National Register of Historic Places listings in Southeast Quadrant, Washington, D.C.: Difference between revisions
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|article=St. Elizabeths Hospital |
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|name=St. Elizabeths Hospital |
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|address=1100 Alabama Ave., SE.<ref name="DCDeptHealth">{{cite web |url=http://dmh.dc.gov/dmh/cwp/view,a,3,q,516064.asp |title=About St. Elizabeths Hospital |accessdate=2009-12-23 |author=District of Columbia Department of Mental Health }}</ref> |
|address=1100 Alabama Ave., SE.<ref name="DCDeptHealth">{{cite web |url=http://dmh.dc.gov/dmh/cwp/view,a,3,q,516064.asp |title=About St. Elizabeths Hospital |accessdate=2009-12-23 |author=District of Columbia Department of Mental Health |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070823132840/http://dmh.dc.gov/dmh/cwp/view%2Ca%2C3%2Cq%2C516064.asp |archivedate=2007-08-23 |df= }}</ref> |
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|county=[[District of Columbia]] |
|county=[[District of Columbia]] |
Revision as of 15:49, 29 January 2018
This is a list of properties and districts in the Southeast quadrant of Washington, D.C. that are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Current listings
[1] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[2] | Location | Quadrant | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Anacostia Historic District | October 11, 1978 (#78003050) |
Roughly bounded by Martin Luther King, Jr. Avenue; Good Hope Road; 16th Street; Fendall Street; V Street; 15th Street and the Frederick Douglass National Historic Site; Maple View Place 38°51′53″N 76°59′08″W / 38.864722°N 76.985556°W | SE | Comprises approximately 20 squares and about 550 buildings built between 1854 and 1930 | |
2 | Capitol Hill Historic District | August 27, 1976 (#76002127) |
Roughly bounded by Virginia Ave., SE., S. Capitol St., F St. NE., and 14th Sts. SE & NE.; also roughly bounded by 7th St. NE, I-295, M St. SE and 11th St. SE 38°53′13″N 76°59′51″W / 38.886944°N 76.9975°W | NE, SE and NW | Second set of boundaries represents a boundary increase of July 3, 2003 | |
3 | Christ Church | ![]() |
May 25, 1969 (#69000291) |
620 G St., SE. 38°52′53″N 76°59′52″W / 38.881389°N 76.997778°W | SE | |
4 | Civil War Fort Sites | ![]() |
July 15, 1974 (#74000274) |
Civil War Forts from Battery Kemble, NW to Fort Gremble, SW; also south of Washington on Rosier Bluff and north of Washington off George Washington Parkway 38°52′00″N 76°57′06″W / 38.866667°N 76.951667°W | NW and SW | Second set of locations represents a boundary increase of September 13, 1978 |
5 | Civil War Monuments in Washington, DC | ![]() |
September 20, 1978 (#78000257) |
Various parks within the original boundaries of city 38°53′23″N 76°59′25″W / 38.889722°N 76.990278°W | Various | 18 statues about people and topics related to the Civil War, including 1 in Lincoln Park (NE & SE quadrants), 6 in the upper NW quadrant, and 11 in central Washington. |
6 | Commandant's Office, Washington Navy Yard | ![]() |
August 14, 1973 (#73002077) |
Montgomery Sq. and Dahlgren Ave., SE. 38°52′23″N 76°59′43″W / 38.873056°N 76.995278°W | SE | See Washington Navy Yard |
7 | Congressional Cemetery | ![]() |
June 23, 1969 (#69000292) |
1801 E St., SE. 38°52′52″N 76°58′38″W / 38.881111°N 76.977222°W | SE | Designated a National Historic Landmark June 14, 2011[3] |
8 | Frederick Douglass National Historic Site | ![]() |
October 15, 1966 (#66000033) |
1411 W St., SE. 38°51′45″N 76°59′04″W / 38.8625°N 76.984444°W | SE | |
9 | Eastern Market | May 27, 1971 (#71000998) |
7th and C Sts., SE. 38°53′11″N 76°59′48″W / 38.886389°N 76.996667°W | SE | Badly damaged by an early-morning fire on April 30, 2007; reopened on June 26, 2009 | |
10 | East Corner Boundary Marker of the Original District of Columbia | ![]() |
November 1, 1996 (#96001249) |
100 feet east of the junction of Eastern and Southern Aves. 38°53′35″N 76°54′34″W / 38.893056°N 76.909444°W | NE and SE | See List of Boundary Markers of the Original District of Columbia |
11 | Engine Company No. 19 | May 10, 2010 (#10000238) |
2813 Pennsylvania Ave., SE 38°52′24″N 76°58′01″W / 38.873333°N 76.966944°W | SE | ||
12 | Engine Company No. 25 | ![]() |
June 27, 2007 (#07000593) |
3203 Martin Luther King Jr., Ave SE 38°50′35″N 77°00′03″W / 38.843056°N 77.000833°W | SE | |
13 | Folger Shakespeare Library | June 23, 1969 (#69000294) |
201 E. Capitol St., SE. 38°53′22″N 77°00′11″W / 38.889444°N 77.003056°W | SE | ||
14 | Friendship House-The Maples | ![]() |
January 18, 1973 (#73002086) |
619 D St., SE., or 630 South Carolina Ave., SE. 38°53′02″N 76°59′53″W / 38.883889°N 76.998056°W | SE | |
15 | The Furies Collective | ![]() |
May 2, 2016 (#16000211) |
219 11th St., SE 38°53′13″N 76°59′29″W / 38.887024°N 76.991494°W | SE | |
16 | Gallinger Municipal Hospital Psychopathic Ward | February 27, 1989 (#89000074) |
Reservation 13, 19th St. and Massachusetts Ave., SE 38°53′04″N 76°58′37″W / 38.884444°N 76.976944°W | SE | ||
17 | Main Gate, Washington Navy Yard | ![]() |
August 14, 1973 (#73002098) |
8th and M Sts., SE. 38°52′35″N 76°59′43″W / 38.876389°N 76.995278°W | SE | More commonly known as the Latrobe Gate. |
18 | Main Sewerage Pumping Station, District of Columbia | ![]() |
May 24, 2012 (#12000297) |
125 O St., SE 38°52′26″N 77°00′12″W / 38.873828°N 77.003426°W | SE | |
19 | Old Naval Hospital | ![]() |
May 3, 1974 (#74002171) |
921 Pennsylvania Ave., SE. 38°52′58″N 76°59′36″W / 38.882778°N 76.993333°W | SE | |
20 | Quarters A, Washington Navy Yard | ![]() |
August 14, 1973 (#73002111) |
East of the main gate and south of M St., SE., in the navy yard 38°52′34″N 76°59′41″W / 38.876111°N 76.994722°W | SE | |
21 | Quarters B, Washington Navy Yard | ![]() |
August 14, 1973 (#73002112) |
Charles Morris Ave., SE. 38°52′32″N 76°59′39″W / 38.875556°N 76.994167°W | SE | |
22 | St. Elizabeths Hospital | ![]() |
April 26, 1979 (#79003101) |
1100 Alabama Ave., SE.[4] 38°51′01″N 76°59′40″W / 38.850278°N 76.994444°W | SE | |
23 | St. Mark's Church | May 8, 1973 (#73002117) |
3rd and A Sts., SE. 38°53′18″N 77°00′06″W / 38.888333°N 77.001667°W | SE | ||
24 | Saint Paul African Union Methodist Church | ![]() |
July 28, 2011 (#11000481) |
401 I St., SE. 38°52′45″N 77°00′02″W / 38.879167°N 77.000556°W | SE | |
25 | John Philip Sousa Junior High School | August 7, 2001 (#01001045) |
3650 Ely Place, SE. 38°53′01″N 76°57′08″W / 38.883497°N 76.952217°W | SE | In 1950, eleven African American students were denied admission to the newly constructed all-white Sousa school. This action was eventually overturned in the landmark 1954 Supreme Court decision in Bolling v. Sharpe, which made segregated public schools illegal in the District of Columbia. The defeat of the legal doctrine "separate but equal" was a significant landmark in the modern Civil Rights Movement. | |
26 | Southeast No. 1 Boundary Marker of the Original District of Columbia | ![]() |
November 1, 1996 (#96001248) |
30 feet south of the junction of Southern Ave. and D St., SE 38°52′58″N 76°55′20″W / 38.882786°N 76.922303°W | SE | |
27 | Southeast No. 2 Boundary Marker of the Original District of Columbia | ![]() |
November 1, 1996 (#96001247) |
4345 Southern Ave. 38°52′20″N 76°56′09″W / 38.872222°N 76.935833°W | SE | |
28 | Southeast No. 3 Boundary Marker of the Original District of Columbia | ![]() |
November 1, 1996 (#96001246) |
3908 Southern Ave. 38°51′43″N 76°56′55″W / 38.861944°N 76.948611°W | SE | |
29 | Southeast No. 5 Boundary Marker of the Original District of Columbia | ![]() |
November 1, 1996 (#96001245) |
280 feet northeast of the junction of Southern Ave. and Valley Terrace 38°50′31″N 76°58′29″W / 38.841944°N 76.974722°W | SE | |
30 | Southeast No. 6 Boundary Marker of the Original District of Columbia | ![]() |
November 1, 1996 (#96001244) |
901 Southern Ave. 38°49′54″N 76°59′17″W / 38.831667°N 76.988056°W | SE | |
31 | Southeast No. 7 Boundary Marker of the Original District of Columbia | ![]() |
November 1, 1996 (#96001243) |
25 feet northeast of the junction of Southern Ave. and Indian Head Rd. 38°49′17″N 77°00′05″W / 38.821389°N 77.001389°W | SE | |
32 | U.S. Marine Corps Barracks and Commandant's House | ![]() |
December 27, 1972 (#72001435) |
8th and I Sts., SE 38°52′48″N 76°59′41″W / 38.88°N 76.994722°W | SE | |
33 | Suitland Parkway | ![]() |
June 2, 1995 (#95000604) |
From the Anacostia River in the District of Columbia to Pennsylvania Ave. in Prince George's County, Maryland 38°51′12″N 76°59′00″W / 38.853333°N 76.983333°W | SE | |
34 | Washington and Georgetown Railroad Car House | ![]() |
November 14, 2006 (#06000516) |
770 M St. SE 38°52′44″N 76°59′45″W / 38.878889°N 76.995833°W | SE | Commonly known as the Blue Castle |
35 | Washington Navy Yard | ![]() |
June 19, 1973 (#73002124) |
8th and M Sts., SE 38°52′25″N 76°59′47″W / 38.873611°N 76.996389°W | SE | |
36 | Watterston House | ![]() |
January 17, 1992 (#91001942) |
224 2nd St., SE. 38°53′11″N 77°00′13″W / 38.886389°N 77.003611°W | SE | |
37 | Woodlawn Cemetery | ![]() |
December 20, 1996 (#96001499) |
4611 Benning Rd., SE 38°53′06″N 76°56′19″W / 38.885°N 76.938611°W | SE |
References
- ^ Numbers represent an alphabetical ordering by significant words. Various colorings, defined here, differentiate National Historic Landmarks and historic districts from other NRHP buildings, structures, sites or objects.
- ^ The eight-digit number below each date is the number assigned to each location in the National Register Information System database, which can be viewed by clicking the number.
- ^ "National Register of Historic Places listings - Weekly list of actions taken on properties: 6/13/11 through 6/19/11". June 24, 2011. Retrieved July 4, 2011.
- ^ District of Columbia Department of Mental Health. "About St. Elizabeths Hospital". Archived from the original on 2007-08-23. Retrieved 2009-12-23.
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