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Wikipedia

National Mall

The National Mall is a landscaped park near the downtown area of Washington, D.C., the capital city of the United States. It contains and borders a number of museums of the Smithsonian Institution, art galleries, cultural institutions, and various memorials, sculptures, and statues. It is administered by the National Park Service (NPS) of the United States Department of the Interior as part of the National Mall and Memorial Parks unit of the National Park System.[4] The park receives approximately 24 million visitors each year.[5]

National Mall
The National Mall with the Lincoln Memorial in the foreground, the Washington Monument behind it, and the United States Capitol in the background, 2010
LocationBetween Independence and Constitution Avenues from the Capitol to the Lincoln Memorial
Coordinates38°53′24″N 77°1′25″W / 38.89000°N 77.02361°W / 38.89000; -77.02361Coordinates: 38°53′24″N 77°1′25″W / 38.89000°N 77.02361°W / 38.89000; -77.02361
ArchitectPierre (Peter) Charles L'Enfant; McMillan Commission
WebsiteNational Mall and Memorial Parks
NRHP reference No.66000031[1] (original)
16000805[2][3] (increase)
Significant dates
Added to NRHPOctober 15, 1966
Boundary increaseDecember 8, 2016

The core area of the National Mall extends between the United States Capitol grounds to the east and the Washington Monument to the west and is lined to the north and south by several museums and a federal office building.[6] The term National Mall may also include areas that are also officially part of neighboring West Potomac Park to the south and west and Constitution Gardens to the north, extending to the Lincoln Memorial on the west and Jefferson Memorial to the south.[7]

Landmarks, museums, and other features

2008 Map
 
Map of the National Mall and vicinity (2008)

Features within the National Mall proper

2002 Satellite image
 
National Mall proper and adjacent areas (April 2002). The Mall had a grassy lawn flanked on each side by unpaved paths and rows of American elm trees as its central feature. (Numbers in the image correspond to numbers in the list of landmarks, museums and other features below.)

The National Mall proper contains the following landmarks, museums and other features (including opening year):[7][6]

 
Andrew Jackson Downing Urn in May 2012

Not marked on the above image:

Above the Smithsonian Institution Building
Below the Smithsonian Institution Building
Above the Arts and Industries Building
  • Smithsonian Carousel (1967)[11]
To the left of the National Museum of American History
 
June 2004 view from the United States Capitol, facing west across the National Mall towards the Washington Monument
To the left of the Freer Gallery of Art
 
Facing east on the National Mall, as viewed near the 1300 block of Jefferson Drive, S.W. in April 2010. Rows of American elm trees line the sides of a path traversing the length of the Mall.

With the exception of the National Gallery of Art, all of the museums on the National Mall proper are part of the Smithsonian Institution. The Smithsonian Gardens maintains a number of gardens and landscapes near its museums.[14] These include:

Features east of the National Mall proper

 
West side of the U.S. Capitol building (September 2013)

Features east of the National Mall proper include:

Features west of the National Mall proper and in West Potomac Park

 
The Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool in July 2005, facing east towards the Washington Monument
 
The view of the Lincoln Memorial from the Reflecting Pool in April 2007.
 
National World War II Memorial (July 2017)
 
The west side of the Jefferson Pier in April 2011, with the Washington Monument in the background.
Interactive Map

Not included in the above map:

Boundaries and dimensions

Dimensions

  • Between the Capitol steps and the Lincoln Memorial, the Mall spans 1.9 miles (3.0 km).
  • Between the Capitol steps and the Washington Monument, the Mall spans 1.2 miles (1.8 km).
  • Between the Ulysses S. Grant Memorial and the Lincoln Memorial, the Mall covers 309.2 acres (125.13 ha).
  • Between Constitution Avenue NW and Independence Avenue SW at 7th Street, the width of the Mall is 1,586 feet (483 m).
  • Between Madison Drive NW and Jefferson Drive SW at 7th Street, the width of the Mall's open space is 656 feet (200 m).
  • Between the innermost rows of trees near 7th Street, the width of the Mall's vista is 300 feet (91 m).

Boundaries

In its 1981 National Register of Historic Places nomination form, the NPS defined the boundaries of the National Mall (proper) as Constitution and Pennsylvania Avenues on the north, 1st Street NW on the east, Independence and Maryland Avenues on the south, and 14th Street NW on the west, with the exception of the section of land bordered by Jefferson Drive on the north, Independence Avenue on the south, and by 12th and 14th Streets respectively on the east and west, which the U.S. Department of Agriculture administers and which contains the Jamie L. Whitten Building (U.S. Department of Agriculture Administration Building).[6][26] The 2012–2016 National Park Service index describes the National Mall as being a landscaped park that extends from the Capitol to the Washington Monument, defined as a principal axis in the L'Enfant Plan for the city of Washington.[4]

However, a 2010 NPS plan for the Mall contains maps that show the Mall's general area to be larger.[27][28] A document within the plan describes this area as "the grounds of the U.S. Capitol west to the Potomac River, and from the Thomas Jefferson Memorial north to Constitution Avenue".[7] A map within the plan entitled "National Mall Areas" illustrates "The Mall" as being the green space bounded on the east by 3rd Street, on the west by 14th Street, on the north by Jefferson Drive, NW, and on the south by Madison Drive, SW.[29] A Central Intelligence Agency map shows the Mall as occupying the space between the Lincoln Memorial and the United States Capitol.[30]

In 2011, the 112th United States Congress enacted the Legislative Branch Appropriations Act, 2012, which transferred to the Architect of the Capitol the NPS "property which is bounded on the north by Pennsylvania Avenue Northwest, on the east by First Street Northwest and First Street Southwest, on the south by Maryland Avenue Southwest, and on the west by Third Street Southwest and Third Street Northwest".[31] This act removed Union Square (the area containing the Ulysses S. Grant Memorial and the Capitol Reflecting Pool) from NPS jurisdiction.[32]

Purposes

The National Park Service states that the purposes of the National Mall are to:

  • "Provide a monumental, dignified, and symbolic setting for the governmental structures, museums, and national memorials as first delineated by the L'Enfant plan and further outlined in the McMillan plan.
  • "Maintain and provide for the use of the National Mall with its public promenades as a completed work of civic art, a designed historic landscape providing extraordinary vistas to symbols of the nation.
  • "Maintain National Mall commemorative works (memorials, monuments, statues, sites, gardens) that honor presidential legacies, distinguished public figures, ideas, events, and military and civilian sacrifices and contributions.
  • "Forever retain the West Potomac Park section of the National Mall as a public park for the recreation and enjoyment of the people.
  • "Maintain the National Mall in the heart of the nation's capital as a stage for national events and a preeminent national civic space for public gatherings because it is here that the constitutional rights of speech and peaceful assembly find their fullest expression.
  • "Maintain the National Mall as an area free of commercial advertising while retaining the ability to recognize sponsors."[7]

History

L'Enfant City Plan

 
Portrait of the Mall and vicinity looking northwest from southeast of the U.S. Capitol circa 1846–1855, showing stables in the foreground, the Washington City Canal behind them, the Capitol on the right and the Smithsonian "Castle", the Washington Monument and the Potomac River in the distant left.

In his 1791 plan for the future city of Washington, D.C., Pierre (Peter) Charles L'Enfant envisioned a garden-lined "grand avenue" approximately 1 mile (1.6 km) in length and 400 feet (120 m) wide, in an area that would lie between the Congress House (now the United States Capitol) and an equestrian statue of George Washington. The statue would be placed directly south of the President's House (now the White House) and directly west of the Congress House (see L'Enfant Plan).[33][34][35] The National Mall (proper) occupies the site of this planned "grand avenue", which was never constructed.

Mathew Carey's 1802 map is reported to be the first to name the area west of the United States Capitol as the "Mall".[36] The name is derived from that of The Mall in London, which during the 1700s was a fashionable promenade near Buckingham Palace upon which the city's elite strolled.[37]

 
The Lockkeepr's House in 2018, looking northwest
 
Route of the Washington City Canal, showing the Mall (1851)

The Washington City Canal, completed in 1815 in accordance with the L'Enfant Plan, travelled along the former course of Tiber Creek to the Potomac River along B Street Northwest (NW) (now Constitution Avenue NW) and south along the base of a hill containing the Congress House, thus defining the northern and eastern boundaries of the Mall.[38][39][40] Being shallow and often obstructed by silt, the canal served only a limited role and became an open sewer that poured sediment and waste into the Potomac River's flats and shipping channel.[38][41] The portion of the canal that traveled near the Mall was covered over in 1871 for sanitary reasons.[38]

 
The Smithsonian Institution Building ("The Castle") in February 2007, looking north from the Enid A. Haupt Garden

Some consider a lockkeeper's house constructed in 1837 near the western end of the Washington City Canal for an eastward extension of the Chesapeake & Ohio Canal to be the oldest building still standing on the National Mall.[42] The structure, which is located near the southwestern corner of 17th Street NW and Constitution Avenue NW, is west of the National Mall (proper).[40][43]

The Smithsonian Institution Building ("The Castle"), constructed from 1847 to 1855, is the oldest building now present on the National Mall (proper).[44] The Washington Monument, whose construction began in 1848 and reached completion in 1888, stands near the planned site of its namesake's equestrian statue.[45] The Jefferson Pier marks the planned site of the statue itself.[46]

Downing Plan

 
Map of the Mall in 1893 showing the Monument Grounds, Agricultural Grounds, Smithsonian Grounds, Armory Square, Public Grounds and Botanical Garden, as well as parts of the recently created "Tidal Reservoir" and "Proposed Park"[47]

During the early 1850s, architect and horticulturist Andrew Jackson Downing designed a landscape plan for the Mall.[34][48][49] Over the next half century, federal agencies developed several naturalistic parks within the Mall in accordance with Downing's plan.[34][48] Two such areas were Henry Park and Seaton Park.[50]

During that period, the Mall was subdivided into several areas between B Street Northwest (NW) (now Constitution Avenue NW) and B Street Southwest (SW) (now Independence Avenue SW):

  • The Public Grounds between 2nd and 6th Streets NW and SW
  • The Armory Grounds between 6th and 7th Streets NW and SW
  • The Smithsonian Grounds between 7th and 12th Streets NW and SW
  • The Agricultural Grounds between 12th and 14th Streets NW and SW
  • The Monument Grounds between 14th and 17th Streets NW and SW[51]

In 1856, the Armory (No. 27 on the 1893 map of the Mall) was built at the intersection of B Street SW and 6th Street SW on the Armory Grounds. In 1862, during the American Civil War, the building was converted to a military hospital known as Armory Square Hospital to house Union Army casualties. After the war ended, the Armory building became the home of the United States Fish Commission.[52]

The United States Congress established the United States Department of Agriculture in 1862 during the Civil War.[53] Designed by Adolf Cluss and Joseph von Kammerhueber, the United States Department of Agriculture Building (No. 25 on the map), was constructed in 1867–1868 north of B Street SW within a 35-acre site on the Mall.[54]

After the Civil War ended, the Department of Agriculture started growing experimental crops and demonstration gardens on the Mall. These gardens extended from the department's building near the south side of the Mall to B Street NW (the northern boundary of the Mall). The building was razed in 1930.[53] In addition, greenhouses belonging to the U.S. Botanical Garden (No. 16 on the map) appeared near the east end of the Mall between the Washington City Canal and the Capitol (later between 1st and 3rd Streets NW and SW).[48]

Originating during the early 1800s as a collection of market stalls immediately north of the Washington City Canal and the Mall, the Center Market (No. 19 on the map), which Adolf Cluss also designed, opened in 1872 soon after the canal closed. Located on the north side of Constitution Avenue NW, the National Archives now occupies the Market's site.[55][56]

During that period, railroad tracks crossed the Mall on 6th Street, west of the Capitol.[34] Near the tracks, several structures were built over the years. The Baltimore and Potomac Railroad station (B on the map) rose in 1873 on the north side of the Mall at the southwest corner of 6th Street and B Street NW (now the site of the west building of the National Gallery of Art).[57]

In 1881, the Arts and Industries Building (No. 34 on the map), known originally as the National Museum Building, opened on the north side of B Street SW to the east of "The Castle". Designed in 1876 by Adolf Cluss and his associates, the building is the second oldest still standing on the National Mall (proper).[58]

In 1887, the Army Medical Museum and Library, which Adolf Cluss designed in 1885, opened on the Mall at northwest corner of B Street SW and 7th Street SW.[59][60] The Smithsonian Institution's Hirshhorn Museum now occupies the site of the building, which was demolished in 1968.[60]

Meanwhile, in order to clean up the Potomac Flats and to make the Potomac River more navigable, in 1882 Congress authorized the Army Corps of Engineers to dredge the river. The Corps used the sediment removed from the shipping channel to fill in the flats. The work started in 1882 and continued until 1911, creating the Tidal Basin and 628 new acres of land. Part of the new land, which became West Potomac Park, expanded the Mall southward and westward (see 1893 map above).[41][61]

McMillan Plan

 
The National Mall was the centerpiece of the 1902 McMillan Plan. A central open vista traversed the length of the Mall.

In 1902, the McMillan Commission's plan, which was partially inspired by the City Beautiful Movement and which purportedly extended L'Enfant's plan, called for a radical redesign of the Mall that would replace its greenhouses, gardens, trees, and commercial/industrial facilities with an open space.[34][48][62] The plan differed from L'Enfant's by replacing the 400 feet (120 m) wide "grand avenue" with a 300 feet (91 m) wide vista containing a long and broad expanse of grass.

Four rows of American elm trees (Ulmus americana) planted fifty feet apart between two paths or streets would line each side of the vista. Buildings housing cultural and educational institutions constructed in the Beaux-Arts style would line each outer path or street, on the opposite side of the path or street from the elms.[34][48][62][63][64][65]

In subsequent years, the vision of the McMillan plan was generally followed with the planting of American elms and the layout of four boulevards down the Mall, two on either side of a wide lawn.[63][66][67] In accordance with a plan that it completed in 1976, the NPS converted the two innermost boulevards (Washington Drive NW and Adams Drive SW) into gravel walking paths.[63] The two outermost boulevards (Madison Drive NW and Jefferson Drive SW)) remain paved and open to vehicular traffic.[63]

Temporary war buildings

During World Wars I and II, the federal government constructed a number of temporary buildings (tempos) on the Mall, disrupting the area's planned layout. Most of these buildings were in two clusters: one near the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool and the other on the National Mall (proper) in the vicinity of 4th through 7th Streets NW and SW.[68][69][70]

World War I temporary buildings

 
Eastward view of the National Mall from the top of the Washington Monument in 1918. The three structures and two chimneys crossing the Mall are temporary World War I buildings A, B and C and parts of their central power plant.[71]

The United States entered World War I in April 1917.[72] By 1918, a row of tempos designated from north to south as Buildings A, B, and C had stretched across the Mall along the east side of the former railroad route on 6th Street. The smokestacks of the buildings' centrally-located power plant were set apart to preserve the view of the Washington Monument from the Capitol building.[69][71][73] Soon afterwards, the government constructed Buildings D, E and F to the east and west of the row.[69][73]

Around 1921 (when the United States and Germany signed the U.S.–German Peace Treaty, thus formally ending the war between the two nations),[74] the government demolished Buildings A and B. The remaining tempos held offices of several agencies belonging to the Agriculture, Commerce, Treasury and War Departments for a number of years after the war ended.[69][73][75]

The government then slowly dismantled most of the tempos that had remained within the Mall (proper), removing the power plant and nearby buildings by 1936.[76] Among those removed was Building C, which the government demolished between 1933 and 1936.[77]

By 1937, the government had removed all of the World War I tempos that had been within the National Mall (proper) except for Building E, thus largely restoring the Mall's central vista.[66] However, another World War I tempo, which the government constructed south of the Mall in 1919 between 14th Street SW and the Tidal Basin as the Liberty Loan Building, remained standing in 2019 while housing the Treasury Department's Bureau of the Fiscal Service.[78][79]

 
Westward view from the top of the Washington Monument in 1943 or 1944 during World War II. In the foreground, temporary buildings on the Washington Monument grounds house the Navy's Bureau of Ships. The Main Navy and Munitions Buildings stand to the right of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool. Temporary buildings to the left of the Reflecting Pool house the Navy's Bureau of Supplies and Accounts.[80]

In 1918, contractors for the United States Navy's Bureau of Yards and Docks constructed the Main Navy and Munitions Buildings along nearly a third of a mile of the south side of Constitution Avenue (then known as B Street), from 17th Street NW to 21st Street NW.[79][81][82][83] Although the Navy intended the buildings to provide temporary quarters for the United States military during World War I, the reinforced concrete structures remained in place until 1970.[79][81][82] After their demolition, much of their former sites became Constitution Gardens, which was dedicated in 1976.[82][84]

World War II temporary buildings

During World War II, the government constructed a larger set of temporary buildings on the Mall in the area of the former World War I tempos, along the south side of Constitution Avenue between 12th and 14th Streets NW, on the west side of the Washington Monument grounds, along the entire length of the south side of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool and between the Reflecting Pool and the Main Navy and Munition buildings on the Pool's north side. Numbers identified new buildings built on the Monument grounds, while letters identified the remainder. The government also built dormitories, residence halls and facilities for dining and recreation south of the eastern half of the Mall and within the part of West Potomac Park that lay south of the Mall's western half.[70][85]

The government progressively demolished all of the World War II tempos beginning in 1964.[79] After the government removed the Main Navy and Munitions buildings in 1970, much of their former sites became Constitution Gardens, which was dedicated in 1976.[82][79][84]

Later history

 
Rows of young American elm trees on the National Mall, looking east from the top of the Washington Monument circa 1942
 
This view from the top of the Washington Monument shows rows of elm trees lining the Reflecting Pool (November 2014).

The planting of American elm trees (Ulmus americana) on the National Mall following the McMillan Plan started in the 1930s between 3rd and 14th Streets at the same time that Dutch Elm Disease (DED) began to appear in the United States. Concern was expressed about the impact that DED could have on these trees.[86]

DED first appeared on the Mall during the 1950s and reached a peak in the 1970s. The NPS has used a number of methods to control this fungal epidemic, including sanitation, pruning, injecting trees with fungicide and replanting with DED-resistant American elm cultivars (see Ulmus americana cultivars). The NPS cloned one such cultivar ('Jefferson') from a DED-resistant tree growing near a path on the Mall in front of the Freer Gallery of Art, near the Smithsonian Institution Building ("The Castle").[87]

The NPS has combated the disease's local insect vector, the smaller European elm bark beetle (Scolytus multistriatus), by trapping and by spraying with insecticides. Soil compaction and root damage by crowds and construction projects also adversely affect the elms.[86]

On October 15, 1966, the NPS listed the National Mall on the National Register of Historic Places.[88] In 1981, the NPS prepared a National Register nomination form that documented the Mall's boundaries, features and historical significance.[6]

 
Uncle Beazley on the National Mall between 1980 and 1994
 
National Park Service map showing the National Mall's designated reserve area referenced in the 2003 Commemorative Works Clarification and Revision Act
 
Barricade blocking walkway adjacent to the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool during the 2013 federal government shutdown, looking east toward the Washington Monument undergoing repair
 
Aerial view of the Mall facing west between 1980 and 1999
 
Looking east from the top of the Washington Monument towards the National Mall and the United States Capitol in December 1999

From the 1970s to 1994, a fiberglass model of a triceratops named Uncle Beazley stood on the Mall in front of the National Museum of Natural History. The life-size statue, which is now located at the National Zoological Park (the National Zoo) in Northwest Washington, D.C., was donated to the Smithsonian Institution by the Sinclair Oil Corporation. The statue, which Louis Paul Jonas created for Sinclair's DinoLand pavilion at the 1964 New York World's Fair, was named after a dinosaur in Oliver Butterworth's 1956 children's book, The Enormous Egg, and the 1968 televised movie adaptation in which the statue appeared.[89]

In 2003, the 108th United States Congress enacted the Commemorative Works Clarification and Revision Act. This Act prohibits the siting of new commemorative works and visitor centers in a designated reserve area within the cross-axis of the Mall.[90]

In October 2013, a two-week federal government shutdown closed the National Mall and its museums and monuments.[91] However, when a group of elderly veterans tried to enter the National World War II Memorial during the shutdown's first day, the memorial's barricades were removed.[92] The NPS subsequently announced that the veterans had a legal right to be in the memorial and would not be barred in the future.[93] During the shutdown's second week, the NPS permitted a controversial immigration rally and concert to take place on the Mall.[94]

On December 8, 2016, the NPS listed on the National Register of Historic Places an increase in the National Mall Historic District's boundary to encompass an area bounded by 3rd Street, NW/SW, Independence Avenue, SW, Raoul Wallenberg Place, SW, the CSX Railroad, the Potomac River, Constitution Ave., NW, 17th Street, NW, the White House Grounds and 15th Street, NW. The listing's registration form, which contained 232 pages, described and illustrated the history and features of the historic district's proposed expanded area.[2]

Demolished or moved structures

Other attractions nearby

 
2007 aerial view of Capitol Hill and the National Mall, facing west

Other attractions within walking distance of the National Mall (proper) include:

Attractions east of the Capitol

Attractions northeast of the National Mall (proper)

Attractions north of the National Mall (proper)

 
Inlay of L'Enfant Plan in Freedom Plaza, looking northwest in June 2005 from the observation deck in the Old Post Office Building Clock Tower

Attractions northwest of the National Mall (proper)

 
John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts (June 2010)
 
National Christmas Tree (November 28, 2018)
 
A Christmas tree in front of the Capitol in December 2013.

Attractions west of the National Mall (proper)

Attractions southwest of the National Mall (proper)

 
Tidal Basin and Jefferson Memorial at dusk, facing south in October 2011.

Attractions south of the National Mall (proper)

 
L'Enfant Promenade (August 2013)

Usage

In combination with the other attractions in the Washington Metropolitan Area, the National Mall makes the nation's capital city one of the most popular tourist destinations in the country. It has several other uses in addition to serving as a tourist focal point.

Protests and rallies

 
1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom on the National Mall facing east from the Lincoln Memorial

The National Mall's status as a vast, open expanse at the heart of the capital makes it an attractive site for protests and rallies of all types. One notable example was the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, a political rally during the Civil Rights Movement, at which Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his speech "I Have a Dream".

The largest officially recorded rally was the Vietnam War Moratorium Rally on October 15, 1969. However, in 1995, the NPS issued a crowd estimate for the Million Man March with which an organizer of the event, Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan, disagreed.[98][99] The next year, a committee of the 104th United States Congress provided no funds for NPS crowd-counting activities in Washington, D.C. when it prepared legislation making 1997 appropriations for the U.S. Department of the Interior.[98][100]

As a result, the NPS has not provided any official crowd size estimates for Mall events since 1995.[98][99][101] The absence of such an official estimate fueled a political controversy following the presidential inauguration of Donald Trump in 2017 (see: Inauguration of Donald Trump crowd size).[102]

On April 25, 2004, the March for Women's Lives filled the Mall.[103] On January 27, 2007, tens of thousands of protesters opposed to the Iraq War converged on the Mall (see: January 27, 2007 anti-war protest), drawing comparisons by participants to the Vietnam War protest.[104][105]

On June 12, 2018, the National Hockey League's Washington Capitals staged a rally on the Mall after parading through the city to celebrate the franchise's first Stanley Cup championship victory. Tens of thousands of fans reportedly joined the beer-soaked event.[106]

Presidential inaugurations

 
The first inauguration of Barack Obama on January 20, 2009, facing west from the Capitol

During presidential inaugurations, people without official tickets gather at the National Mall. Normally, the Mall between 7th and 14th Streets NW is used as a staging ground for the parade.[107] On December 4, 2008, the Presidential Inaugural Committee (see: United States presidential inauguration organizers) announced, "for the first time, the entire length of the National Mall will be opened to the public so that more people than ever before will be able to witness the swearing-in of the president from a vantage point in sight of the Capitol."[108] The committee made this arrangement because of the massive attendance – projected to be as many as 2 million people – that it expected for the first inauguration of Barack Obama on January 20, 2009.

Despite the arrangement, a throng of people seeking access to the event climbed and then removed temporary protective fences around the Smithsonian's Mary Livingston Ripley Garden, six blocks from the site at which Obama took his inaugural oath. Hordes then trampled the garden's vegetation and elevated plant beds when entering and leaving the event.[109] Others could not find a way to enter the Mall in time to view the ceremony.

More than a thousand people with purple tickets missed the event while being stranded in the I-395 Third Street Tunnel beneath the Mall after police directed them there (see Purple Tunnel of Doom).[110] Terrance W. Gainer, the Sergeant at Arms of the United States Senate, stated that it appeared that the stranding had occurred because there were more bulky people in coats than the event's purple section could accommodate.[111] The Joint Congressional Committee on Inaugural Ceremonies subsequently announced that ticket holders that were not admitted would receive copies of the swearing-in invitation and program, photos of Obama and Vice President Joe Biden, and a color print of the ceremony.[112]

Other events and recreational activities

The National Mall has long served as a spot for jogging, picnics, and light recreation for the Washington population. The Smithsonian Carousel, located on the Mall in front of the Arts and Industry Building, is a popular attraction. The Allan Herschell Company built the carousel, which arrived at Gwynn Oak Park near Baltimore, Maryland, in 1947. The carousel was moved to the Mall in 1981 and now operates seasonally.[11]

Annual events

A number of large free events recur annually on the Mall.[113] A kite festival, formerly named the "Smithsonian Kite Festival" and now named the "Blossom Kite Festival", usually takes place each year on the Washington Monument grounds during the last weekend of March as part of the National Cherry Blossom Festival. The event's organizers cancelled the 2020 kite festival, which they had earlier scheduled to take place on the Washington Monument grounds on Saturday, March 28, because of concerns related the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.[114]

An Earth Day celebration often takes place on the Mall around April 22.[115] A week-long series of rallies, exhibits, observances and performances occurred on the Mall from April 17 to April 25, 2010, to commemorate Earth Day's 40th anniversary.[116] The final day's events featured performances by Sting, Mavis Staples, The Roots, John Legend and others.[117]

The 2012 Earth Day rally, which featured music, entertainment, celebrity speakers and environmental activities, took place on the Mall during a rainy day on Sunday, April 22. Cheap Trick, Dave Mason, Kicking Daisies, Sting, John Legend, Joss Stone, The Roots, Mavis Staples, Jimmy Cliff, Bob Weir and The Explorers Club performed and Congressmen John Dingell and Edward Markey spoke.[118] In 2013, an "Earth Month" at Washington's Union Station replaced the Mall's Earth Day event.[119] On April 19, 2015, a "Global Citizen" Earth Day concert featured performances on the Washington Monument grounds by Usher, My Morning Jacket, Mary J. Blige, Train and No Doubt.[120]

 
Independence Day fireworks display between the Washington Monument and the Lincoln Memorial, July 4, 1986

The National Symphony Orchestra presents each year its National Memorial Day Concert on the west lawn of the United States Capitol during the evening of the Sunday before Memorial Day (the last Monday of May).[121] The National Gallery of Art hosts a Jazz in the Garden series each year in the museum's Sculpture Garden on Friday evenings from late May through August.[122]

Components of the United States Navy Band, the United States Air Force Band, the United States Marine Band and the United States Army Band perform on the west steps of the United States Capitol on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday evenings, respectively, during June, July and August.[123][124] The Marine Band repeats each Wednesday Capitol performance on the following evening (Thursday) at the Sylvan Theater on the grounds of the Washington Monument.[124] Components of U.S. military bands also provide evening concerts at the World War II Memorial from May through August.[125]

The Smithsonian Folklife Festival takes place on the Mall each year for two weeks around Independence Day (July 4).[126][127] On that holiday, the A Capitol Fourth concert takes place in the late afternoon and early evening on the west lawn of the Capitol.[128] This and other Independence Day celebrations on and near the Mall end after sunset with a fireworks display between the Washington Monument and the Lincoln Memorial.[129]

The National Symphony Orchestra presents each year its Labor Day Capitol Concert on the west lawn of the United States Capitol during the evening of the Sunday before Labor Day (the first Monday of September).[130]

Other events

 
The April 9, 1939, concert by Marian Anderson, facing east from the Lincoln Memorial

On April 9, 1939, singer Marian Anderson gave an Easter Sunday concert at the Lincoln Memorial after the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) denied a request by Howard University for her to give an Easter performance at the DAR's nearby racially segregated Constitution Hall (see: Marian Anderson's 1939 Lincoln Memorial concert). The event, which 75,000 people attended, occurred after President Franklin D. Roosevelt gave his assent for the performance.[131][132]

The 1976 United States Bicentennial celebration provided the motivation for planning to accommodate large numbers of expected visitors to the National Mall. A number of major memorials were added to the Mall throughout that period.[133] On May 21, 1976, Constitution Gardens was dedicated.[134] On July 1, the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum opened.[135] On July 4, the Bicentennial fireworks display on the Mall attracted one million viewers, making it second only to the 1965 presidential inauguration of Lyndon B. Johnson as the largest event in the Mall's history up to that time.[136]

On Sunday, October 9, 1979, Pope John Paul II celebrated Mass on the National Mall during a visit to Washington.[137] The celebration took place after an appellate court denied a motion for an injunction that atheists Madalyn Murray O'Hair and Jon Garth Murray had filed to prevent the event from occurring.[138]

From 1980 through 1982, The Beach Boys and The Grass Roots performed Independence Day concerts on the Mall, attracting large crowds.[139][140][141] However, in April 1983, Secretary of the Interior James G. Watt, banned Independence Day concerts on the Mall by such groups.

Watt said that "rock bands" that had performed on the Mall on Independence Day in 1981 and 1982 had encouraged drug use and alcoholism and had attracted "the wrong element", who would mug individuals and families attending any similar events in the future.[140] Watt then announced that Las Vegas crooner Wayne Newton, a friend and supporter of President Ronald Reagan and a contributor to Republican Party political campaigns, would perform at the Mall's 1983 Independence Day celebration.[140][142]

During the ensuing uproar, Rob Grill, lead singer of The Grass Roots, stated that he felt "highly insulted" by Watt's remarks, which he called "nothing but un-American".[140] The Beach Boys stated that the Soviet Union, which had invited them to perform in Leningrad in 1978, "obviously .... did not feel that the group attracted the wrong element".[140] Vice President George H. W. Bush said of The Beach Boys, "They're my friends and I like their music".[140]

On July 3, 1983, thousands attended a heavily policed "Rock Against Reagan" concert that the hardcore punk rock band, Dead Kennedys, performed on the Mall in response to Watt's action.[143] When Newton entered an Independence Day stage on the Mall on July 4, members of his audience booed.[144][145] Watt apologized to The Beach Boys, First Lady Nancy Reagan apologized for Watt, and in 1984 The Beach Boys gave an Independence Day concert on the Mall to an audience of 750,000 people.[144][146]

 
Britney Spears performs during the "NFL Kickoff Live from the National Mall Presented by Pepsi Vanilla" concert, September 4, 2003

On September 4, 2003, Britney Spears, Mary J. Blige, Aretha Franklin, Aerosmith and others performed in a nationally televised "NFL Kickoff Live from the National Mall Presented by Pepsi Vanilla" (see: Pre-game concerts for National Football League kickoff game).[147] Preceded by a three-day National Football League "interactive Super Bowl theme park", the event had primarily commercial purposes, unlike earlier major activities on the Mall. Three weeks later, the United States Senate overwhelmingly passed legislation that, when enacted into law, limited displays of commercial sponsorship on the Mall.[148]

On July 7, 2007, one leg of Live Earth was held outdoors at the National Museum of the American Indian on the Mall. Former Vice President Al Gore presented, and artists such as Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood performed.[149]

Occurring once every two to three years on the Mall in the early fall from 2002 to 2009,[150] the U.S. Department of Energy Solar Decathlon displayed solar-powered houses that competitive collegiate teams designed, constructed and operated.[151][152] Igniting a controversy, the Department of Energy (DOE) decided to move the 2011 Decathlon off the Mall, claiming that this would support an effort to protect, improve and restore the park.[153] Federal officials stated that heavy equipment that had placed two-story houses on the Mall during earlier Decathlons had cracked walkways and killed grass to a greater extent than had most other Mall events.[154]

On February 4, 2011, a Washington Post editorial criticized attempts to have President Obama restore the Decathlon to the Mall.[155] Nevertheless, by February 12, 2011, at least thirteen U.S. senators had signed a letter asking the DOE to reconsider its decision.[154] On February 23, 2011, the DOE and the Department of the Interior announced that the 2011 Solar Decathlon would take place along Ohio Drive southeast of the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial in West Potomac Park.[156] The event took place in the Park from September 23 through October 2, 2011.[152][157] The 2013 Decathlon took place in California instead of Washington.[158]

From 2003 to 2013, the National Book Festival took place on the Mall each year in late September or early October.[159] However, the event moved to the Walter E. Washington Convention Center in 2014 because the NPS became concerned about the damage that pedestrians had inflicted on the Mall's lawn during previous Festivals.[160]

A four-day exhibition took place each year on the Mall during Public Service Recognition Week (the first full week of May) until 2010. Government agencies participating in the event sponsored exhibits that displayed the works of public employees and that enabled visitors to learn about government programs and initiatives, discuss employee benefits, and interact with agency representatives.[161] However, the 2011 United States federal budget (Public Law 112-10), which was belatedly enacted on April 15, 2011, contained no funding for that year's event, forcing the event's cancellation.[162] The event did not take place in 2012.[163]

On June 12, 2010, Tareq and Michaele Salahi, a couple under investigation for allegedly crashing a White House state dinner for the prime minister of India in November 2009 (see: 2009 U.S. state dinner security breaches), hosted an America's Polo Cup match between the United States and India on the Mall, charging $95 per person for admission.[164] A spokesman for the Embassy of India stated that neither the Embassy nor the government of India had any association with the event.[164] Reports of the event stated that the players who represented India were actually of Pakistani origin and were from Florida.[165]

 
The Concert for Valor on the National Mall on November 11, 2014, looking west from the United States Capitol grounds

The inaugural USA Science and Engineering Festival Expo took place on the National Mall and surrounding areas on October 23 and 24, 2010. More than 1,500 free interactive exhibits reportedly drew about 500,000 people to the event,[166] which had over 75 performances.[167] The second Expo took place on April 28–29, 2012, in the Walter E. Washington Convention Center.[168]

On Veterans Day, November 11, 2014, Bruce Springsteen, Eminem, Rihanna, Metallica, Carrie Underwood, Dave Grohl, the Zac Brown Band and other pop entertainers performed on the Mall during a free evening Concert for Valor honoring veterans and their families. Attendance was in the hundreds of thousands, making it one of the biggest events on the Mall for the year.[169]

The annual Screen on the Green movie festival took place on the Mall on Monday nights during July and August for 17 years until 2015. Free classic movies were projected on large portable screens and typically drew crowds of thousands of people. Organizers cancelled the event in 2016 when the event's sponsors (HBO and Comcast) terminated their support, stating that they needed their resources for other projects.[170]

During October 2020, artist Suzanne Brennan Firstenberg installed 267,080 white flags within a 4 acres (1.6 ha) site at the D.C. Armory Parade Grounds near Washington's Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium to temporarily memorialize the lives lost in the United States during the COVID-19 pandemic.[171] She recreated her memorial on the Washington Monument grounds during September 2021 when covering for three weeks a 20 acres (8.1 ha) area with 700,000 white flags.[172]

Improvements and future plans

National Mall Plan

From 2006 through 2010, the NPS conducted a public process that created a plan for the future of the National Mall.[27] On July 13, 2010, the NPS issued in the Federal Register a notice of availability of a final environmental impact statement (EIS) for the National Mall Plan.[173] The two-volume final EIS responded to comments and incorporated changes to a draft EIS for the Plan.[174]

 
The Sylvan Theater in 2011.

On November 9, 2010, the NPS and the Department of the Interior issued a Record of Decision (ROD) that completed the planning process.[27][175][176][177] The ROD contains a summary of the selected alternative, which is the basis for the Plan, together with mitigation measures developed to minimize environmental harm; other alternatives considered; the basis for the decision in terms of planning objectives and the criteria used to develop the preferred alternative; a finding of no impairment of park resources and values; the environmentally preferable alternative; and the public and agency involvement.[178][179]

The Plan proposed several changes to the Mall. The NPS would construct a vast expanse of paved surface in Union Square at the east end of the Mall to accommodate demonstrations and other events by reducing the size of the Capitol Reflecting Pool or by replacing the pool with a fountain or other minor water feature. Additional proposed changes included the replacement of the Sylvan Theater on the Washington Monument grounds with a facility containing offices, restaurants, and restrooms, as well as the replacement of an open space near the east end of Constitution Gardens with a multipurpose visitor facility containing food service, retail, and restrooms.[27][175][176][177]

On December 2, 2010, the National Capital Planning Commission (NCPC) unanimously approved the final National Mall Plan at a public hearing.[180] The NCPC's approval allowed the NPS to move forward with implementation of the Plan's recommendations.[27][177][178][180]

On March 1, 2012, the NCPC discussed a proposal that, when implemented, reduced the Mall's green space by widening and paving most of the north–south walkways that cross the Mall between Seventh and Fourteenth Streets. The project also replaced with gravel large areas of grass that were located near the Smithsonian Metro Station and the National Gallery of Art's Sculpture Garden.[181]

On September 8, 2011, the Trust for the National Mall[182] and the NPS announced an open competition for a redesign of the spaces on the National Mall that Union Square, the Sylvan Theater grounds and the Constitution Gardens lake now occupy.[183] Former First Lady of the United States Laura Bush agreed to be the honorary co-chair of a drive to raise funds for the three projects.[183]

On April 9, 2012, the Trust for the National Mall announced the ideas for the redesign of Union Square, the Sylvan Theater grounds and Constitution Gardens lake area that finalists in the competition had submitted. The Trust asked the public to submit online comments that the competition jury would consider when evaluating each design.[184] The Trust announced the winners of the competition on May 2, 2012. Groundbreaking for the first project was expected to take place by 2014, with the first ribbon-cutting ceremony by 2016.[185]

On October 1, 2015, the NCPC approved preliminary and final site and building plans that the NPS had submitted for the first phase rehabilitation of Constitution Gardens. Plans included the relocation and rehabilitation of the Lockkeeper's House, C & O Canal Extension, a new entry plaza at the corner of Constitution Avenue and 17th Street, NW, landscaping, a meadow and pollinator habitat and a new perimeter garden wall. A temporary path would connect to an existing plaza located at the eastern end of Constitution Garden's lake.[186]

The NPS began to implement the first phase rehabilitation of Constitution Gardens in 2017. A Park Service contractor moved the Lockkeeper's House, C & O Canal Extension, southward and westward away from Constitution Avenue, NW and 17th Street, NW while retaining the structure's east–west orientation.[43][187] The NPS restored the building's exterior to the conditions that had existed before the building was modified during 1915 and earlier years. The NPS also replaced the structure's brick chimneys, thus restoring the building to its original 1800s appearance. The building reopened temporarily in late August 2018 and permanently on September 13 of that year.[42][43][188] The structure now serves in its new location as an NPS education center.[42][43]

Reconstruction and restoration

From 2010 to 2012, NPS contractors rebuilt the aging Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool, which had first been constructed in the early 1920s and whose water had come from the pipes that supply Washington, D.C., with its drinking water. As a result of the project, the pool now receives filtered water from the Tidal Basin through a high-density polyethylene (HDPE) pipeline.[189]

The NPS then began a four-year restoration of the portion of the central axis of the Mall that lies between 3rd Street and 14th Street.[190] By 2016, the restoration project had completely replaced the deteriorated and weedy turf that had previously covered much of that part of the Mall with a new cover containing soil, fescue (Festuca) and Kentucky bluegrass (Poa pratensis).[191]

Transportation

Public transportation

The National Mall is accessible via the Washington Metro, with the Smithsonian station located on the south side of the Mall, near the Smithsonian Institution Building between the Washington Monument and the United States Capitol.[192] The Federal Triangle, Archives, Judiciary Square and Union Station Metro stations are also located near the Mall, to the north.[193] The L'Enfant Plaza, Federal Center Southwest and Capitol South Metro stations are located several blocks south of the Mall.[194] Metrobus and the DC Circulator make scheduled stops near the Mall.[195]

Bicycles

The NPS provides parking facilities for bicycles near each of the major memorials as well as along the National Mall.[196] From March to October, an NPS concessionaire rents out bicycles at the Thompson Boat Center, located near the intersection of Virginia Avenue NW and Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway, 1 mile (1.6 km) north of the Lincoln Memorial along the Potomac River-Rock Creek Trail.[196][197] The first two of five approved Capital Bikeshare stations opened on the National Mall on March 16, 2012, shortly before the start of the 2012 National Cherry Blossom Festival.[198]

The National Mall is the official midpoint of the East Coast Greenway, a 2,900 mile–long system of shared-use bicycle trails linking Calais, Maine, with Key West, Florida.[199]

Electric scooters and Segways

The use of an electric scooter or a Segway falls under the NPS definition of recreational use of a self-propelled vehicle. People without identified disabilities can only use such vehicles on park roadways. NPS rules, therefore, prohibit people without disabilities from using electric scooters and Segways on sidewalks and paths within the National Mall and its memorials.[200][201]

Several companies rent out electric scooters within the District of Columbia. However, the National Mall is outside of those companies' service areas. Some such companies, therefore, charge fines for people who end their rides on the Mall. Others do not allow people to end their trips until they have left the area.[201]

Pedicabs

The NPS licenses pedicab drivers to provide transportation and tours of the National Mall through its Commercial Use Authorization program.[202]

Motor vehicle parking

 
Due to limited dining options on the mall, food trucks are often found parked on the street next to tourist-dense locations.

General visitor parking is available along Ohio Drive SW, between the Lincoln and Thomas Jefferson Memorials. Bus parking is available primarily along Ohio Drive, SW, near the Lincoln and Thomas Jefferson Memorials, and along Ohio Drive SW, in East Potomac Park. There is limited handicapped parking at the Franklin Delano Roosevelt and World War II Memorials and near the Washington Monument and the Thomas Jefferson, Lincoln, Korean War Veterans, and Vietnam Veterans Memorials; otherwise, parking is extremely scarce in and near the Mall.[203]

In April 2017, the NPS awarded a contract for the installation of parking meters on streets and in parking areas on the Mall. On June 12, 2017, the NPS and the District of Columbia Department of Public Works began to enforce metered parking on approximately 1,100 parking spaces in which motorists could previously park without charge.[203][204]

Weather and climate

 
The Mall following a snow storm.

On July 16, 2016, speakers and musicians participated in a gathering of thousands of evangelicals during a Together 2016 rally on the Mall.[205][206] Although the event was originally scheduled to conclude at 9 p.m., it ended at 4 p.m. due to excessive heat. Officers reportedly responded to 350 medical calls for heat-related injuries. The large number of people who lost consciousness because of heat syncope overwhelmed emergency medical technicians.[205][207]

On July 1, 2021, an EF1 tornado formed in Arlington County, Virginia at 8:59 p.m., crossed the Potomac River near the Theodore Roosevelt Bridge, and traveled eastward along the National Mall before dissipating near 16th Street NW and Constitution Avenue south of the White House and The Ellipse, 4.4 mi (7 km) from where it had started. Its maximum winds were 90 mph (145 km/h), and it was as wide as 125 yards (114 m). The National Weather Service reported that wind damage to trees on the Mall “was prominent from 23rd St NW east for 0.75 mi (1.2 km) to near 16th Street NW south of The Ellipse”. The weather service stated that the tornado lifted up and twisted temporary fencing installed on the Mall for the upcoming July 4 Independence Day celebration. The fencing landed in a "mangled and haphazard manner" before the twister dissipated at 9:05 p.m.[208]

National Mall
Climate chart (explanation)
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
 
 
82
 
 
4
−2
 
 
108
 
 
5
−1
 
 
80
 
 
15
4
 
 
125
 
 
25
10
 
 
106
 
 
28
15
 
 
133
 
 
30
20
 
 
105
 
 
30
21
 
 
128
 
 
32
23
 
 
74
 
 
29
17
 
 
149
 
 
21
10
 
 
56
 
 
14
6
 
 
125
 
 
6
1
Average max. and min. temperatures in °C
Precipitation totals in mm
Source: [209]
Imperial conversion
JFMAMJJASOND
 
 
3.2
 
 
39
28
 
 
4.3
 
 
41
30
 
 
3.1
 
 
59
39
 
 
4.9
 
 
77
50
 
 
4.2
 
 
82
59
 
 
5.2
 
 
86
68
 
 
4.1
 
 
86
70
 
 
5
 
 
90
73
 
 
2.9
 
 
84
63
 
 
5.9
 
 
70
50
 
 
2.2
 
 
57
43
 
 
4.9
 
 
43
34
Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation totals in inches

See also

References

  1. ^ "National Register of Historic Places: NPS Focus". National Park Service. from the original on July 25, 2008. Retrieved July 8, 2010..
  2. ^ a b "District of Columbia: National Mall Historic District (Boundary Increase and Additional Documentation), Bounded by 3rd St. NW-SW, Independence Ave. SW, Raoul Wallenberg Pl. SW, CSX RR, Potomac R., Constitution Ave. NW, Washington, 16000805, Listed 12/8/2016". National Register of Historic Places Program: Weekly List of Actions Taken on Properties: 11/28/2016 through 12/2/2016. National Park Service. December 9, 2016. from the original on December 20, 2016. Retrieved December 20, 2016..
  3. ^ Robinson, Judith H.; Gasparini, Daria; Kerr, Tim (Robinson & Associates, Inc., Washington, D.C.) (May 31, 2016). "National Mall Historic District – Boundary Increase/Additional Documentation (Final backcheck)". United States Department of the Interior: National Park Service: National Register of Historic Places Registration Form. National Park Service. from the original on October 12, 2016. Retrieved October 12, 2016..
  4. ^ a b "The National Parks: Index 2012-2016" (PDF). National Park Service. p. 44. (PDF) from the original on December 26, 2017. Retrieved December 26, 2017..
  5. ^ "National Mall Frequently Asked Questions". National Park Service. October 28, 2008. from the original on May 7, 2010. Retrieved April 18, 2010..
  6. ^ a b c d Pfanz, Donald C. (February 11, 1981). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: National Mall". National Park Service. Retrieved March 17, 2010. (PDF). Archived from the original on December 23, 2015. Retrieved June 12, 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  7. ^ a b c d "Foundation statement for the National Mall and Pennsylvania Avenue National Historic Park" (PDF). National Mall Plan. National Park Service. pp. 6–10. (PDF) from the original on December 26, 2017. Retrieved December 26, 2017. The National Mall stretches from the grounds of the U.S. Capitol west to the Potomac River, and from the Thomas Jefferson Memorial north to Constitution Avenue..
  8. ^ Numbers preceding names of landmarks correspond to numbers in 2005 satellite image of the National Mall (proper).
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    (4) "Joseph Henry statue marker". Markers Attached to Sculpture series. HMdb.org: The Historical Marker Database. from the original on October 20, 2012. Retrieved October 27, 2010..
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    (2) "DOWNING, Andrew Jackson: Urn on the east side of the Arts & Industries Bldg in Washington, D.C. by Robert E Launitz, Calvert Vaux". dcMemorials.com. 2008. from the original on December 21, 2016. Retrieved March 17, 2010..
    (3)"Andrew Jackson Downing marker". HMdb.org: The Historical Marker Database. from the original on September 18, 2017. Retrieved October 27, 2010..
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    (3) Milner, John D., AIA, Executive Director, National Heritage Foundation, Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania (June 22, 1973). "U.S. Department of Agriculture Administration Building". National Register of Historic Places Inventory — Nomination Form: For Federal Properties (Form 10-36). Washington, D.C.: United States Department of the Interior: National Park Service. from the original on January 21, 2021. Retrieved February 10, 2021..
    (4) Marzella, Bill, Historic Preservation Planner, EHT Traceries, Inc., Washington, D.C. (August 5, 2015). "U.S. Department of Agriculture Administration Building (Boundary Increase and Additional Documentation)" (PDF). United States Department of the Interior: National Park Service: National Register of Historic Places Registration Form (NPS Form 10-900). Washington, D.C.: United States Department of the Interior: National Park Service. (PDF) from the original on February 22, 2017. Retrieved February 10, 2021..
  13. ^ "Our Gardens". Smithsonian Gardens. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution. from the original on March 16, 2020. Retrieved March 18, 2010..
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  15. ^ (1) "Enid A. Haupt Garden". Smithsonian Gardens. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution. from the original on March 16, 2020. Retrieved March 18, 2010..
    (2) "Enid A. Haupt Garden". Frommer's Review: Wiley Publishing, Inc. from the original on June 13, 2020. Retrieved March 18, 2010..
  16. ^ "Freer Gallery of Art: Courtyard Garden". Smithsonian Gardens. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution. from the original on March 16, 2020. Retrieved June 13, 2020..
  17. ^ "Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden". Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution. from the original on May 13, 2020. Retrieved June 13, 2020..
  18. ^ "Kathrine Dulin Folger Rose Garden". Smithsonian Gardens. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution. from the original on March 16, 2020. Retrieved June 13, 2020..
  19. ^ (1) "Mary Livingston Ripley Garden". Smithsonian Gardens. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution. from the original on March 16, 2020. Retrieved June 13, 2020..
    (2) Nesius, Marie (2004). . Kanawha County Master Gardeners, West Virginia. Archived from the original on November 8, 2006. Retrieved March 18, 2010..
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  21. ^ "Native Landscape at the National Museum of the American Indian". Smithsonian Gardens. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution. from the original on March 16, 2020. Retrieved June 13, 2020..
  22. ^ "Pollinator Garden". Smithsonian Gardens. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution. from the original on March 16, 2020. Retrieved June 13, 2020..
  23. ^ "Urban Bird Habitat". Smithsonian Gardens. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution. from the original on March 16, 2020. Retrieved June 13, 2020..
  24. ^ "Victory Garden". Smithsonian Gardens. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution. from the original on March 16, 2020. Retrieved March 18, 2010..
  25. ^ Milner, John D. (June 22, 1973). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination: U.S. Department of Agriculture Administration Building". National Park Service. Retrieved May 10, 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link) (PDF). Archived from the original on October 24, 2015. Retrieved June 12, 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link).
  26. ^ a b c d e "National Mall Plan: Summary: Enriching Our National Experience: Envisioning a New Future (NPS 802/105261)" (PDF). Washington, D.C.: National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior, National Mall and Memorial Parks. Fall 2010. (PDF) from the original on July 15, 2012. Retrieved November 10, 2010..
  27. ^ "Update on the National Mall Plan". Enriching Your American Experience: The National Mall Plan. National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior. 2010. from the original on August 3, 2016. Retrieved October 12, 2016..
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  29. ^ (PDF). The World Factbook. Central Intelligence Agency. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 5, 2013. Retrieved October 14, 2013..
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    TRANSFER TO ARCHITECT OF THE CAPITOL
    Sec. 1202. (a) Transfer.—To the extent that the Director of the National Park Service has jurisdiction and control over any portion of the area described in subsection (b) and any monument or other facility which is located within such area, such jurisdiction and control is hereby transferred to the Architect of the Capitol as of the date of the enactment of this Act.
    (b) Area Described.—The area described in this subsection is the property which is bounded on the north by Pennsylvania Avenue Northwest, on the east by First Street Northwest and First Street Southwest, on the south by Maryland Avenue Southwest, and on the west by Third Street Southwest and Third Street Northwest.
    .
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  34. ^ (1) "Map 1: The L'Enfant Plan for Washington". National Park Service. from the original on January 21, 2009. Retrieved October 27, 2009..
    (2) L'Enfant identified himself as "Peter Charles L'Enfant" during most of his life, while residing in the United States. He wrote this name on his "Plan of the city intended for the permanent seat of the government of t(he) United States ...." (Washington, D.C.) and on other legal documents. However, during the early 1900s, a French ambassador to the United States, Jean Jules Jusserand, popularized the use of L'Enfant's birth name, "Pierre Charles L'Enfant". (See: Bowling, Kenneth R (2002). Peter Charles L'Enfant: vision, honor, and male friendship in the early American Republic. George Washington University, Washington, D.C.) The National Park Service identifies L'Enfant as "Major Peter Charles L'Enfant". from the original on April 5, 2014. Retrieved October 27, 2009. and as "Major Pierre (Peter) Charles L'Enfant]". from the original on February 28, 2010. Retrieved October 27, 2009. on its website. The United States Code states in 40 U.S.C. § 3309: "(a) In General.—The purposes of this chapter shall be carried out in the District of Columbia as nearly as may be practicable in harmony with the plan of Peter Charles L'Enfant."
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    (3) Glazer, Nathan; Field, Cynthia R., eds. (2008). "A Chronology of the Mall". The National Mall: Rethinking Washington's Monumental Core. Baltimore, Maryland: The Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 179. ISBN 978-0-8018-8805-2. OCLC 166273738. from the original on July 3, 2019. Retrieved July 3, 2019 – via Google Books. 1802: Mathew Carey's map of Washington is the first to name the stretch of land west of the Capitol as "The Mall"..
    (4) Carey, Mathew (1802). "Washington City". Carey's general atlas, improved and enlarged: being a collection of maps of the world and quarters, their principal empires, kingdoms, &c. Philadelphia: M. Carey and Son. LCCN 2020586053.
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  41. ^ a b c "Come see the restored Lockkeeper's House". Lockkeeper's House. Washington, D.C.: Trust for the National Mall. from the original on April 4, 2019. Retrieved January 17, 2020. The Lockkeeper's House — the oldest structure on the National Mall — has been relocated and restored as part of a major project that has transformed the site with a new visitor-friendly entrance, surrounding outdoor plaza and educational displays.
    Previously located just inches from heavy traffic at the corner of 17th Street and Constitution Avenue NW, the house was lifted and moved about 20 feet from the road. Untouched for more than 40 years, the 180-year old structure now welcomes visitors from around the world to the National Mall.
    .
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    (2) "Historic Lockkeeper's House Opens on the National Mall Following Major Renovation". Washington, D.C.: Trust for the National Mall. October 23, 2018. from the original on January 17, 2020. Retrieved January 17, 2020..
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  45. ^ Benson-Short, Lisa (2016). "Chapter 1: From Grand Avenue to Public Space". The National Mall: No Ordinary Public Space. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. p. 29. ISBN 9781442630574. LCCN 2016448269. OCLC 1049661165. Retrieved August 15, 2020 – via Google Books.
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  48. ^ (1) Schuyler, David (February 2000). "Downing, Andrew Jackson". American Council of Learned Societies: American National Biography Online. Oxford University Press. from the original on September 18, 2017. Retrieved September 18, 2017. In late 1850 Downing was commissioned to landscape the public grounds in Washington, D.C. This 150-acre tract extended west from the foot of Capitol Hill to the site of the Washington Monument and then north to the president's house. Downing saw this as an opportunity not simply to ornament the capital but also to create the first large public park in the United States. He believed that the Washington park would encourage cities across the nation to provide healthful recreational grounds for their citizens. Although only the initial stages of construction had been completed at the time of his death, Downing's commission, as well as the influence of his writings, merited the epithet "Father of American Parks"..
    (2) "Downing's Plans for the Mall". Smithsonian Gardens: The Downing Urn. Smithsonian Institution. from the original on March 16, 2020. Retrieved June 13, 2020..
    (3) Andrew Jackson Downing's Plan for the National Mall: Plan Showing Proposed Laying Out of the Public Grounds at Washington: Copied from the Original Plan by A. J. Downing: February. 1851. To Accompany the Annual Report dated October 1st, 1867, of Bvt Brig. Genl. N. Michler In Charge of Public Buildings, Grounds & Works. File Unit: Maryland, the District of Columbia, and the Potomac River, 1784 - 1890. National Archives. from the original on September 17, 2017. Retrieved September 17, 2017..
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    This division of the public grounds embraces the area lying between First and Seventeenth streets west and B street north, and includes the large and important parks known as Henry and Seaton parks, the Smithsonian grounds and Monument grounds.
    .
    (2) "After the First Improvements: Changes to the Mall Parks after 1877" (map). Cultural Landscape Inventory. Washington, D.C.: United States Department of the Interior: National Park Service. 2006. p. 48. (PDF) from the original on October 28, 2020. Retrieved February 25, 2021. This graphic depicts the nineteenth-century Mall reservations overlaid on the current Mall..
  50. ^ Map of the Mall in 1893 showing the Monuments Grounds, Agricultural Grounds, Smithsonian Grounds, Armory Grounds, Public Grounds, and Botanical Gardens
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    (2) "What happened to the railroad stations on the Mall?". Histories of the National Mall. Fairfax County, Virginia: Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, George Mason University. from the original on November 28, 2018. Retrieved November 28, 2018..
    (3) Brownell, Richard (June 29, 2016). "The Short-Lived Baltimore & Potomac Railroad Station on the National Mall". Boundary Stones: WETA's Local History Blog. Arlington County, Virginia: WETA. from the original on November 28, 2018. Retrieved November 28, 2018..
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    (2) "Potomac Flats Reclaimed". Histories of the National Mall. Fairfax County, Virginia: Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, George Mason University. July 9, 1875. from the original on May 2, 2018. Retrieved December 18, 2018..
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  63. ^ "The L'Enfant and McMillan Plans". National Park Service. from the original on October 28, 2010. Retrieved October 22, 2010..
  64. ^ "Washington, D.C.: A National Register of Historic Places Travel Itinerary". National Park Service. from the original on October 10, 2009. Retrieved October 27, 2009..
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  66. ^ Satellite imagery of the National Mall in Google maps in 38°53′24″N 77°01′25″W / 38.89°N 77.023611°W / 38.89; -77.023611 (National Mall)
  67. ^ "How has the federal government used the Mall during times of war?". Histories of the National Mall. Fairfax County, Virginia: Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, George Mason University. from the original on January 28, 2020. Retrieved February 23, 2021..
  68. ^ a b c d "Rand McNalley Standard Map of Washington, D.C." 1925. from the original on February 6, 2021. Retrieved February 23, 2021 – via Geographicus Rare Antique Maps (www.geographicus.com)..
  69. ^ a b "Public buildings in the metropolitan area of Washington, D.C." (map). Washington, D.C.: Federal Works Agency: Public Buildings Administration: Office of the Buildings Manager. 1946. LCCN 87694427. OCLC 1686895 – via Library of Congress.
  70. ^ a b (1) "World War I Temporary Buildings". Histories of the National Mall. Fairfax County, Virginia: Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, George Mason University. from the original on December 29, 2019. Retrieved February 23, 2021..
    (2) Harris & Ewing, photographer. "Washington Monument. View of Mall From Monument" (photograph). Prints & Photographs Online Catalog. Library of Congress. Retrieved February 22, 2021. Date Created/Published: [between 1913 and 1918]
  71. ^ "U.S. Entry into World War I, 1917". Milestones: 1914–1920. Office of the Historian, Foreign Service Institute, United States Department of State. from the original on February 11, 2021. Retrieved February 23, 2021..
  72. ^ a b c "World War I tempos" (PDF). Cultural Landscape Inventory. Washington, D.C.: United States Department of the Interior: National Park Service. 2006. pp. 52–53. Retrieved February 25, 2021.
  73. ^ "The Paris Peace Conference and the Treaty of Versailles". Milestones: 1914–1920. Office of the Historian, Foreign Service Institute, United States Department of State. from the original on February 22, 2021. Retrieved February 23, 2021..
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    (2) "Activities Occupying Buildings Under the Office of the Superintendent: State, War and Navy Buildings: Mall Buildings". Reorganization of Executive Departments Hearings before the Joint Committee on the Reorganization of the Administrative Branch of the Government, Congress of the United States, Sixty-Eighth Congress, first session, on S.J. res. 282, Sixty-Seventh Congress, a resolution to amend the resolution of December 29, 1920, entitled "Joint resolution to create a Joint Committee on the Reorganization of the Administrative Branch of the Government." January 7 to 31, 1924 ... United States Government Printing Office. 1924. p. 475. OCLC 908076577. Retrieved February 21, 2021 – via HathiTrust Digital Library.
  75. ^ "World War I Temporary Buildings". Histories of the National Mall. Fairfax County, Virginia: Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, George Mason University. from the original on December 29, 2019. Retrieved February 23, 2021..
  76. ^ Ives, James E.; Britten, Rollo H.; Armstrong, David W.; Gill, W. A.; Goldman, Frederick H., Office of Industrial Hygiene and Sanitation (March 1936). "Part I: Origin And Nature Of The Study: Locations Of Stations Where Observations Were Made In The Present Study". Public Health Bulletin No. 224: Atmospheric Pollution of American Cities for the Years 1931 to 1933. United States Treasury Department: United States Public Health Service. United States Government Printing Office. p. 10. Retrieved February 21, 2021 – via Google Books.
  77. ^ (1) "Liberty Loan Federal Building". Washington, D.C.: General Services Administration. Retrieved February 25, 2021.
    (2) "Liberty Loan Building History". Washington, D.C.: General Services Administration. September 5, 2019. Retrieved February 25, 2021.
    (3) Gilmore, Matthew B. (December 3, 2018). "One Last Tempo: Liberty Loan Building". Washington DC History Resources. from the original on June 23, 2020. Retrieved February 25, 2021 – via WordPress..
    (4) Gilmore, Matthew B. (November 30, 2018). . TheInTowner. Washington, D.C.: InTowner Publishing Corp. Archived from the original on December 8, 2018. Retrieved February 25, 2021.
    (5) Coordinates of Bureau of the Fiscal Service Building (former Liberty Loan Building): 38°53′05.0″N 77°01′56.7″W / 38.884722°N 77.032417°W / 38.884722; -77.032417 (Fiscal Service Building (former Liberty Loan Building)
  78. ^ a b c d e (1) "Temporary' War Department Buildings". National Mall and Memorial Parks. United States Department of the Interior: National Park Service. July 18, 2017. from the original on December 12, 2020. Retrieved February 23, 2021..
    (2) Kelly, John (January 7, 2017). "Answer Man remembers the 'temporary' office buildings that once blighted D.C." The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. from the original on November 10, 2020. Retrieved February 21, 2021..
  79. ^ "80-G-K-14433 Navy Department buildings, Washington, D.C." Washington, D.C.: Naval History and Heritage Command. from the original on November 29, 2020. Retrieved February 21, 2021..
  80. ^ a b Main Navy Building: Its Construction and Original Occupants. Naval Historical Foundation. August 1, 1970. from the original on February 13, 2021. Retrieved February 21, 2021..
  81. ^ a b c d ""Main Navy" and "Munitions" Buildings". Naval Historical Center. September 22, 2001. from the original on September 15, 2008. Retrieved March 16, 2010..
  82. ^ United States Bureau of Yards and Docks (1921). . Activities of the Bureau of Yards and Docks: Navy Department: World War: 1917-1918. Government Printing Office. p. 480. Archived from the original on April 4, 2016. Retrieved July 31, 2020..
  83. ^ a b "History and Culture". Constitution Gardens. National Park Service. April 10, 2015. from the original on August 28, 2010. Retrieved February 23, 2021..
  84. ^ "World War II Temporary Buildings". Histories of the National Mall. Fairfax County, Virginia: Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, George Mason University. from the original on November 12, 2020. Retrieved February 23, 2021..
  85. ^ a b Sherald, James L (December 2009). Elms for the Monumental Core: History and Management Plan (PDF). Washington, D.C.: Center for Urban Ecology, National Capital Region, National Park Service. Natural Resource Report NPS/NCR/NRR--2009/001. (PDF) from the original on December 14, 2019. Retrieved August 4, 2020..
  86. ^ (1) Flores, Alberto (June 13, 2006). "Jefferson Trees Resistant to Dutch Elm Disease". News & Events. United States Department of Agriculture: Agricultural Research Service. from the original on January 26, 2021. Retrieved January 30, 2021. In 2005, the newest American elm—named Jefferson—was released jointly by ARS and the National Park Service (NPS), after collaborative screening tests by Townsend and James L. Sherald, NPS Natural Resource Officer, showed it to have an outstanding level of Dutch elm disease (DED) tolerance. It was cloned in 1993 from the original tree, a survivor of about 300 elms planted on the National Mall in Southwest Washington in the 1930s..
    (2) Bentz, S.E. (February 2005). "Mature American elm of variety "Jefferson," at the old Smithsonian building, Washington, DC" (photograph). elmpost.org. from the original on February 2, 2017. Retrieved January 30, 2021..
    (3) Sherald, James L (December 2009). Elms for the Monumental Core: History and Management Plan (photograph). Washington, D.C.: Center for Urban Ecology, National Capital Region, National Park Service. p. 38. Natural Resource Report NPS/NCR/NRR--2009/001. (PDF) from the original on December 14, 2019. Retrieved August 4, 2020. Fig. 33. American elm 'Jefferson'. Parent tree on the National Mall in front of the Freer Gallery of Art on Jefferson Drive, flanked on either side by trees vegetatively propagated from it..
  87. ^ "The National Mall" (PDF). District of Columbia Inventory of Historic Sites: Alphabetical Version. Historic Preservation Office, Office of Planning, Government of the District of Columbia. 2009. pp. 103–104. (PDF) from the original on November 4, 2009. Retrieved March 17, 2010..
  88. ^ (1) "Uncle Beazley". Histories of the National Mall. Fairfax, Virginia: Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, George Mason University. from the original on April 16, 2016. Retrieved July 1, 2016..
    (2) "Uncle Beazley on the Mall". Historic Images of the Smithsonian. Smithsonian Institution Research Information System. 1976. from the original on August 15, 2016. Retrieved July 2, 2016..
    (3) Goode, James M. (1974). "Chapter 12: Uncle Beazley". The Outdoor Sculpture of Washington, D.C.: A Comprehensive Historical Guide. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press. p. 260. ISBN 9780881032338. OCLC 2610663. from the original on June 12, 2017. Retrieved July 4, 2016 – via Google Books. This 25-foot long replica of a Triceratops ... was placed on the Mall in 1967. ... The full-size Triceratops replica and eight other types of dinosaurs were designed by two prominent paleontologists, Dr. Barnum Brown of the American Museum of Natural History, in New York City, and Dr. John Ostrom of the Peabody Museum, in Peabody, Massachusetts. The sculptor, Louis Paul Jonas, executed these prehistoric animals in fiberglass, after the designs of Barnum and Ostrom, for the Sinclair Refining Company's Pavilion at the New York World's Fair of 1964. After the Fair closed, the nine dinosaurs, which weighed between 2 and 4 tons each, were placed on trucks and taken on a tour of the eastern United States. The Sinclair Refining Company promoted the tour for public relations and advertising purposes, since their trademark was the dinosaur. In 1967, the nine dinosaurs were given to various American museums.

    This particular replica was used for the filming of The Enormous Egg, a movie made by the National Broadcasting Company for television, based on a children's book of the same name by Oliver Buttersworth. The movie features an enormous egg, out of which hatches a baby Tricerotops; the boy consults with the Smithsonian Institution which accepts Uncle Beasley for the National Zoo.

    .
    (4) "A Dinosaur at the Zoo". Art at the National Zoo. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian National Zoological Park. from the original on June 12, 2007. Retrieved July 1, 2016..
    (6) Butterworth, Oliver, illustrated by Louis Darling (1956). The Enormous Egg. Boston, Massachusetts: Little, Brown and Co. ISBN 0590475460. OCLC 299175. from the original on June 12, 2017. Retrieved July 4, 2016 – via Google Books..
    (7) "About this book". The Enormous Egg by Oliver Butterworth, illustrated by Louis Darling. Scholastic Inc. 2016. from the original on August 31, 2012. Retrieved July 3, 2016. At first Nate doesn't see what all the fuss is all about. All he wants is to keep his new pet. But Uncle Beazley, the dinosaur himself, just keeps getting bigger and bigger....
    (8) "NBC Children's Theatre (1963–1973): The Enormous Egg: Episode aired 18 April 1968". IMDb.com, Inc. 2008. from the original on March 9, 2008. Retrieved July 3, 2016..
    (9) MacIntyre, F Gwynplaine (May 28, 2003). "User Comment". NBC Children's Theatre (1963–1973): The Enormous Egg: Episode aired 18 April 1968. IMDb.com, Inc. from the original on March 9, 2008. Retrieved July 3, 2016..
  89. ^ Commemorative Works Clarification and Revision Act of 2003, in "Public Law 108-126, Title II (117 Stat. 1349 - 117 Stat. 1353)". November 17, 2003. (PDF) from the original on February 26, 2005. Retrieved February 4, 2010.
  90. ^ Ruane, Michael E. (October 1, 2013). "During a shutdown, Mall visitors will see barricades, not landmarks". The Washington Post. from the original on February 21, 2015. Retrieved February 21, 2015..
  91. ^ Ruane, Michael E.; Wilgoren, Debbi (October 1, 2013). "Visiting veterans storm closed war memorial". The Washington Post. from the original on February 12, 2015. Retrieved February 21, 2015..
  92. ^ Ruane, Michael E.; Berman, Mark (October 2, 2013). "National Park Service to keep WWII Memorial open to veterans, as visitors skirt shutdown". The Washington Post. from the original on February 21, 2015. Retrieved February 21, 2015..
  93. ^ Gomez, Alan (November 8, 2015). "Immigration rally allowed on Mall despite shutdown". USA Today. from the original on September 29, 2018. Retrieved February 21, 2015..
  94. ^ (1) "Enid Haupt Fountains". President's Park. City Walking Guide. 2018. from the original on January 4, 2018. Retrieved February 14, 2021. The two Haupt Fountains flank the entrance to the Ellipse at 16th Street N.W. and Constitution Avenue..
    (2) Coordinates of Enid Haupt Fountains:
    East: 38°53′32.5″N 77°02′11.012″W / 38.892361°N 77.03639222°W / 38.892361; -77.03639222 (Enid Haupt Fountain (east))
    West: 38°53′32.5″N 77°02′12.175″W / 38.892361°N 77.03671528°W / 38.892361; -77.03671528 (Enid Haupt Fountain (west))
  95. ^ (1) "Patentees Monument". National Society Daughters of the American Colonists. 2018. from the original on January 4, 2018. Retrieved February 12, 2021.
    (2) "Original Patentees of DC Monument". President's Park (White House): Place. United States Department of the Interior: National Park Service. October 29, 2020. from the original on March 15, 2021. Retrieved March 15, 2021.
    (3)"Colonial Settler's Monument". dcMemorials.com. DC Memorialist. February 3, 2021. from the original on April 10, 2015. Retrieved March 15, 2021 – via SuperbThemes and WordPress.
    (4) Joint Resolution: Authorizing the erection of a memorial to the early settlers whose land grants embrace the site of the Federal City (PDF). United States Statutes at Large: 74th Congress: Session II: Chapter 64. Library of Congress. February 12, 1936. p. 1137. Retrieved March 15, 2021.
    (5) Coordinates of the Settlers of the District of Columbia Memorial: 38°53′37.5″N 77°02′01.9″W / 38.893750°N 77.033861°W / 38.893750; -77.033861 (Settlers of the District of Columbia Memorial)
  96. ^ (1) "Forest Service Museum". Washington, D.C.: Visitor FAQ. americasbesthistory.com: America's Best History. 2020. from the original on April 7, 2020. Retrieved February 14, 2021. Forest Service Museum - Located along 15th street below the Washington Monument..
    (2) Coordinates of the United States Forest Service Museum: 38°53′15.4″N 77°2′0.23″W / 38.887611°N 77.0333972°W / 38.887611; -77.0333972 (United States Forest Service Museum)
  97. ^ a b c Smith, Leef; Melillo, Wendy (October 13, 1996). "If It's Crowd Size You Want, Park Service Says Count It Out; Congress Told Agency to Stop, Official Says". The Washington Post. p. A.34. Retrieved November 29, 2010.
  98. ^ a b Nukols, Ben (January 18, 2017). "Inaugural crowds sure to be huge _ but how huge?". The Big Story. Associated Press. from the original on February 13, 2017. Retrieved March 16, 2017. IT STARTS WITH THE MILLION MAN MARCH ..... The agency still estimates crowd size for its own planning purposes, but does not publicly reveal the figures.
    "No matter what we said or did, no one ever felt we gave a fair estimate," U.S. Park Police Maj. J.J. McLaughlin, who had been in charge of coordinating crowd estimates, said in 1996 when the agency confirmed it would no longer count heads.
    .
  99. ^ Regula, Ralph, Committee on Appropriations (June 18, 1996). "House of Representatives Report 104-625: Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Bill, 1997, to accompany H.R. 3662". p. 28. Retrieved November 30, 2010. The Committee has provided no funding for crowd counting activities associated with gatherings held on federal property in Washington, D.C. If event organizers wish to have an estimate on the number of people participating in their event, then those organizers should hire a private sector firm to conduct the count.[dead link]. Note: The Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Bill, 1997 (H.R. 3662), was incorporated into the "Omnibus Consolidated Appropriations Act, 1997 (Public Law 104-208, Sept. 30, 1996)" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on May 27, 2010. Retrieved December 1, 2010.at 110 STAT. 3009-181.}}.
  100. ^ (1) Goodier, Rob (September 12, 2001). "The Curious Science of Counting a Crowd". Popular Mechanics. from the original on September 5, 2016. Retrieved August 26, 2016. For its part, the National Park Service tries to stay above the fray by not estimating crowd sizes. It stopped providing head counts after the organizers of the 1995 Million Man March accused the service of underestimating their crowd..
    (2) McKenna, Dave (January 16, 2009). "The 3 to 5 Million Man March: Crowd estimates could lead to post-swearing-in swearing, history shows". Washington City Paper. from the original on September 19, 2016. Retrieved August 26, 2016. Street hasn't been asked to come up with an official estimate for any D.C. event in a long while. And that 1991 manual is currently not used by his agency. Street and the Park Service, in fact, have been specifically barred by an act of Congress from divulging official crowd estimates—but only for D.C. gatherings. 'Ever since the Million Man March,' he says. 'That changed things.'.
  101. ^ (1) Davis, Julie Hirschfeld; Rosenberg, Matthew (January 21, 2017). "With False Claims, Trump Attacks Media on Turnout and Intelligence Rift". The New York Times. from the original on March 14, 2017. Retrieved March 15, 2017..
    (2) Wallace, Tim; Parlapiano, Alicia (January 22, 2017). "Crowd Scientists Say Women's March in Washington Had 3 Times More People Than Trump's Inauguration". The New York Times. from the original on March 13, 2017. Retrieved March 14, 2017..
  102. ^ "Abortion activists on the march". BBC. April 26, 2004. from the original on September 24, 2009. Retrieved June 8, 2009..
  103. ^ (1) Urbina, Ian (January 28, 2007). "Wide opposition to war energizes protests / Washington: Jane Fonda among celebrity protesters joining veterans, politicians in calling for end to war". The New York Times. from the original on February 19, 2007. Retrieved January 28, 2007 – via SFGate..
  104. ^ Urbina, Ian (January 28, 2007). "Protest Focuses on Iraq Troop Increase". The New York Times. from the original on May 30, 2013. Retrieved January 28, 2007..
    (2) Charles, Deborah (January 28, 2007). "Tens of thousands demand U.S. get out of Iraq". The Star. from the original on December 11, 2008. Retrieved January 28, 2007..
  105. ^ Boren, Cindy; Allen, Scott; Larimer, Sara (June 12, 2018). "Capitals' Stanley Cup parade: Ovechkin's speech brings the celebration to a wild end". The Washington Post. from the original on September 10, 2018. Retrieved September 9, 2018..
  106. ^ Stewart, Nikita (December 5, 2008). "Entire Mall To Be Open To Public". The Washington Post. from the original on November 11, 2012. Retrieved December 5, 2008..
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national, mall, this, article, about, park, washington, parkway, california, capitol, mall, shopping, malls, olympia, washington, jefferson, city, missouri, respectively, capital, mall, capital, mall, missouri, landscaped, park, near, downtown, area, washingto. This article is about the park in Washington D C For the parkway in California see Capitol Mall For the shopping malls in Olympia Washington and Jefferson City Missouri respectively see Capital Mall and Capital Mall Missouri The National Mall is a landscaped park near the downtown area of Washington D C the capital city of the United States It contains and borders a number of museums of the Smithsonian Institution art galleries cultural institutions and various memorials sculptures and statues It is administered by the National Park Service NPS of the United States Department of the Interior as part of the National Mall and Memorial Parks unit of the National Park System 4 The park receives approximately 24 million visitors each year 5 National MallU S National Register of Historic PlacesThe National Mall with the Lincoln Memorial in the foreground the Washington Monument behind it and the United States Capitol in the background 2010LocationBetween Independence and Constitution Avenues from the Capitol to the Lincoln MemorialCoordinates38 53 24 N 77 1 25 W 38 89000 N 77 02361 W 38 89000 77 02361 Coordinates 38 53 24 N 77 1 25 W 38 89000 N 77 02361 W 38 89000 77 02361ArchitectPierre Peter Charles L Enfant McMillan CommissionWebsiteNational Mall and Memorial ParksNRHP reference No 66000031 1 original 16000805 2 3 increase Significant datesAdded to NRHPOctober 15 1966Boundary increaseDecember 8 2016The core area of the National Mall extends between the United States Capitol grounds to the east and the Washington Monument to the west and is lined to the north and south by several museums and a federal office building 6 The term National Mall may also include areas that are also officially part of neighboring West Potomac Park to the south and west and Constitution Gardens to the north extending to the Lincoln Memorial on the west and Jefferson Memorial to the south 7 Contents 1 Landmarks museums and other features 1 1 Features within the National Mall proper 1 2 Features east of the National Mall proper 1 3 Features west of the National Mall proper and in West Potomac Park 2 Boundaries and dimensions 2 1 Dimensions 2 2 Boundaries 3 Purposes 4 History 4 1 L Enfant City Plan 4 2 Downing Plan 4 3 McMillan Plan 4 4 Temporary war buildings 4 4 1 World War I temporary buildings 4 4 2 World War II temporary buildings 4 5 Later history 5 Demolished or moved structures 6 Other attractions nearby 6 1 Attractions east of the Capitol 6 2 Attractions northeast of the National Mall proper 6 3 Attractions north of the National Mall proper 6 4 Attractions northwest of the National Mall proper 6 5 Attractions west of the National Mall proper 6 6 Attractions southwest of the National Mall proper 6 7 Attractions south of the National Mall proper 7 Usage 7 1 Protests and rallies 7 2 Presidential inaugurations 7 3 Other events and recreational activities 7 3 1 Annual events 7 3 2 Other events 8 Improvements and future plans 8 1 National Mall Plan 8 2 Reconstruction and restoration 9 Transportation 9 1 Public transportation 9 2 Bicycles 9 3 Electric scooters and Segways 9 4 Pedicabs 9 5 Motor vehicle parking 10 Weather and climate 11 See also 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksLandmarks museums and other features Edit2008 Map Map of the National Mall and vicinity 2008 Features within the National Mall proper Edit 2002 Satellite image National Mall proper and adjacent areas April 2002 The Mall had a grassy lawn flanked on each side by unpaved paths and rows of American elm trees as its central feature Numbers in the image correspond to numbers in the list of landmarks museums and other features below The National Mall proper contains the following landmarks museums and other features including opening year 7 6 2 National Museum of American History 1964 8 3 National Museum of Natural History 1910 4 National Gallery of Art Sculpture Garden 1999 5 West Building of the National Gallery of Art 1941 6 East Building of the National Gallery of Art 1978 10 National Museum of the American Indian 2004 shown under construction 11 National Air and Space Museum 1976 12 Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden 1974 13 Arts and Industries Building 1881 14 Smithsonian Institution Building The Castle 1849 15 Freer Gallery of Art 1923 16 Arthur M Sackler Gallery 1987 17 National Museum of African Art 1987 Andrew Jackson Downing Urn in May 2012 Not marked on the above image Above the Smithsonian Institution Building Joseph Henry statue 1883 9 Below the Smithsonian Institution Building Andrew Jackson Downing Urn 1856 10 Above the Arts and Industries Building Smithsonian Carousel 1967 11 To the left of the National Museum of American History Site of the present National Museum of African American History and Culture 2016 12 June 2004 view from the United States Capitol facing west across the National Mall towards the Washington Monument To the left of the Freer Gallery of Art Jamie L Whitten Building U S Department of Agriculture Administration Building 1930 13 Facing east on the National Mall as viewed near the 1300 block of Jefferson Drive S W in April 2010 Rows of American elm trees line the sides of a path traversing the length of the Mall With the exception of the National Gallery of Art all of the museums on the National Mall proper are part of the Smithsonian Institution The Smithsonian Gardens maintains a number of gardens and landscapes near its museums 14 These include Common Ground Our American Garden 2017 15 Enid A Haupt Garden 1987 16 Freer Gallery of Art Courtyard Garden 1923 17 Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden 1974 18 Kathrine Dulin Folger Rose Garden 1998 19 Mary Livingston Ripley Garden 1978 20 National Air and Space Museum landscape 1976 21 Native landscape at the National Museum of the American Indian 2004 22 Pollinator Garden 1995 23 Urban Bird Habitat 24 Victory Garden 25 Features east of the National Mall proper Edit West side of the U S Capitol building September 2013 Features east of the National Mall proper include United States Capitol and its grounds no 7 on image Union Square containing Capitol Reflecting Pool 1971 no 8 on image Ulysses S Grant Memorial 1922 east of no 8 on image Peace Monument 1878 in traffic circle northeast of no 8 in image United States Botanic Garden 1933 no 9 on image James A Garfield Monument 1887 in traffic circle northeast of no 9 in image Features west of the National Mall proper and in West Potomac Park Edit The Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool in July 2005 facing east towards the Washington Monument The view of the Lincoln Memorial from the Reflecting Pool in April 2007 National World War II Memorial July 2017 The west side of the Jefferson Pier in April 2011 with the Washington Monument in the background Interactive Map Landmarks 1 Lincoln Memorial 2 Vietnam Veterans Memorial 3 Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool 4 WWII Memorial 5 Washington Monument 6 Korean War Veterans Memorial 7 Martin Luther King Jr Memorial 8 FDR Memorial 9 Jefferson Memorial Not included in the above map Lockkeeper s House C amp O Canal Extension 1837 Constitution Gardens 1976 Memorial to the 56 Signers of the Declaration of Independence 1984 District of Columbia War Memorial Sylvan Theater George Mason Memorial John Paul Jones Memorial John Ericsson Memorial The Arts of War and The Arts of Peace sculptures Jefferson Pier Tidal Basin paddle boat dock Boundaries and dimensions EditDimensions Edit See also Geography of Washington D C Between the Capitol steps and the Lincoln Memorial the Mall spans 1 9 miles 3 0 km Between the Capitol steps and the Washington Monument the Mall spans 1 2 miles 1 8 km Between the Ulysses S Grant Memorial and the Lincoln Memorial the Mall covers 309 2 acres 125 13 ha Between Constitution Avenue NW and Independence Avenue SW at 7th Street the width of the Mall is 1 586 feet 483 m Between Madison Drive NW and Jefferson Drive SW at 7th Street the width of the Mall s open space is 656 feet 200 m Between the innermost rows of trees near 7th Street the width of the Mall s vista is 300 feet 91 m Boundaries Edit In its 1981 National Register of Historic Places nomination form the NPS defined the boundaries of the National Mall proper as Constitution and Pennsylvania Avenues on the north 1st Street NW on the east Independence and Maryland Avenues on the south and 14th Street NW on the west with the exception of the section of land bordered by Jefferson Drive on the north Independence Avenue on the south and by 12th and 14th Streets respectively on the east and west which the U S Department of Agriculture administers and which contains the Jamie L Whitten Building U S Department of Agriculture Administration Building 6 26 The 2012 2016 National Park Service index describes the National Mall as being a landscaped park that extends from the Capitol to the Washington Monument defined as a principal axis in the L Enfant Plan for the city of Washington 4 However a 2010 NPS plan for the Mall contains maps that show the Mall s general area to be larger 27 28 A document within the plan describes this area as the grounds of the U S Capitol west to the Potomac River and from the Thomas Jefferson Memorial north to Constitution Avenue 7 A map within the plan entitled National Mall Areas illustrates The Mall as being the green space bounded on the east by 3rd Street on the west by 14th Street on the north by Jefferson Drive NW and on the south by Madison Drive SW 29 A Central Intelligence Agency map shows the Mall as occupying the space between the Lincoln Memorial and the United States Capitol 30 In 2011 the 112th United States Congress enacted the Legislative Branch Appropriations Act 2012 which transferred to the Architect of the Capitol the NPS property which is bounded on the north by Pennsylvania Avenue Northwest on the east by First Street Northwest and First Street Southwest on the south by Maryland Avenue Southwest and on the west by Third Street Southwest and Third Street Northwest 31 This act removed Union Square the area containing the Ulysses S Grant Memorial and the Capitol Reflecting Pool from NPS jurisdiction 32 Purposes EditThe National Park Service states that the purposes of the National Mall are to Provide a monumental dignified and symbolic setting for the governmental structures museums and national memorials as first delineated by the L Enfant plan and further outlined in the McMillan plan Maintain and provide for the use of the National Mall with its public promenades as a completed work of civic art a designed historic landscape providing extraordinary vistas to symbols of the nation Maintain National Mall commemorative works memorials monuments statues sites gardens that honor presidential legacies distinguished public figures ideas events and military and civilian sacrifices and contributions Forever retain the West Potomac Park section of the National Mall as a public park for the recreation and enjoyment of the people Maintain the National Mall in the heart of the nation s capital as a stage for national events and a preeminent national civic space for public gatherings because it is here that the constitutional rights of speech and peaceful assembly find their fullest expression Maintain the National Mall as an area free of commercial advertising while retaining the ability to recognize sponsors 7 History EditSee also History of Washington D C L Enfant City Plan Edit Portrait of the Mall and vicinity looking northwest from southeast of the U S Capitol circa 1846 1855 showing stables in the foreground the Washington City Canal behind them the Capitol on the right and the Smithsonian Castle the Washington Monument and the Potomac River in the distant left In his 1791 plan for the future city of Washington D C Pierre Peter Charles L Enfant envisioned a garden lined grand avenue approximately 1 mile 1 6 km in length and 400 feet 120 m wide in an area that would lie between the Congress House now the United States Capitol and an equestrian statue of George Washington The statue would be placed directly south of the President s House now the White House and directly west of the Congress House see L Enfant Plan 33 34 35 The National Mall proper occupies the site of this planned grand avenue which was never constructed Mathew Carey s 1802 map is reported to be the first to name the area west of the United States Capitol as the Mall 36 The name is derived from that of The Mall in London which during the 1700s was a fashionable promenade near Buckingham Palace upon which the city s elite strolled 37 The Lockkeepr s House in 2018 looking northwest Route of the Washington City Canal showing the Mall 1851 The Washington City Canal completed in 1815 in accordance with the L Enfant Plan travelled along the former course of Tiber Creek to the Potomac River along B Street Northwest NW now Constitution Avenue NW and south along the base of a hill containing the Congress House thus defining the northern and eastern boundaries of the Mall 38 39 40 Being shallow and often obstructed by silt the canal served only a limited role and became an open sewer that poured sediment and waste into the Potomac River s flats and shipping channel 38 41 The portion of the canal that traveled near the Mall was covered over in 1871 for sanitary reasons 38 The Smithsonian Institution Building The Castle in February 2007 looking north from the Enid A Haupt Garden Some consider a lockkeeper s house constructed in 1837 near the western end of the Washington City Canal for an eastward extension of the Chesapeake amp Ohio Canal to be the oldest building still standing on the National Mall 42 The structure which is located near the southwestern corner of 17th Street NW and Constitution Avenue NW is west of the National Mall proper 40 43 The Smithsonian Institution Building The Castle constructed from 1847 to 1855 is the oldest building now present on the National Mall proper 44 The Washington Monument whose construction began in 1848 and reached completion in 1888 stands near the planned site of its namesake s equestrian statue 45 The Jefferson Pier marks the planned site of the statue itself 46 Downing Plan Edit 1863 photograph of the National Mall and vicinity during the Civil War looking west towards the U S Botanical Garden Washington City Canal Gas Works railroad tracks Washington Armory and Armory Square Hospital buildings The Smithsonian Institution Building the uncompleted Washington Monument behind the Smithsonian s building and the Potomac River are in the background The Victorian landscaping and architecture of the Mall looking east from the top of the Washington Monument showing the influence of the Downing Plan and Adolph Cluss on the National Mall circa 1904 The Department of Agriculture Building and above it The Castle are in the foreground A railroad route leading to a shed attached to the Baltimore and Potomac Railroad station not visible crosses the Mall behind the Arts and Industry Building the Army Medical Center and the Armory View looking north of the National Mall with the Treasury Building in the background in April 1865 View the National Mall with its livestock and the Treasury Building in the background in April 1865 Map of the Mall in 1893 showing the Monument Grounds Agricultural Grounds Smithsonian Grounds Armory Square Public Grounds and Botanical Garden as well as parts of the recently created Tidal Reservoir and Proposed Park 47 During the early 1850s architect and horticulturist Andrew Jackson Downing designed a landscape plan for the Mall 34 48 49 Over the next half century federal agencies developed several naturalistic parks within the Mall in accordance with Downing s plan 34 48 Two such areas were Henry Park and Seaton Park 50 During that period the Mall was subdivided into several areas between B Street Northwest NW now Constitution Avenue NW and B Street Southwest SW now Independence Avenue SW The Public Grounds between 2nd and 6th Streets NW and SW The Armory Grounds between 6th and 7th Streets NW and SW The Smithsonian Grounds between 7th and 12th Streets NW and SW The Agricultural Grounds between 12th and 14th Streets NW and SW The Monument Grounds between 14th and 17th Streets NW and SW 51 In 1856 the Armory No 27 on the 1893 map of the Mall was built at the intersection of B Street SW and 6th Street SW on the Armory Grounds In 1862 during the American Civil War the building was converted to a military hospital known as Armory Square Hospital to house Union Army casualties After the war ended the Armory building became the home of the United States Fish Commission 52 The United States Congress established the United States Department of Agriculture in 1862 during the Civil War 53 Designed by Adolf Cluss and Joseph von Kammerhueber the United States Department of Agriculture Building No 25 on the map was constructed in 1867 1868 north of B Street SW within a 35 acre site on the Mall 54 After the Civil War ended the Department of Agriculture started growing experimental crops and demonstration gardens on the Mall These gardens extended from the department s building near the south side of the Mall to B Street NW the northern boundary of the Mall The building was razed in 1930 53 In addition greenhouses belonging to the U S Botanical Garden No 16 on the map appeared near the east end of the Mall between the Washington City Canal and the Capitol later between 1st and 3rd Streets NW and SW 48 Originating during the early 1800s as a collection of market stalls immediately north of the Washington City Canal and the Mall the Center Market No 19 on the map which Adolf Cluss also designed opened in 1872 soon after the canal closed Located on the north side of Constitution Avenue NW the National Archives now occupies the Market s site 55 56 During that period railroad tracks crossed the Mall on 6th Street west of the Capitol 34 Near the tracks several structures were built over the years The Baltimore and Potomac Railroad station B on the map rose in 1873 on the north side of the Mall at the southwest corner of 6th Street and B Street NW now the site of the west building of the National Gallery of Art 57 In 1881 the Arts and Industries Building No 34 on the map known originally as the National Museum Building opened on the north side of B Street SW to the east of The Castle Designed in 1876 by Adolf Cluss and his associates the building is the second oldest still standing on the National Mall proper 58 In 1887 the Army Medical Museum and Library which Adolf Cluss designed in 1885 opened on the Mall at northwest corner of B Street SW and 7th Street SW 59 60 The Smithsonian Institution s Hirshhorn Museum now occupies the site of the building which was demolished in 1968 60 Meanwhile in order to clean up the Potomac Flats and to make the Potomac River more navigable in 1882 Congress authorized the Army Corps of Engineers to dredge the river The Corps used the sediment removed from the shipping channel to fill in the flats The work started in 1882 and continued until 1911 creating the Tidal Basin and 628 new acres of land Part of the new land which became West Potomac Park expanded the Mall southward and westward see 1893 map above 41 61 Looking east from the top of the Washington Monument towards the United States Capitol in the summer of 1901 The Mall exhibited the Victorian era landscape of winding paths and random plantings that Andrew Jackson Downing designed in the 1850s The Armory as a hospital during the Civil War Department of Agriculture Building circa 1895 Center Market circa 1875 looking northwest from The Mall Center Market between 1910 and 1930 looking southwest from 7th Street NW at left Arts and Industries Building looking southwest March 2017 Baltimore and Potomac Railroad station looking southwest from 6th Street NW at bottom and left Army Medical Museum and Library looking northeast from Independence Avenue SWMcMillan Plan Edit The National Mall was the centerpiece of the 1902 McMillan Plan A central open vista traversed the length of the Mall In 1902 the McMillan Commission s plan which was partially inspired by the City Beautiful Movement and which purportedly extended L Enfant s plan called for a radical redesign of the Mall that would replace its greenhouses gardens trees and commercial industrial facilities with an open space 34 48 62 The plan differed from L Enfant s by replacing the 400 feet 120 m wide grand avenue with a 300 feet 91 m wide vista containing a long and broad expanse of grass Four rows of American elm trees Ulmus americana planted fifty feet apart between two paths or streets would line each side of the vista Buildings housing cultural and educational institutions constructed in the Beaux Arts style would line each outer path or street on the opposite side of the path or street from the elms 34 48 62 63 64 65 In subsequent years the vision of the McMillan plan was generally followed with the planting of American elms and the layout of four boulevards down the Mall two on either side of a wide lawn 63 66 67 In accordance with a plan that it completed in 1976 the NPS converted the two innermost boulevards Washington Drive NW and Adams Drive SW into gravel walking paths 63 The two outermost boulevards Madison Drive NW and Jefferson Drive SW remain paved and open to vehicular traffic 63 Temporary war buildings Edit Further information Temporary buildings of the National Mall During World Wars I and II the federal government constructed a number of temporary buildings tempos on the Mall disrupting the area s planned layout Most of these buildings were in two clusters one near the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool and the other on the National Mall proper in the vicinity of 4th through 7th Streets NW and SW 68 69 70 World War I temporary buildings Edit Eastward view of the National Mall from the top of the Washington Monument in 1918 The three structures and two chimneys crossing the Mall are temporary World War I buildings A B and C and parts of their central power plant 71 The United States entered World War I in April 1917 72 By 1918 a row of tempos designated from north to south as Buildings A B and C had stretched across the Mall along the east side of the former railroad route on 6th Street The smokestacks of the buildings centrally located power plant were set apart to preserve the view of the Washington Monument from the Capitol building 69 71 73 Soon afterwards the government constructed Buildings D E and F to the east and west of the row 69 73 Around 1921 when the United States and Germany signed the U S German Peace Treaty thus formally ending the war between the two nations 74 the government demolished Buildings A and B The remaining tempos held offices of several agencies belonging to the Agriculture Commerce Treasury and War Departments for a number of years after the war ended 69 73 75 The government then slowly dismantled most of the tempos that had remained within the Mall proper removing the power plant and nearby buildings by 1936 76 Among those removed was Building C which the government demolished between 1933 and 1936 77 By 1937 the government had removed all of the World War I tempos that had been within the National Mall proper except for Building E thus largely restoring the Mall s central vista 66 However another World War I tempo which the government constructed south of the Mall in 1919 between 14th Street SW and the Tidal Basin as the Liberty Loan Building remained standing in 2019 while housing the Treasury Department s Bureau of the Fiscal Service 78 79 Westward view from the top of the Washington Monument in 1943 or 1944 during World War II In the foreground temporary buildings on the Washington Monument grounds house the Navy s Bureau of Ships The Main Navy and Munitions Buildings stand to the right of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool Temporary buildings to the left of the Reflecting Pool house the Navy s Bureau of Supplies and Accounts 80 In 1918 contractors for the United States Navy s Bureau of Yards and Docks constructed the Main Navy and Munitions Buildings along nearly a third of a mile of the south side of Constitution Avenue then known as B Street from 17th Street NW to 21st Street NW 79 81 82 83 Although the Navy intended the buildings to provide temporary quarters for the United States military during World War I the reinforced concrete structures remained in place until 1970 79 81 82 After their demolition much of their former sites became Constitution Gardens which was dedicated in 1976 82 84 World War II temporary buildings Edit During World War II the government constructed a larger set of temporary buildings on the Mall in the area of the former World War I tempos along the south side of Constitution Avenue between 12th and 14th Streets NW on the west side of the Washington Monument grounds along the entire length of the south side of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool and between the Reflecting Pool and the Main Navy and Munition buildings on the Pool s north side Numbers identified new buildings built on the Monument grounds while letters identified the remainder The government also built dormitories residence halls and facilities for dining and recreation south of the eastern half of the Mall and within the part of West Potomac Park that lay south of the Mall s western half 70 85 The government progressively demolished all of the World War II tempos beginning in 1964 79 After the government removed the Main Navy and Munitions buildings in 1970 much of their former sites became Constitution Gardens which was dedicated in 1976 82 79 84 Later history Edit Rows of young American elm trees on the National Mall looking east from the top of the Washington Monument circa 1942 This view from the top of the Washington Monument shows rows of elm trees lining the Reflecting Pool November 2014 The planting of American elm trees Ulmus americana on the National Mall following the McMillan Plan started in the 1930s between 3rd and 14th Streets at the same time that Dutch Elm Disease DED began to appear in the United States Concern was expressed about the impact that DED could have on these trees 86 DED first appeared on the Mall during the 1950s and reached a peak in the 1970s The NPS has used a number of methods to control this fungal epidemic including sanitation pruning injecting trees with fungicide and replanting with DED resistant American elm cultivars see Ulmus americana cultivars The NPS cloned one such cultivar Jefferson from a DED resistant tree growing near a path on the Mall in front of the Freer Gallery of Art near the Smithsonian Institution Building The Castle 87 The NPS has combated the disease s local insect vector the smaller European elm bark beetle Scolytus multistriatus by trapping and by spraying with insecticides Soil compaction and root damage by crowds and construction projects also adversely affect the elms 86 On October 15 1966 the NPS listed the National Mall on the National Register of Historic Places 88 In 1981 the NPS prepared a National Register nomination form that documented the Mall s boundaries features and historical significance 6 Uncle Beazley on the National Mall between 1980 and 1994 National Park Service map showing the National Mall s designated reserve area referenced in the 2003 Commemorative Works Clarification and Revision Act Barricade blocking walkway adjacent to the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool during the 2013 federal government shutdown looking east toward the Washington Monument undergoing repair Aerial view of the Mall facing west between 1980 and 1999 Looking east from the top of the Washington Monument towards the National Mall and the United States Capitol in December 1999 From the 1970s to 1994 a fiberglass model of a triceratops named Uncle Beazley stood on the Mall in front of the National Museum of Natural History The life size statue which is now located at the National Zoological Park the National Zoo in Northwest Washington D C was donated to the Smithsonian Institution by the Sinclair Oil Corporation The statue which Louis Paul Jonas created for Sinclair s DinoLand pavilion at the 1964 New York World s Fair was named after a dinosaur in Oliver Butterworth s 1956 children s book The Enormous Egg and the 1968 televised movie adaptation in which the statue appeared 89 In 2003 the 108th United States Congress enacted the Commemorative Works Clarification and Revision Act This Act prohibits the siting of new commemorative works and visitor centers in a designated reserve area within the cross axis of the Mall 90 In October 2013 a two week federal government shutdown closed the National Mall and its museums and monuments 91 However when a group of elderly veterans tried to enter the National World War II Memorial during the shutdown s first day the memorial s barricades were removed 92 The NPS subsequently announced that the veterans had a legal right to be in the memorial and would not be barred in the future 93 During the shutdown s second week the NPS permitted a controversial immigration rally and concert to take place on the Mall 94 On December 8 2016 the NPS listed on the National Register of Historic Places an increase in the National Mall Historic District s boundary to encompass an area bounded by 3rd Street NW SW Independence Avenue SW Raoul Wallenberg Place SW the CSX Railroad the Potomac River Constitution Ave NW 17th Street NW the White House Grounds and 15th Street NW The listing s registration form which contained 232 pages described and illustrated the history and features of the historic district s proposed expanded area 2 Demolished or moved structures EditWashington City Canal covered over by Constitution Avenue NW 3rd Street NW and SW and Canal Street SW now Washington Street SW Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Station closed in 1907 when Union Station opened United States Department of Agriculture Building demolished in 1930 Center Market replaced in 1931 by the National Archives Building Armory Square Hospital Armory replaced in 1976 by the National Air and Space Museum Army Medical Museum and Library demolished in 1968 replaced by the Hirshhorn Museum Temporary Main Navy and Munitions Buildings built in 1918 demolished in 1970 replaced by Constitution Gardens Uncle Beazley moved in 1994 to the National Zoo Other attractions nearby EditSee also Category Tourist attractions in Washington D C 2007 aerial view of Capitol Hill and the National Mall facing west Other attractions within walking distance of the National Mall proper include Attractions east of the Capitol Edit Folger Shakespeare Library Library of Congress United States Supreme Court BuildingAttractions northeast of the National Mall proper Edit Holodomor Genocide Memorial Japanese American Memorial to Patriotism During World War II National Postal Museum Robert A Taft Memorial Union StationAttractions north of the National Mall proper Edit Inlay of L Enfant Plan in Freedom Plaza looking northwest in June 2005 from the observation deck in the Old Post Office Building Clock Tower Ford s Theatre George Gordon Meade Memorial Inlay of L Enfant s plan for the federal capital city in Freedom Plaza National Archives National Building Museum National Law Enforcement Museum National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial National Museum of Women in the Arts National Portrait Gallery National Theatre Old Post Office Building and Clock Tower Pershing Park and National World War I Memorial Smithsonian American Art Museum United States Navy MemorialAttractions northwest of the National Mall proper Edit John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts June 2010 National Christmas Tree November 28 2018 A Christmas tree in front of the Capitol in December 2013 Albert Einstein Memorial Boy Scout Memorial Butt Millet Memorial Fountain Enid Haupt Fountains 95 First Division Monument German American Friendship Garden Interior Museum John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts National Christmas Tree Second Division Memorial Settlers of the District of Columbia Memorial 96 Statues of the Liberators The Ellipse Theodore Roosevelt Island U S Capitol Gatehouses and Gateposts White House on a line directly north of the Washington Monument Zero MilestoneAttractions west of the National Mall proper Edit Arlington Memorial Bridge The Arts of War and The Arts of Peace statues at the eastern approach to the Arlington Memorial Bridge Marine Corps War Memorial Netherlands CarillonAttractions southwest of the National Mall proper Edit Tidal Basin and Jefferson Memorial at dusk facing south in October 2011 Arlington House The Robert E Lee Memorial Arlington National Cemetery Bureau of Engraving and Printing Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial George Mason Memorial Jefferson Memorial Lady Bird Johnson Park Lyndon Baines Johnson Memorial Grove on the Potomac Martin Luther King Jr Memorial Tidal Basin United States Forest Service Museum 97 United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Women in Military Service for America MemorialAttractions south of the National Mall proper Edit L Enfant Promenade August 2013 American Veterans Disabled for Life Memorial International Spy Museum L Enfant Promenade and Plaza Museum of the Bible Overlook in Benjamin Banneker ParkUsage EditIn combination with the other attractions in the Washington Metropolitan Area the National Mall makes the nation s capital city one of the most popular tourist destinations in the country It has several other uses in addition to serving as a tourist focal point Protests and rallies Edit Further information List of rallies and protest marches in Washington D C 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom on the National Mall facing east from the Lincoln Memorial The National Mall s status as a vast open expanse at the heart of the capital makes it an attractive site for protests and rallies of all types One notable example was the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom a political rally during the Civil Rights Movement at which Martin Luther King Jr delivered his speech I Have a Dream The largest officially recorded rally was the Vietnam War Moratorium Rally on October 15 1969 However in 1995 the NPS issued a crowd estimate for the Million Man March with which an organizer of the event Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan disagreed 98 99 The next year a committee of the 104th United States Congress provided no funds for NPS crowd counting activities in Washington D C when it prepared legislation making 1997 appropriations for the U S Department of the Interior 98 100 As a result the NPS has not provided any official crowd size estimates for Mall events since 1995 98 99 101 The absence of such an official estimate fueled a political controversy following the presidential inauguration of Donald Trump in 2017 see Inauguration of Donald Trump crowd size 102 On April 25 2004 the March for Women s Lives filled the Mall 103 On January 27 2007 tens of thousands of protesters opposed to the Iraq War converged on the Mall see January 27 2007 anti war protest drawing comparisons by participants to the Vietnam War protest 104 105 On June 12 2018 the National Hockey League s Washington Capitals staged a rally on the Mall after parading through the city to celebrate the franchise s first Stanley Cup championship victory Tens of thousands of fans reportedly joined the beer soaked event 106 Presidential inaugurations Edit Further information United States presidential inauguration The first inauguration of Barack Obama on January 20 2009 facing west from the Capitol During presidential inaugurations people without official tickets gather at the National Mall Normally the Mall between 7th and 14th Streets NW is used as a staging ground for the parade 107 On December 4 2008 the Presidential Inaugural Committee see United States presidential inauguration organizers announced for the first time the entire length of the National Mall will be opened to the public so that more people than ever before will be able to witness the swearing in of the president from a vantage point in sight of the Capitol 108 The committee made this arrangement because of the massive attendance projected to be as many as 2 million people that it expected for the first inauguration of Barack Obama on January 20 2009 Despite the arrangement a throng of people seeking access to the event climbed and then removed temporary protective fences around the Smithsonian s Mary Livingston Ripley Garden six blocks from the site at which Obama took his inaugural oath Hordes then trampled the garden s vegetation and elevated plant beds when entering and leaving the event 109 Others could not find a way to enter the Mall in time to view the ceremony More than a thousand people with purple tickets missed the event while being stranded in the I 395 Third Street Tunnel beneath the Mall after police directed them there see Purple Tunnel of Doom 110 Terrance W Gainer the Sergeant at Arms of the United States Senate stated that it appeared that the stranding had occurred because there were more bulky people in coats than the event s purple section could accommodate 111 The Joint Congressional Committee on Inaugural Ceremonies subsequently announced that ticket holders that were not admitted would receive copies of the swearing in invitation and program photos of Obama and Vice President Joe Biden and a color print of the ceremony 112 Other events and recreational activities Edit The National Mall has long served as a spot for jogging picnics and light recreation for the Washington population The Smithsonian Carousel located on the Mall in front of the Arts and Industry Building is a popular attraction The Allan Herschell Company built the carousel which arrived at Gwynn Oak Park near Baltimore Maryland in 1947 The carousel was moved to the Mall in 1981 and now operates seasonally 11 Annual events Edit A number of large free events recur annually on the Mall 113 A kite festival formerly named the Smithsonian Kite Festival and now named the Blossom Kite Festival usually takes place each year on the Washington Monument grounds during the last weekend of March as part of the National Cherry Blossom Festival The event s organizers cancelled the 2020 kite festival which they had earlier scheduled to take place on the Washington Monument grounds on Saturday March 28 because of concerns related the ongoing coronavirus pandemic 114 An Earth Day celebration often takes place on the Mall around April 22 115 A week long series of rallies exhibits observances and performances occurred on the Mall from April 17 to April 25 2010 to commemorate Earth Day s 40th anniversary 116 The final day s events featured performances by Sting Mavis Staples The Roots John Legend and others 117 The 2012 Earth Day rally which featured music entertainment celebrity speakers and environmental activities took place on the Mall during a rainy day on Sunday April 22 Cheap Trick Dave Mason Kicking Daisies Sting John Legend Joss Stone The Roots Mavis Staples Jimmy Cliff Bob Weir and The Explorers Club performed and Congressmen John Dingell and Edward Markey spoke 118 In 2013 an Earth Month at Washington s Union Station replaced the Mall s Earth Day event 119 On April 19 2015 a Global Citizen Earth Day concert featured performances on the Washington Monument grounds by Usher My Morning Jacket Mary J Blige Train and No Doubt 120 Independence Day fireworks display between the Washington Monument and the Lincoln Memorial July 4 1986 The National Symphony Orchestra presents each year its National Memorial Day Concert on the west lawn of the United States Capitol during the evening of the Sunday before Memorial Day the last Monday of May 121 The National Gallery of Art hosts a Jazz in the Garden series each year in the museum s Sculpture Garden on Friday evenings from late May through August 122 Components of the United States Navy Band the United States Air Force Band the United States Marine Band and the United States Army Band perform on the west steps of the United States Capitol on Monday Tuesday Wednesday and Friday evenings respectively during June July and August 123 124 The Marine Band repeats each Wednesday Capitol performance on the following evening Thursday at the Sylvan Theater on the grounds of the Washington Monument 124 Components of U S military bands also provide evening concerts at the World War II Memorial from May through August 125 The Smithsonian Folklife Festival takes place on the Mall each year for two weeks around Independence Day July 4 126 127 On that holiday the A Capitol Fourth concert takes place in the late afternoon and early evening on the west lawn of the Capitol 128 This and other Independence Day celebrations on and near the Mall end after sunset with a fireworks display between the Washington Monument and the Lincoln Memorial 129 The National Symphony Orchestra presents each year its Labor Day Capitol Concert on the west lawn of the United States Capitol during the evening of the Sunday before Labor Day the first Monday of September 130 Other events Edit The April 9 1939 concert by Marian Anderson facing east from the Lincoln Memorial On April 9 1939 singer Marian Anderson gave an Easter Sunday concert at the Lincoln Memorial after the Daughters of the American Revolution DAR denied a request by Howard University for her to give an Easter performance at the DAR s nearby racially segregated Constitution Hall see Marian Anderson s 1939 Lincoln Memorial concert The event which 75 000 people attended occurred after President Franklin D Roosevelt gave his assent for the performance 131 132 The 1976 United States Bicentennial celebration provided the motivation for planning to accommodate large numbers of expected visitors to the National Mall A number of major memorials were added to the Mall throughout that period 133 On May 21 1976 Constitution Gardens was dedicated 134 On July 1 the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum opened 135 On July 4 the Bicentennial fireworks display on the Mall attracted one million viewers making it second only to the 1965 presidential inauguration of Lyndon B Johnson as the largest event in the Mall s history up to that time 136 On Sunday October 9 1979 Pope John Paul II celebrated Mass on the National Mall during a visit to Washington 137 The celebration took place after an appellate court denied a motion for an injunction that atheists Madalyn Murray O Hair and Jon Garth Murray had filed to prevent the event from occurring 138 From 1980 through 1982 The Beach Boys and The Grass Roots performed Independence Day concerts on the Mall attracting large crowds 139 140 141 However in April 1983 Secretary of the Interior James G Watt banned Independence Day concerts on the Mall by such groups Watt said that rock bands that had performed on the Mall on Independence Day in 1981 and 1982 had encouraged drug use and alcoholism and had attracted the wrong element who would mug individuals and families attending any similar events in the future 140 Watt then announced that Las Vegas crooner Wayne Newton a friend and supporter of President Ronald Reagan and a contributor to Republican Party political campaigns would perform at the Mall s 1983 Independence Day celebration 140 142 During the ensuing uproar Rob Grill lead singer of The Grass Roots stated that he felt highly insulted by Watt s remarks which he called nothing but un American 140 The Beach Boys stated that the Soviet Union which had invited them to perform in Leningrad in 1978 obviously did not feel that the group attracted the wrong element 140 Vice President George H W Bush said of The Beach Boys They re my friends and I like their music 140 On July 3 1983 thousands attended a heavily policed Rock Against Reagan concert that the hardcore punk rock band Dead Kennedys performed on the Mall in response to Watt s action 143 When Newton entered an Independence Day stage on the Mall on July 4 members of his audience booed 144 145 Watt apologized to The Beach Boys First Lady Nancy Reagan apologized for Watt and in 1984 The Beach Boys gave an Independence Day concert on the Mall to an audience of 750 000 people 144 146 Britney Spears performs during the NFL Kickoff Live from the National Mall Presented by Pepsi Vanilla concert September 4 2003 On September 4 2003 Britney Spears Mary J Blige Aretha Franklin Aerosmith and others performed in a nationally televised NFL Kickoff Live from the National Mall Presented by Pepsi Vanilla see Pre game concerts for National Football League kickoff game 147 Preceded by a three day National Football League interactive Super Bowl theme park the event had primarily commercial purposes unlike earlier major activities on the Mall Three weeks later the United States Senate overwhelmingly passed legislation that when enacted into law limited displays of commercial sponsorship on the Mall 148 On July 7 2007 one leg of Live Earth was held outdoors at the National Museum of the American Indian on the Mall Former Vice President Al Gore presented and artists such as Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood performed 149 Occurring once every two to three years on the Mall in the early fall from 2002 to 2009 150 the U S Department of Energy Solar Decathlon displayed solar powered houses that competitive collegiate teams designed constructed and operated 151 152 Igniting a controversy the Department of Energy DOE decided to move the 2011 Decathlon off the Mall claiming that this would support an effort to protect improve and restore the park 153 Federal officials stated that heavy equipment that had placed two story houses on the Mall during earlier Decathlons had cracked walkways and killed grass to a greater extent than had most other Mall events 154 On February 4 2011 a Washington Post editorial criticized attempts to have President Obama restore the Decathlon to the Mall 155 Nevertheless by February 12 2011 at least thirteen U S senators had signed a letter asking the DOE to reconsider its decision 154 On February 23 2011 the DOE and the Department of the Interior announced that the 2011 Solar Decathlon would take place along Ohio Drive southeast of the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial in West Potomac Park 156 The event took place in the Park from September 23 through October 2 2011 152 157 The 2013 Decathlon took place in California instead of Washington 158 From 2003 to 2013 the National Book Festival took place on the Mall each year in late September or early October 159 However the event moved to the Walter E Washington Convention Center in 2014 because the NPS became concerned about the damage that pedestrians had inflicted on the Mall s lawn during previous Festivals 160 A four day exhibition took place each year on the Mall during Public Service Recognition Week the first full week of May until 2010 Government agencies participating in the event sponsored exhibits that displayed the works of public employees and that enabled visitors to learn about government programs and initiatives discuss employee benefits and interact with agency representatives 161 However the 2011 United States federal budget Public Law 112 10 which was belatedly enacted on April 15 2011 contained no funding for that year s event forcing the event s cancellation 162 The event did not take place in 2012 163 On June 12 2010 Tareq and Michaele Salahi a couple under investigation for allegedly crashing a White House state dinner for the prime minister of India in November 2009 see 2009 U S state dinner security breaches hosted an America s Polo Cup match between the United States and India on the Mall charging 95 per person for admission 164 A spokesman for the Embassy of India stated that neither the Embassy nor the government of India had any association with the event 164 Reports of the event stated that the players who represented India were actually of Pakistani origin and were from Florida 165 The Concert for Valor on the National Mall on November 11 2014 looking west from the United States Capitol grounds The inaugural USA Science and Engineering Festival Expo took place on the National Mall and surrounding areas on October 23 and 24 2010 More than 1 500 free interactive exhibits reportedly drew about 500 000 people to the event 166 which had over 75 performances 167 The second Expo took place on April 28 29 2012 in the Walter E Washington Convention Center 168 On Veterans Day November 11 2014 Bruce Springsteen Eminem Rihanna Metallica Carrie Underwood Dave Grohl the Zac Brown Band and other pop entertainers performed on the Mall during a free evening Concert for Valor honoring veterans and their families Attendance was in the hundreds of thousands making it one of the biggest events on the Mall for the year 169 The annual Screen on the Green movie festival took place on the Mall on Monday nights during July and August for 17 years until 2015 Free classic movies were projected on large portable screens and typically drew crowds of thousands of people Organizers cancelled the event in 2016 when the event s sponsors HBO and Comcast terminated their support stating that they needed their resources for other projects 170 During October 2020 artist Suzanne Brennan Firstenberg installed 267 080 white flags within a 4 acres 1 6 ha site at the D C Armory Parade Grounds near Washington s Robert F Kennedy Memorial Stadium to temporarily memorialize the lives lost in the United States during the COVID 19 pandemic 171 She recreated her memorial on the Washington Monument grounds during September 2021 when covering for three weeks a 20 acres 8 1 ha area with 700 000 white flags 172 Improvements and future plans EditNational Mall Plan Edit From 2006 through 2010 the NPS conducted a public process that created a plan for the future of the National Mall 27 On July 13 2010 the NPS issued in the Federal Register a notice of availability of a final environmental impact statement EIS for the National Mall Plan 173 The two volume final EIS responded to comments and incorporated changes to a draft EIS for the Plan 174 The Sylvan Theater in 2011 Constitution Gardens in 2011 On November 9 2010 the NPS and the Department of the Interior issued a Record of Decision ROD that completed the planning process 27 175 176 177 The ROD contains a summary of the selected alternative which is the basis for the Plan together with mitigation measures developed to minimize environmental harm other alternatives considered the basis for the decision in terms of planning objectives and the criteria used to develop the preferred alternative a finding of no impairment of park resources and values the environmentally preferable alternative and the public and agency involvement 178 179 The Plan proposed several changes to the Mall The NPS would construct a vast expanse of paved surface in Union Square at the east end of the Mall to accommodate demonstrations and other events by reducing the size of the Capitol Reflecting Pool or by replacing the pool with a fountain or other minor water feature Additional proposed changes included the replacement of the Sylvan Theater on the Washington Monument grounds with a facility containing offices restaurants and restrooms as well as the replacement of an open space near the east end of Constitution Gardens with a multipurpose visitor facility containing food service retail and restrooms 27 175 176 177 On December 2 2010 the National Capital Planning Commission NCPC unanimously approved the final National Mall Plan at a public hearing 180 The NCPC s approval allowed the NPS to move forward with implementation of the Plan s recommendations 27 177 178 180 On March 1 2012 the NCPC discussed a proposal that when implemented reduced the Mall s green space by widening and paving most of the north south walkways that cross the Mall between Seventh and Fourteenth Streets The project also replaced with gravel large areas of grass that were located near the Smithsonian Metro Station and the National Gallery of Art s Sculpture Garden 181 On September 8 2011 the Trust for the National Mall 182 and the NPS announced an open competition for a redesign of the spaces on the National Mall that Union Square the Sylvan Theater grounds and the Constitution Gardens lake now occupy 183 Former First Lady of the United States Laura Bush agreed to be the honorary co chair of a drive to raise funds for the three projects 183 On April 9 2012 the Trust for the National Mall announced the ideas for the redesign of Union Square the Sylvan Theater grounds and Constitution Gardens lake area that finalists in the competition had submitted The Trust asked the public to submit online comments that the competition jury would consider when evaluating each design 184 The Trust announced the winners of the competition on May 2 2012 Groundbreaking for the first project was expected to take place by 2014 with the first ribbon cutting ceremony by 2016 185 On October 1 2015 the NCPC approved preliminary and final site and building plans that the NPS had submitted for the first phase rehabilitation of Constitution Gardens Plans included the relocation and rehabilitation of the Lockkeeper s House C amp O Canal Extension a new entry plaza at the corner of Constitution Avenue and 17th Street NW landscaping a meadow and pollinator habitat and a new perimeter garden wall A temporary path would connect to an existing plaza located at the eastern end of Constitution Garden s lake 186 The NPS began to implement the first phase rehabilitation of Constitution Gardens in 2017 A Park Service contractor moved the Lockkeeper s House C amp O Canal Extension southward and westward away from Constitution Avenue NW and 17th Street NW while retaining the structure s east west orientation 43 187 The NPS restored the building s exterior to the conditions that had existed before the building was modified during 1915 and earlier years The NPS also replaced the structure s brick chimneys thus restoring the building to its original 1800s appearance The building reopened temporarily in late August 2018 and permanently on September 13 of that year 42 43 188 The structure now serves in its new location as an NPS education center 42 43 Reconstruction and restoration Edit From 2010 to 2012 NPS contractors rebuilt the aging Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool which had first been constructed in the early 1920s and whose water had come from the pipes that supply Washington D C with its drinking water As a result of the project the pool now receives filtered water from the Tidal Basin through a high density polyethylene HDPE pipeline 189 The NPS then began a four year restoration of the portion of the central axis of the Mall that lies between 3rd Street and 14th Street 190 By 2016 the restoration project had completely replaced the deteriorated and weedy turf that had previously covered much of that part of the Mall with a new cover containing soil fescue Festuca and Kentucky bluegrass Poa pratensis 191 Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool before reconstruction April 2010 Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool undergoing reconstruction June 2011 Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool undergoing reconstruction December 2011 Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool after reconstruction May 2016 Axis of National Mall before restoration July 2012 Axis of National Mall undergoing restoration April 2015 Axis of National Mall undergoing restoration October 2015 Axis of National Mall after restoration September 2016 Aerial view of National Mall Looking SouthTransportation EditSee also Transportation in Washington D C Public transportation Edit The Smithsonian station of the Washington Metro in 2005 The National Mall is accessible via the Washington Metro with the Smithsonian station located on the south side of the Mall near the Smithsonian Institution Building between the Washington Monument and the United States Capitol 192 The Federal Triangle Archives Judiciary Square and Union Station Metro stations are also located near the Mall to the north 193 The L Enfant Plaza Federal Center Southwest and Capitol South Metro stations are located several blocks south of the Mall 194 Metrobus and the DC Circulator make scheduled stops near the Mall 195 Bicycles Edit The NPS provides parking facilities for bicycles near each of the major memorials as well as along the National Mall 196 From March to October an NPS concessionaire rents out bicycles at the Thompson Boat Center located near the intersection of Virginia Avenue NW and Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway 1 mile 1 6 km north of the Lincoln Memorial along the Potomac River Rock Creek Trail 196 197 The first two of five approved Capital Bikeshare stations opened on the National Mall on March 16 2012 shortly before the start of the 2012 National Cherry Blossom Festival 198 The National Mall is the official midpoint of the East Coast Greenway a 2 900 mile long system of shared use bicycle trails linking Calais Maine with Key West Florida 199 Electric scooters and Segways Edit The use of an electric scooter or a Segway falls under the NPS definition of recreational use of a self propelled vehicle People without identified disabilities can only use such vehicles on park roadways NPS rules therefore prohibit people without disabilities from using electric scooters and Segways on sidewalks and paths within the National Mall and its memorials 200 201 Several companies rent out electric scooters within the District of Columbia However the National Mall is outside of those companies service areas Some such companies therefore charge fines for people who end their rides on the Mall Others do not allow people to end their trips until they have left the area 201 Pedicabs Edit The NPS licenses pedicab drivers to provide transportation and tours of the National Mall through its Commercial Use Authorization program 202 Motor vehicle parking Edit Due to limited dining options on the mall food trucks are often found parked on the street next to tourist dense locations General visitor parking is available along Ohio Drive SW between the Lincoln and Thomas Jefferson Memorials Bus parking is available primarily along Ohio Drive SW near the Lincoln and Thomas Jefferson Memorials and along Ohio Drive SW in East Potomac Park There is limited handicapped parking at the Franklin Delano Roosevelt and World War II Memorials and near the Washington Monument and the Thomas Jefferson Lincoln Korean War Veterans and Vietnam Veterans Memorials otherwise parking is extremely scarce in and near the Mall 203 In April 2017 the NPS awarded a contract for the installation of parking meters on streets and in parking areas on the Mall On June 12 2017 the NPS and the District of Columbia Department of Public Works began to enforce metered parking on approximately 1 100 parking spaces in which motorists could previously park without charge 203 204 Weather and climate Edit The Mall following a snow storm On July 16 2016 speakers and musicians participated in a gathering of thousands of evangelicals during a Together 2016 rally on the Mall 205 206 Although the event was originally scheduled to conclude at 9 p m it ended at 4 p m due to excessive heat Officers reportedly responded to 350 medical calls for heat related injuries The large number of people who lost consciousness because of heat syncope overwhelmed emergency medical technicians 205 207 On July 1 2021 an EF1 tornado formed in Arlington County Virginia at 8 59 p m crossed the Potomac River near the Theodore Roosevelt Bridge and traveled eastward along the National Mall before dissipating near 16th Street NW and Constitution Avenue south of the White House and The Ellipse 4 4 mi 7 km from where it had started Its maximum winds were 90 mph 145 km h and it was as wide as 125 yards 114 m The National Weather Service reported that wind damage to trees on the Mall was prominent from 23rd St NW east for 0 75 mi 1 2 km to near 16th Street NW south of The Ellipse The weather service stated that the tornado lifted up and twisted temporary fencing installed on the Mall for the upcoming July 4 Independence Day celebration The fencing landed in a mangled and haphazard manner before the twister dissipated at 9 05 p m 208 National MallClimate chart explanation J F M A M J J A S O N D 82 4 2 108 5 1 80 15 4 125 25 10 106 28 15 133 30 20 105 30 21 128 32 23 74 29 17 149 21 10 56 14 6 125 6 1 Average max and min temperatures in C Precipitation totals in mmSource 209 Imperial conversionJFMAMJJASOND 3 2 39 28 4 3 41 30 3 1 59 39 4 9 77 50 4 2 82 59 5 2 86 68 4 1 86 70 5 90 73 2 9 84 63 5 9 70 50 2 2 57 43 4 9 43 34 Average max and min temperatures in F Precipitation totals in inchesSee also EditNational Register of Historic Places listings in Washington D C Operation Fast Forward Capitol Mall a similar but smaller parkway situated in front of California State Capitol modeled on the National Mall Architecture of Washington D C References Edit National Register of Historic Places NPS Focus National Park Service Archived from the original on July 25 2008 Retrieved July 8 2010 a b District of Columbia National Mall Historic District Boundary Increase and Additional Documentation Bounded by 3rd St NW SW Independence Ave SW Raoul Wallenberg Pl SW CSX RR Potomac R Constitution Ave NW Washington 16000805 Listed 12 8 2016 National Register of Historic Places Program Weekly List of Actions Taken on Properties 11 28 2016 through 12 2 2016 National Park Service December 9 2016 Archived from the original on December 20 2016 Retrieved December 20 2016 Robinson Judith H Gasparini Daria Kerr Tim Robinson amp Associates Inc Washington D C May 31 2016 National Mall Historic District Boundary Increase Additional Documentation Final backcheck United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Registration Form National Park Service Archived from the original on October 12 2016 Retrieved October 12 2016 a b The National Parks Index 2012 2016 PDF National Park Service p 44 Archived PDF from the original on December 26 2017 Retrieved December 26 2017 National Mall Frequently Asked Questions National Park Service October 28 2008 Archived from the original on May 7 2010 Retrieved April 18 2010 a b c d Pfanz Donald C February 11 1981 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form National Mall National Park Service Retrieved March 17 2010 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original on December 23 2015 Retrieved June 12 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link a b c d Foundation statement for the National Mall and Pennsylvania Avenue National Historic Park PDF National Mall Plan National Park Service pp 6 10 Archived PDF from the original on December 26 2017 Retrieved December 26 2017 The National Mall stretches from the grounds of the U S Capitol west to the Potomac River and from the Thomas Jefferson Memorial north to Constitution Avenue Numbers preceding names of landmarks correspond to numbers in 2005 satellite image of the National Mall proper 1 HENRY Joseph Memorial at the Smithsonian Castle in Washington D C by William Wetmore Storey dcMemorials com July 24 2011 Archived from the original on November 17 2011 Retrieved April 16 2012 2 Rosales Jean K Jobe Michael R 2001 Joseph Henry statue Who Is That Man Anyway KittyTours Archived from the original on November 27 2008 Retrieved April 16 2012 3 Program for dedication ceremony for the Joseph Henry statue PDF Smithsonian Institution Libraries Digital Library Smithsonian Institution April 19 1883 Archived PDF from the original on September 19 2011 Retrieved October 27 2010 4 Joseph Henry statue marker Markers Attached to Sculpture series HMdb org The Historical Marker Database Archived from the original on October 20 2012 Retrieved October 27 2010 1 The Downing Urn Smithsonian Gardens Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on March 16 2020 Retrieved June 13 2020 2 DOWNING Andrew Jackson Urn on the east side of the Arts amp Industries Bldg in Washington D C by Robert E Launitz Calvert Vaux dcMemorials com 2008 Archived from the original on December 21 2016 Retrieved March 17 2010 3 Andrew Jackson Downing marker HMdb org The Historical Marker Database Archived from the original on September 18 2017 Retrieved October 27 2010 a b 1 Toda Mitch April 13 2013 A Favorite The Smithsonian Carousel Smithsonian Institution Archives Archived from the original on September 16 2018 Retrieved September 16 2018 2 Welcome to The Carousel on the National Mall Washington D C nationalcarousel com Archived from the original on September 16 2018 Retrieved September 16 2018 3 Benson Chris The NCA Photo Show Project Presents The 1947 Allan Herschell Carousel at The National Mall Washington DC National Carousel Association Retrieved September 16 2018 4 Nathan Amy 2011 Round and Round Together Taking a Merry Go Round Ride into the Civil Rights Movement Philadelphia Paul Dry Books pp 3 15 19 220 224 ISBN 9781589880719 LCCN 2011029073 OCLC 669754920 Retrieved September 16 2018 via Google Books 5 Carousel Welcome to the Smithsonian Kid Stuff Smithsonian Institution August 2006 Archived from the original on February 12 2010 Retrieved January 22 2010 Outdoors on the National Mall across Jefferson Drive from the Arts and Industries Building the Smithsonian carousel operates seasonally 6 Coordinates of the Smithsonian Carousel 38 53 20 93 N 77 01 28 44 W 38 8891472 N 77 0245667 W 38 8891472 77 0245667 Smithsonian Carousel National Museum of African American History and Culture Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on November 13 2020 Retrieved February 11 2021 1 Jamie L Whitten Federal Building Washington DC General Services Administration Archived from the original on November 26 2020 Retrieved February 9 2021 2 Histories of the USDA Headquarters Complex Buildings U S Department of Agriculture 2004 Archived from the original on April 25 2009 Retrieved May 10 2009 3 Milner John D AIA Executive Director National Heritage Foundation Chadds Ford Pennsylvania June 22 1973 U S Department of Agriculture Administration Building National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form For Federal Properties Form 10 36 Washington D C United States Department of the Interior National Park Service Archived from the original on January 21 2021 Retrieved February 10 2021 4 Marzella Bill Historic Preservation Planner EHT Traceries Inc Washington D C August 5 2015 U S Department of Agriculture Administration Building Boundary Increase and Additional Documentation PDF United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10 900 Washington D C United States Department of the Interior National Park Service Archived PDF from the original on February 22 2017 Retrieved February 10 2021 Our Gardens Smithsonian Gardens Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on March 16 2020 Retrieved March 18 2010 Common Ground Our American Garden Smithsonian Gardens Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on March 16 2020 Retrieved June 13 2020 1 Enid A Haupt Garden Smithsonian Gardens Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on March 16 2020 Retrieved March 18 2010 2 Enid A Haupt Garden Frommer s Review Wiley Publishing Inc Archived from the original on June 13 2020 Retrieved March 18 2010 Freer Gallery of Art Courtyard Garden Smithsonian Gardens Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on March 16 2020 Retrieved June 13 2020 Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on May 13 2020 Retrieved June 13 2020 Kathrine Dulin Folger Rose Garden Smithsonian Gardens Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on March 16 2020 Retrieved June 13 2020 1 Mary Livingston Ripley Garden Smithsonian Gardens Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on March 16 2020 Retrieved June 13 2020 2 Nesius Marie 2004 Mary Livingston Ripley Garden Kanawha County Master Gardeners West Virginia Archived from the original on November 8 2006 Retrieved March 18 2010 3 Mary Livingston Ripley Garden The Cultural Landscape Foundation 2020 Archived from the original on March 22 2021 Retrieved March 22 2021 National Air and Space Museum Landscape Smithsonian Gardens Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on March 16 2020 Retrieved June 13 2020 Native Landscape at the National Museum of the American Indian Smithsonian Gardens Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on March 16 2020 Retrieved June 13 2020 Pollinator Garden Smithsonian Gardens Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on March 16 2020 Retrieved June 13 2020 Urban Bird Habitat Smithsonian Gardens Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on March 16 2020 Retrieved June 13 2020 Victory Garden Smithsonian Gardens Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on March 16 2020 Retrieved March 18 2010 Milner John D June 22 1973 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination U S Department of Agriculture Administration Building National Park Service Retrieved May 10 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Archived copy PDF Archived from the original on October 24 2015 Retrieved June 12 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link a b c d e National Mall Plan Summary Enriching Our National Experience Envisioning a New Future NPS 802 105261 PDF Washington D C National Park Service United States Department of the Interior National Mall and Memorial Parks Fall 2010 Archived PDF from the original on July 15 2012 Retrieved November 10 2010 Update on the National Mall Plan Enriching Your American Experience The National Mall Plan National Park Service U S Department of the Interior 2010 Archived from the original on August 3 2016 Retrieved October 12 2016 National Mall Areas PDF National Mall Plan National Park Service Archived PDF from the original on April 28 2015 Retrieved October 19 2013 Map of the United States Inset showing Washington D C area PDF The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency Archived from the original PDF on June 5 2013 Retrieved October 14 2013 Legislative Branch Appropriations Act 2012 PDF Public Law 112 74 Consolidated Appropriations Act 2012 United States Government Printing Office December 23 2011 p 125 STAT 1129 Archived PDF from the original on July 10 2012 Retrieved March 2 2012 TRANSFER TO ARCHITECT OF THE CAPITOLSec 1202 a Transfer To the extent that the Director of the National Park Service has jurisdiction and control over any portion of the area described in subsection b and any monument or other facility which is located within such area such jurisdiction and control is hereby transferred to the Architect of the Capitol as of the date of the enactment of this Act b Area Described The area described in this subsection is the property which is bounded on the north by Pennsylvania Avenue Northwest on the east by First Street Northwest and First Street Southwest on the south by Maryland Avenue Southwest and on the west by Third Street Southwest and Third Street Northwest Ruane Michael E December 27 2011 Control of the Mall s Union Square changes hands The Washington Post Archived from the original on July 23 2014 Retrieved January 5 2012 Pfanz Donald C February 11 1981 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form National Mall National Park Service Retrieved March 17 2010 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original on December 23 2015 Retrieved June 12 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link a b c d e f Sherald James L December 2009 Elms for the Monumental Core History and Management Plan PDF Washington D C Center for Urban Ecology National Capital Region National Park Service pp 2 5 Natural Resource Report NPS NCR NRR 2009 001 Archived PDF from the original on November 29 2010 Retrieved October 14 2010 1 Map 1 The L Enfant Plan for Washington National Park Service Archived from the original on January 21 2009 Retrieved October 27 2009 2 L Enfant identified himself as Peter Charles L Enfant during most of his life while residing in the United States He wrote this name on his Plan of the city intended for the permanent seat of the government of t he United States Washington D C and on other legal documents However during the early 1900s a French ambassador to the United States Jean Jules Jusserand popularized the use of L Enfant s birth name Pierre Charles L Enfant See Bowling Kenneth R 2002 Peter Charles L Enfant vision honor and male friendship in the early American Republic George Washington University Washington D C The National Park Service identifies L Enfant as Major Peter Charles L Enfant Archived from the original on April 5 2014 Retrieved October 27 2009 and as Major Pierre Peter Charles L Enfant Archived from the original on February 28 2010 Retrieved October 27 2009 on its website The United States Code states in 40 U S C 3309 a In General The purposes of this chapter shall be carried out in the District of Columbia as nearly as may be practicable in harmony with the plan of Peter Charles L Enfant 1 Portion of Mathew Carey s 1802 map of Washington City showing the Mall In Hanlon Mary The Mall The Grand Avenue The Government and The People University of Virginia Archived from the original on July 28 1997 Retrieved July 3 2019 Mathew Carey s 1802 map was the first one to name the stretch of land west of the Capitol as The Mall 2 Draper I 1802 Washington City map Philadelphia Mathew Carey LCCN 88694101 Archived from the original on March 12 2012 Retrieved February 3 2015 In Washington Map Chronology dcsymbols com Mathew Carey s 1802 map was the first one to name the stretch of land west of the Capitol as The Mall a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help 3 Glazer Nathan Field Cynthia R eds 2008 A Chronology of the Mall The National Mall Rethinking Washington s Monumental Core Baltimore Maryland The Johns Hopkins University Press p 179 ISBN 978 0 8018 8805 2 OCLC 166273738 Archived from the original on July 3 2019 Retrieved July 3 2019 via Google Books 1802 Mathew Carey s map of Washington is the first to name the stretch of land west of the Capitol as The Mall 4 Carey Mathew 1802 Washington City Carey s general atlas improved and enlarged being a collection of maps of the world and quarters their principal empires kingdoms amp c Philadelphia M Carey and Son LCCN 2020586053 1 Why is this space called a Mall Histories of the National Mall Fairfax County Virginia Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media George Mason University Archived from the original on July 2 2019 Retrieved July 2 2019 2 Walford Edward 1887 93 Chapter VII The Mall and Spring Gardens Old and New London A Narrative of Its History its People and its Places Vol 4 Westminster and the Western Suburbs New ed London England Cassell amp Company Limited pp 74 85 OCLC 35291703 Retrieved July 2 2019 via HathiTrust Digital Library a b c Williams Paul K October 28 2013 The ill fated Washington City Canal filled in and paved over in 1871 The House History Man Archived from the original on September 9 2016 Retrieved June 19 2018 via Blogger Bryan Wilhelmus Bogart 1916 Chapter IV Erection of the City Hall A History of the National Capital from Its Foundation Through the Period of the Adoption of the Organic Act Vol 2 New York MacMillan p 104 Retrieved October 8 2009 via Google Books a b Pfingsten Bill ed Lock Keeper s House marker HMdb org The Historical Marker Database Archived from the original on December 17 2018 Retrieved December 17 2018 a b Robarge Drew March 28 2011 Washington D C s 19th Century Reclamation Project Technology The Atlantic Archived from the original on August 18 2018 Retrieved December 18 2018 a b c Come see the restored Lockkeeper s House Lockkeeper s House Washington D C Trust for the National Mall Archived from the original on April 4 2019 Retrieved January 17 2020 The Lockkeeper s House the oldest structure on the National Mall has been relocated and restored as part of a major project that has transformed the site with a new visitor friendly entrance surrounding outdoor plaza and educational displays Previously located just inches from heavy traffic at the corner of 17th Street and Constitution Avenue NW the house was lifted and moved about 20 feet from the road Untouched for more than 40 years the 180 year old structure now welcomes visitors from around the world to the National Mall a b c d 1 Weiner Talia July 5 2018 181 Year Old Lockkeeper s Tiny House Ready For Its Next Chapter NPR Archived from the original on July 18 2018 Retrieved December 17 2018 2 Historic Lockkeeper s House Opens on the National Mall Following Major Renovation Washington D C Trust for the National Mall October 23 2018 Archived from the original on January 17 2020 Retrieved January 17 2020 Morton W Brown III February 8 1971 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form Smithsonian Institution Building United States Department of the Interior National Park Service Archived from the original on August 30 2018 Retrieved July 21 2018 Torres Louis 1985 To the immortal name and memory of George Washington The United States Army Corps of Engineers and the Construction of the Washington Monument PDF United States Government Printing Office p 17 LCCN 85601652 OCLC 12085597 Archived PDF from the original on June 24 2016 Retrieved July 21 2018 Benson Short Lisa 2016 Chapter 1 From Grand Avenue to Public Space The National Mall No Ordinary Public Space Toronto University of Toronto Press p 29 ISBN 9781442630574 LCCN 2016448269 OCLC 1049661165 Retrieved August 15 2020 via Google Books Portion of Map of Washington D C Buffalo New York The Matthews Northrup Company 1893 Archived from the original on December 20 2018 Retrieved December 20 2018 via Library of Congress a b c d e Hanlon Mary The Mall The Grand Avenue The Government and The People University of Virginia Archived from the original on June 5 2011 Retrieved July 3 2019 1 Schuyler David February 2000 Downing Andrew Jackson American Council of Learned Societies American National Biography Online Oxford University Press Archived from the original on September 18 2017 Retrieved September 18 2017 In late 1850 Downing was commissioned to landscape the public grounds in Washington D C This 150 acre tract extended west from the foot of Capitol Hill to the site of the Washington Monument and then north to the president s house Downing saw this as an opportunity not simply to ornament the capital but also to create the first large public park in the United States He believed that the Washington park would encourage cities across the nation to provide healthful recreational grounds for their citizens Although only the initial stages of construction had been completed at the time of his death Downing s commission as well as the influence of his writings merited the epithet Father of American Parks 2 Downing s Plans for the Mall Smithsonian Gardens The Downing Urn Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on March 16 2020 Retrieved June 13 2020 3 Andrew Jackson Downing s Plan for the National Mall Plan Showing Proposed Laying Out of the Public Grounds at Washington Copied from the Original Plan by A J Downing February 1851 To Accompany the Annual Report dated October 1st 1867 of Bvt Brig Genl N Michler In Charge of Public Buildings Grounds amp Works File Unit Maryland the District of Columbia and the Potomac River 1784 1890 National Archives Archived from the original on September 17 2017 Retrieved September 17 2017 4 Fthenakis Lisa May 31 2018 The Smithsonian s First Garden blog Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Archives Archived from the original on June 13 2020 Retrieved June 13 2020 1 Bingham Theo A 1898 Appendix CCC Improvement and Care of Public Buildings and Grounds in the District of Columbia Washington Monument Annual Reports of the War Department for the Fiscal Year Ended June 30 1898 Washington D C Government Printing Office II Part 6 3728 Archived from the original on April 24 2016 Retrieved February 29 2012 via Google Books RESERVATIONS IN SOUTHWEST DIVISIONThis division of the public grounds embraces the area lying between First and Seventeenth streets west and B street north and includes the large and important parks known as Henry and Seaton parks the Smithsonian grounds and Monument grounds 2 After the First Improvements Changes to the Mall Parks after 1877 map Cultural Landscape Inventory Washington D C United States Department of the Interior National Park Service 2006 p 48 Archived PDF from the original on October 28 2020 Retrieved February 25 2021 This graphic depicts the nineteenth century Mall reservations overlaid on the current Mall Map of the Mall in 1893 showing the Monuments Grounds Agricultural Grounds Smithsonian Grounds Armory Grounds Public Grounds and Botanical Gardens 1 Former Site of Armory Square Hospital Independence Avenue and 7th Street SW Washington DC 20597 History of Medicine Visit Historic Medical Sites Near Washington DC Bethesda Maryland United States Department of Health and Human Services National Institutes of Health United States National Library of Medicine Archived from the original on November 28 2018 Retrieved November 28 2018 2 Armory Square Hospital Carlisle Pennsylvania United States Army War College U S Army Heritage and Education Center at Carlisle Barracks Archived from the original on November 28 2018 Retrieved November 28 2018 3 MacLean Maggie October 22 2014 Armory Square Hospital Union Military Hospital in Washington DC blog Civil War Women Women of the Civil War and Reconstruction Eras 1849 1877 Archived from the original on November 28 2018 Retrieved November 28 2018 a b United States Department of Agriculture Building Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Research Information System 2016 Archived from the original on July 22 2018 Retrieved July 21 2018 Scott Pamela Lee Antoinette Josephine 1993 The Mall Buildings of the District of Columbia Oxford University Press p 73 ISBN 0195061462 LCCN 93009187 OCLC 252905913 Retrieved July 21 2018 via Google Books What happened to George Washington s plan for a market near the Mall Histories of the National Mall Fairfax County Virginia Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media George Mason University Archived from the original on June 21 2018 Retrieved June 21 2018 Center Market 1871 78 Adolf Cluss org Archived from the original on June 21 2018 Retrieved June 21 2018 via Stimme net 1 Baltimore and Potomac Railway Station Histories of the National Mall Fairfax County Virginia Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media George Mason University Archived from the original on November 28 2018 Retrieved November 28 2018 2 What happened to the railroad stations on the Mall Histories of the National Mall Fairfax County Virginia Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media George Mason University Archived from the original on November 28 2018 Retrieved November 28 2018 3 Brownell Richard June 29 2016 The Short Lived Baltimore amp Potomac Railroad Station on the National Mall Boundary Stones WETA s Local History Blog Arlington County Virginia WETA Archived from the original on November 28 2018 Retrieved November 28 2018 1 Arts and Industries Building Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on February 23 2021 Retrieved February 27 2021 2 Building History Description and Significance Historical Background and Context PDF Arts amp Industries Building Historic Structure Report Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Architectural History amp Historic Preservation Division August 31 2009 Archived PDF from the original on August 2 2019 Retrieved February 27 2021 Boundary Review Task Force HCRS Army Medical Museum and Library National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form United States Department of the Interior National Park Service Archived from the original on June 13 2020 Retrieved July 22 2018 a b Rhode Michael G January 2006 The Rise and Fall of the Army Medical Museum and Library Washington History 2006 Academia edu pp 87 94 95 Archived from the original on July 22 2018 Retrieved July 21 2018 1 Potomac Flats Histories of the National Mall Fairfax County Virginia Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media George Mason University Archived from the original on April 25 2018 Retrieved December 18 2018 2 Potomac Flats Reclaimed Histories of the National Mall Fairfax County Virginia Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media George Mason University July 9 1875 Archived from the original on May 2 2018 Retrieved December 18 2018 3 Gillespie Brig Gen G L Chief of Engineers United States Army 1901 Improvement of the Potomac River at Washington District of Columbia Work of the Fiscal Year Ended June 30 1901 Annual Reports of the War Department for the Fiscal Year Ended June 30 1901 Report of the Chief of Engineers Part 2 Washington D C United States Government Printing Office 1399 1405 Retrieved December 9 2018 via Google Books a b Moore Charles ed 1902 The Mall The Improvement Of The Park System Of The District of Columbia Report by the United States Congress Senate Committee on the District of Columbia and District of Columbia Park Commission Washington D C Government Printing Office pp 43 46 Fifty Seventh Congress First Session Senate Report No 166 via Google Books The McMillan Plan a b c d A HISTORY OF THE NATIONAL MALL AND PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE NATIONAL HISTORIC PARK PDF National Park Service Archived PDF from the original on December 1 2009 Retrieved November 5 2009 The L Enfant and McMillan Plans National Park Service Archived from the original on October 28 2010 Retrieved October 22 2010 Washington D C A National Register of Historic Places Travel Itinerary National Park Service Archived from the original on October 10 2009 Retrieved October 27 2009 a b Public buildings in the District of Columbia map United States Department of the Interior National Park Service Branch of Buildings 1937 LCCN 87694424 OCLC 16868951 Retrieved February 24 2021 via Library of Congress Repository Library of Congress Geography and Map Division Satellite imagery of the National Mall in Google maps in 38 53 24 N 77 01 25 W 38 89 N 77 023611 W 38 89 77 023611 National Mall How has the federal government used the Mall during times of war Histories of the National Mall Fairfax County Virginia Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media George Mason University Archived from the original on January 28 2020 Retrieved February 23 2021 a b c d Rand McNalley Standard Map of Washington D C 1925 Archived from the original on February 6 2021 Retrieved February 23 2021 via Geographicus Rare Antique Maps www geographicus com a b Public buildings in the metropolitan area of Washington D C map Washington D C Federal Works Agency Public Buildings Administration Office of the Buildings Manager 1946 LCCN 87694427 OCLC 1686895 via Library of Congress a b 1 World War I Temporary Buildings Histories of the National Mall Fairfax County Virginia Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media George Mason University Archived from the original on December 29 2019 Retrieved February 23 2021 2 Harris amp Ewing photographer Washington Monument View of Mall From Monument photograph Prints amp Photographs Online Catalog Library of Congress Retrieved February 22 2021 Date Created Published between 1913 and 1918 U S Entry into World War I 1917 Milestones 1914 1920 Office of the Historian Foreign Service Institute United States Department of State Archived from the original on February 11 2021 Retrieved February 23 2021 a b c World War I tempos PDF Cultural Landscape Inventory Washington D C United States Department of the Interior National Park Service 2006 pp 52 53 Retrieved February 25 2021 The Paris Peace Conference and the Treaty of Versailles Milestones 1914 1920 Office of the Historian Foreign Service Institute United States Department of State Archived from the original on February 22 2021 Retrieved February 23 2021 1 Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations United States Senate 1920 Tuesday February 1 1921 Statement of Col Clarence F Ridley District of Columbia Appropriation Bill 1922 Hearings Before The Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations United States Senate Sixty sixth Congress Third Session on H R 15130 United States Government Printing Office p 209 OCLC 671599351 Retrieved February 21 2021 via Google Books 2 Activities Occupying Buildings Under the Office of the Superintendent State War and Navy Buildings Mall Buildings Reorganization of Executive Departments Hearings before the Joint Committee on the Reorganization of the Administrative Branch of the Government Congress of the United States Sixty Eighth Congress first session on S J res 282 Sixty Seventh Congress a resolution to amend the resolution of December 29 1920 entitled Joint resolution to create a Joint Committee on the Reorganization of the Administrative Branch of the Government January 7 to 31 1924 United States Government Printing Office 1924 p 475 OCLC 908076577 Retrieved February 21 2021 via HathiTrust Digital Library World War I Temporary Buildings Histories of the National Mall Fairfax County Virginia Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media George Mason University Archived from the original on December 29 2019 Retrieved February 23 2021 Ives James E Britten Rollo H Armstrong David W Gill W A Goldman Frederick H Office of Industrial Hygiene and Sanitation March 1936 Part I Origin And Nature Of The Study Locations Of Stations Where Observations Were Made In The Present Study Public Health Bulletin No 224 Atmospheric Pollution of American Cities for the Years 1931 to 1933 United States Treasury Department United States Public Health Service United States Government Printing Office p 10 Retrieved February 21 2021 via Google Books 1 Liberty Loan Federal Building Washington D C General Services Administration Retrieved February 25 2021 2 Liberty Loan Building History Washington D C General Services Administration September 5 2019 Retrieved February 25 2021 3 Gilmore Matthew B December 3 2018 One Last Tempo Liberty Loan Building Washington DC History Resources Archived from the original on June 23 2020 Retrieved February 25 2021 via WordPress 4 Gilmore Matthew B November 30 2018 What Once Was One Last Tempo Liberty Loan Building TheInTowner Washington D C InTowner Publishing Corp Archived from the original on December 8 2018 Retrieved February 25 2021 5 Coordinates of Bureau of the Fiscal Service Building former Liberty Loan Building 38 53 05 0 N 77 01 56 7 W 38 884722 N 77 032417 W 38 884722 77 032417 Fiscal Service Building former Liberty Loan Building a b c d e 1 Temporary War Department Buildings National Mall and Memorial Parks United States Department of the Interior National Park Service July 18 2017 Archived from the original on December 12 2020 Retrieved February 23 2021 2 Kelly John January 7 2017 Answer Man remembers the temporary office buildings that once blighted D C The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Archived from the original on November 10 2020 Retrieved February 21 2021 80 G K 14433 Navy Department buildings Washington D C Washington D C Naval History and Heritage Command Archived from the original on November 29 2020 Retrieved February 21 2021 a b Main Navy Building Its Construction and Original Occupants Naval Historical Foundation August 1 1970 Archived from the original on February 13 2021 Retrieved February 21 2021 a b c d Main Navy and Munitions Buildings Naval Historical Center September 22 2001 Archived from the original on September 15 2008 Retrieved March 16 2010 United States Bureau of Yards and Docks 1921 Chapter XXIII Emergency Office Buildings Potomac Park Washington D C Activities of the Bureau of Yards and Docks Navy Department World War 1917 1918 Government Printing Office p 480 Archived from the original on April 4 2016 Retrieved July 31 2020 a b History and Culture Constitution Gardens National Park Service April 10 2015 Archived from the original on August 28 2010 Retrieved February 23 2021 World War II Temporary Buildings Histories of the National Mall Fairfax County Virginia Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media George Mason University Archived from the original on November 12 2020 Retrieved February 23 2021 a b Sherald James L December 2009 Elms for the Monumental Core History and Management Plan PDF Washington D C Center for Urban Ecology National Capital Region National Park Service Natural Resource Report NPS NCR NRR 2009 001 Archived PDF from the original on December 14 2019 Retrieved August 4 2020 1 Flores Alberto June 13 2006 Jefferson Trees Resistant to Dutch Elm Disease News amp Events United States Department of Agriculture Agricultural Research Service Archived from the original on January 26 2021 Retrieved January 30 2021 In 2005 the newest American elm named Jefferson was released jointly by ARS and the National Park Service NPS after collaborative screening tests by Townsend and James L Sherald NPS Natural Resource Officer showed it to have an outstanding level of Dutch elm disease DED tolerance It was cloned in 1993 from the original tree a survivor of about 300 elms planted on the National Mall in Southwest Washington in the 1930s 2 Bentz S E February 2005 Mature American elm of variety Jefferson at the old Smithsonian building Washington DC photograph elmpost org Archived from the original on February 2 2017 Retrieved January 30 2021 3 Sherald James L December 2009 Elms for the Monumental Core History and Management Plan photograph Washington D C Center for Urban Ecology National Capital Region National Park Service p 38 Natural Resource Report NPS NCR NRR 2009 001 Archived PDF from the original on December 14 2019 Retrieved August 4 2020 Fig 33 American elm Jefferson Parent tree on the National Mall in front of the Freer Gallery of Art on Jefferson Drive flanked on either side by trees vegetatively propagated from it The National Mall PDF District of Columbia Inventory of Historic Sites Alphabetical Version Historic Preservation Office Office of Planning Government of the District of Columbia 2009 pp 103 104 Archived PDF from the original on November 4 2009 Retrieved March 17 2010 1 Uncle Beazley Histories of the National Mall Fairfax Virginia Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media George Mason University Archived from the original on April 16 2016 Retrieved July 1 2016 2 Uncle Beazley on the Mall Historic Images of the Smithsonian Smithsonian Institution Research Information System 1976 Archived from the original on August 15 2016 Retrieved July 2 2016 3 Goode James M 1974 Chapter 12 Uncle Beazley The Outdoor Sculpture of Washington D C A Comprehensive Historical Guide Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Press p 260 ISBN 9780881032338 OCLC 2610663 Archived from the original on June 12 2017 Retrieved July 4 2016 via Google Books This 25 foot long replica of a Triceratops was placed on the Mall in 1967 The full size Triceratops replica and eight other types of dinosaurs were designed by two prominent paleontologists Dr Barnum Brown of the American Museum of Natural History in New York City and Dr John Ostrom of the Peabody Museum in Peabody Massachusetts The sculptor Louis Paul Jonas executed these prehistoric animals in fiberglass after the designs of Barnum and Ostrom for the Sinclair Refining Company s Pavilion at the New York World s Fair of 1964 After the Fair closed the nine dinosaurs which weighed between 2 and 4 tons each were placed on trucks and taken on a tour of the eastern United States The Sinclair Refining Company promoted the tour for public relations and advertising purposes since their trademark was the dinosaur In 1967 the nine dinosaurs were given to various American museums This particular replica was used for the filming of The Enormous Egg a movie made by the National Broadcasting Company for television based on a children s book of the same name by Oliver Buttersworth The movie features an enormous egg out of which hatches a baby Tricerotops the boy consults with the Smithsonian Institution which accepts Uncle Beasley for the National Zoo 4 A Dinosaur at the Zoo Art at the National Zoo Washington D C Smithsonian National Zoological Park Archived from the original on June 12 2007 Retrieved July 1 2016 6 Butterworth Oliver illustrated by Louis Darling 1956 The Enormous Egg Boston Massachusetts Little Brown and Co ISBN 0590475460 OCLC 299175 Archived from the original on June 12 2017 Retrieved July 4 2016 via Google Books 7 About this book The Enormous Egg by Oliver Butterworth illustrated by Louis Darling Scholastic Inc 2016 Archived from the original on August 31 2012 Retrieved July 3 2016 At first Nate doesn t see what all the fuss is all about All he wants is to keep his new pet But Uncle Beazley the dinosaur himself just keeps getting bigger and bigger 8 NBC Children s Theatre 1963 1973 The Enormous Egg Episode aired 18 April 1968 IMDb com Inc 2008 Archived from the original on March 9 2008 Retrieved July 3 2016 9 MacIntyre F Gwynplaine May 28 2003 User Comment NBC Children s Theatre 1963 1973 The Enormous Egg Episode aired 18 April 1968 IMDb com Inc Archived from the original on March 9 2008 Retrieved July 3 2016 Commemorative Works Clarification and Revision Act of 2003 in Public Law 108 126 Title II 117 Stat 1349 117 Stat 1353 November 17 2003 Archived PDF from the original on February 26 2005 Retrieved February 4 2010 Ruane Michael E October 1 2013 During a shutdown Mall visitors will see barricades not landmarks The Washington Post Archived from the original on February 21 2015 Retrieved February 21 2015 Ruane Michael E Wilgoren Debbi October 1 2013 Visiting veterans storm closed war memorial The Washington Post Archived from the original on February 12 2015 Retrieved February 21 2015 Ruane Michael E Berman Mark October 2 2013 National Park Service to keep WWII Memorial open to veterans as visitors skirt shutdown The Washington Post Archived from the original on February 21 2015 Retrieved February 21 2015 Gomez Alan November 8 2015 Immigration rally allowed on Mall despite shutdown USA Today Archived from the original on September 29 2018 Retrieved February 21 2015 1 Enid Haupt Fountains President s Park City Walking Guide 2018 Archived from the original on January 4 2018 Retrieved February 14 2021 The two Haupt Fountains flank the entrance to the Ellipse at 16th Street N W and Constitution Avenue 2 Coordinates of Enid Haupt Fountains East 38 53 32 5 N 77 02 11 012 W 38 892361 N 77 03639222 W 38 892361 77 03639222 Enid Haupt Fountain east West 38 53 32 5 N 77 02 12 175 W 38 892361 N 77 03671528 W 38 892361 77 03671528 Enid Haupt Fountain west 1 Patentees Monument National Society Daughters of the American Colonists 2018 Archived from the original on January 4 2018 Retrieved February 12 2021 2 Original Patentees of DC Monument President s Park White House Place United States Department of the Interior National Park Service October 29 2020 Archived from the original on March 15 2021 Retrieved March 15 2021 3 Colonial Settler s Monument dcMemorials com DC Memorialist February 3 2021 Archived from the original on April 10 2015 Retrieved March 15 2021 via SuperbThemes and WordPress 4 Joint Resolution Authorizing the erection of a memorial to the early settlers whose land grants embrace the site of the Federal City PDF United States Statutes at Large 74th Congress Session II Chapter 64 Library of Congress February 12 1936 p 1137 Retrieved March 15 2021 5 Coordinates of the Settlers of the District of Columbia Memorial 38 53 37 5 N 77 02 01 9 W 38 893750 N 77 033861 W 38 893750 77 033861 Settlers of the District of Columbia Memorial 1 Forest Service Museum Washington D C Visitor FAQ americasbesthistory com America s Best History 2020 Archived from the original on April 7 2020 Retrieved February 14 2021 Forest Service Museum Located along 15th street below the Washington Monument 2 Coordinates of the United States Forest Service Museum 38 53 15 4 N 77 2 0 23 W 38 887611 N 77 0333972 W 38 887611 77 0333972 United States Forest Service Museum a b c Smith Leef Melillo Wendy October 13 1996 If It s Crowd Size You Want Park Service Says Count It Out Congress Told Agency to Stop Official Says The Washington Post p A 34 Retrieved November 29 2010 a b Nukols Ben January 18 2017 Inaugural crowds sure to be huge but how huge The Big Story Associated Press Archived from the original on February 13 2017 Retrieved March 16 2017 IT STARTS WITH THE MILLION MAN MARCH The agency still estimates crowd size for its own planning purposes but does not publicly reveal the figures No matter what we said or did no one ever felt we gave a fair estimate U S Park Police Maj J J McLaughlin who had been in charge of coordinating crowd estimates said in 1996 when the agency confirmed it would no longer count heads Regula Ralph Committee on Appropriations June 18 1996 House of Representatives Report 104 625 Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Bill 1997 to accompany H R 3662 p 28 Retrieved November 30 2010 The Committee has provided no funding for crowd counting activities associated with gatherings held on federal property in Washington D C If event organizers wish to have an estimate on the number of people participating in their event then those organizers should hire a private sector firm to conduct the count dead link Note The Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Bill 1997 H R 3662 was incorporated into the Omnibus Consolidated Appropriations Act 1997 Public Law 104 208 Sept 30 1996 PDF Archived PDF from the original on May 27 2010 Retrieved December 1 2010 at 110 STAT 3009 181 1 Goodier Rob September 12 2001 The Curious Science of Counting a Crowd Popular Mechanics Archived from the original on September 5 2016 Retrieved August 26 2016 For its part the National Park Service tries to stay above the fray by not estimating crowd sizes It stopped providing head counts after the organizers of the 1995 Million Man March accused the service of underestimating their crowd 2 McKenna Dave January 16 2009 The 3 to 5 Million Man March Crowd estimates could lead to post swearing in swearing history shows Washington City Paper Archived from the original on September 19 2016 Retrieved August 26 2016 Street hasn t been asked to come up with an official estimate for any D C event in a long while And that 1991 manual is currently not used by his agency Street and the Park Service in fact have been specifically barred by an act of Congress from divulging official crowd estimates but only for D C gatherings Ever since the Million Man March he says That changed things 1 Davis Julie Hirschfeld Rosenberg Matthew January 21 2017 With False Claims Trump Attacks Media on Turnout and Intelligence Rift The New York Times Archived from the original on March 14 2017 Retrieved March 15 2017 2 Wallace Tim Parlapiano Alicia January 22 2017 Crowd Scientists Say Women s March in Washington Had 3 Times More People Than Trump s Inauguration The New York Times Archived from the original on March 13 2017 Retrieved March 14 2017 Abortion activists on the march BBC April 26 2004 Archived from the original on September 24 2009 Retrieved June 8 2009 1 Urbina Ian January 28 2007 Wide opposition to war energizes protests Washington Jane Fonda among celebrity protesters joining veterans politicians in calling for end to war The New York Times Archived from the original on February 19 2007 Retrieved January 28 2007 via SFGate Urbina Ian January 28 2007 Protest Focuses on Iraq Troop Increase The New York Times Archived from the original on May 30 2013 Retrieved January 28 2007 2 Charles Deborah January 28 2007 Tens of thousands demand U S get out of Iraq The Star Archived from the original on December 11 2008 Retrieved January 28 2007 Boren Cindy Allen Scott Larimer Sara June 12 2018 Capitals Stanley Cup parade Ovechkin s speech brings the celebration to a wild end The Washington Post Archived from the original on September 10 2018 Retrieved September 9 2018 Stewart Nikita December 5 2008 Entire Mall To Be Open To Public The Washington Post Archived from the original on November 11 2012 Retrieved December 5 2008 National Mall Will Be Open to the Public on Inauguration Day December 4 2008 Archived from the original on December 7 2008 Retrieved March 14 2011 Higgins Adrian March 26 2009 For Smithsonian a Sad Souvenir of the Inauguration The Washington Post p H 1 Archived from the original on November 11 2012 Retrieved March 23 2010 1 Constable Pamela Sheridan Mary Beth January 22 2009 Ticket and Travel Troubles Cloud Inauguration Success The Washington Post p A01 Archived from the original on November 11 2012 Retrieved January 22 2009 2 Surviving the Purple Tunnel of Doom Ticketed parade goers stranded in tunnel NBC Washington January 21 2009 Archived from the original on August 14 2020 Retrieved March 1 2010 3 Coordinates of Third Street Tunnel 38 53 23 N 77 00 52 W 38 8897468 N 77 0143747 W 38 8897468 77 0143747 I 395 Third Street Tunnel Sheridan Mary January 20 2009 Officials Too Many Tickets for Blue Purple Areas The Washington Post Archived from the original on May 18 2019 Retrieved April 3 2021 Senate Sergeant at Arms Terrance W Gainer estimated that several thousand people with blue and purple tickets could not get into the designated sections It does appear that maybe there were more tickets in purple and blue than bulky people in coats would permit he said Stabley Matthew January 29 2009 No Consolation Parting gifts for blocked ticket holders NBC Washington Archived from the original on April 15 2014 Retrieved April 16 2009 Gosford Jane Activities at the National Mall in Washington D C USA Today Archived from the original on April 16 2014 Retrieved March 30 2014 Hahn Fritz Coronavirus closes Smithsonian museums cancels National Cherry Blossom Festival events Going Out Guide The Washington Post Archived from the original on March 13 2020 Retrieved March 14 2020 1 Gold Matea April 23 2000 Thousands at National Mall for Earth Day Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on April 16 2014 Retrieved March 30 2014 2 Cooper Rachel April 20 2008 Earth Day on the National Mall Archived from the original on April 10 2008 Retrieved April 19 2012 3 Strauss Valerie April 21 2008 Raining on Her Own Parade Earth Day Festival Great Despite Mother Nature s Whims The Washington Post p B 1 Archived from the original on June 4 2011 Retrieved February 25 2010 4 du Lac J Freedom April 20 2009 Talking a Green Streak Music amp Antics Lift Earth Day Concert but Too Much Hot Air Drains Energy From Its Message The Washington Post Archived from the original on June 4 2011 Retrieved February 25 2010 5 APRIL 16 17 Join EPA for Earth Day on the National Mall Newsroom United States Environmental Protection Agency April 12 2011 Archived from the original on March 30 2014 Retrieved March 30 2014 1 Earth Day Network Announces The Climate Rally in Washington DC on April 25 Washington D C Earth Day Network March 11 2010 Archived from the original on December 26 2017 Retrieved December 26 2017 2 Earth Day The History of A Movement About Earth Day Network Earth Day Network Archived from the original on February 8 2016 Retrieved March 30 2014 Richards Chris April 26 2010 Earth Day Climate Rally features music speeches and an assist from Mother Nature The Washington Post p C 1 Archived from the original on November 10 2012 Retrieved April 26 2010 1 Bahrampour Tara April 22 2012 Rains don t water down Earth Day enthusiasm The Washington Post Archived from the original on May 29 2012 Retrieved May 4 2012 2 Cheap Trick Dave Mason Kicking Daisies And Explorers Club to Perform at Earth Day Rally on the National Mall earthday org April 22 2012 Archived from the original on February 7 2017 Retrieved February 25 2021 3 Earth Day 4 22 What can you get for FREE Washington D C Wheel n DealMama April 20 2012 Archived from the original on June 16 2012 Retrieved October 29 2018 Union Station to Celebrate Earth Month 2013 Washington D C Earth Day Network January 14 2013 Archived from the original on February 7 2017 Retrieved October 29 2018 1 Carlin Shannon No Doubt Fall Out Boy Usher to Perform at Global Citizen 2015 Earth Day Concert Radio com Archived from the original on March 16 2015 Retrieved March 16 2015 2 Greenberg Rudi April 16 2015 What you need to know about Saturday s Global Citizen 2015 Earth Day rally on the National Mall The Washington Post Archived from the original on August 30 2018 Retrieved April 18 2015 1 National Memorial Day Concert John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts Archived from the original on December 8 2012 Retrieved May 24 2012 2 National Memorial Day Concert Public Broadcasting Service PBS Archived from the original on June 19 2011 Retrieved May 11 2011 National Gallery of Art s Free Jazz in the Garden Concert Series Returns Friday May 17 2019 Jazz in the Garden National Gallery of Art March 29 2019 Archived from the original on August 14 2019 Retrieved August 14 2019 1 Summer Concert Series United States Navy Band Archived from the original on April 27 2011 Retrieved May 11 2011 2 Performance schedule for The United States Navy Band for the Washington D C metro area July and August 2007 United States Navy Band Archived from the original on June 30 2007 Retrieved October 27 2010 3 The United States Navy Band Performance Schedule August 2007 United States Navy Band Archived from the original on August 17 2007 Retrieved October 27 2010 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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