDR Memorial
Eleanor Roosevelt, First United States Delegate to the United Nations, FDR Memorial
Leslie Abbott is here, there and everywhere…and not just where I am on the map of the world. I’m kind of here, there and everywhere in the other parts of my life, too. Read more →