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  • EmmyLou Harris standing, holding a guitar and singing into a microphone.

    The Meeting that Changed Country Music — Emmylou Harris and Gram Parsons in D.C.

    Before Emmylou Harris became a renowned musician, singer, songwriter, and activist, she was a struggling single mother in the D.C. area. A meeting at Clyde's in Georgetown would change her life.

    September 4, 2025

    • Washington, D.C.
    • Maryland

    By Isabel Bozarth

  • A photo of a large white house with black roof and shutters. The center of the house has a second floor and on either side of it dormer windows are unevenly placed along the roof

    George Washington's Complicated Relationship with His Mother

    When one thinks about George Washington they probably think of the general that led America to victory in the Revolutionary War or the first president of the United States. What they may not think about is someone with a sometimes complicated relationship with his mother. 

    August 26, 2025

    • Virginia

    By Noah Brushwood

  • Black and white photo of statue with four pillars and a roof inscribed with "Temperance" on it.

    The Temperance Fountain Just Might Be the Ugliest Statue in Washington

    In a city full of monuments and memorials like Washington, not all of them can be beautiful. Exhibit A: The Temperance Fountain at Seventh Street and Indiana Avenue, NW. So how did we come in possession of this strange piece of public art?

    August 19, 2025

    • Washington, D.C.

    By Paige Little

  • A group of women sit on the railing of a porch wearing banners across their chests that read "Anti-flirt club"

    The Anti-Flirt Club: The Movement to End Unwanted Attention in the 1920s

    In the 1920s, a group of D.C. women formed the Anti-Flirt Club to put a stop to the increasingly annoying, and at times dangerous, problem of men harassing women from motor vehicles and street corners. 

    August 14, 2025

    • Washington, D.C.

    By Lily Applebaum

  • A crew of Air Force soldiers below a plane fuselage

    How to Exhibit the Enola Gay Was a Decades-Long Struggle for the Smithsonian

    In the early 1990s, the Smithsonian found itself embroiled in national controversy over one of its planned exhibitions, making enemies of newspapers, veterans groups, and even Congress. What was the right way to display the plane that dropped the atomic bomb?

    August 8, 2025

    • Washington, D.C.

    By Isabel Sans

  • Old black and white photo of African American woman in white dress.

    Decades Before Rosa Parks, D.C.'s Barbara Pope Challenged Segregation on Public Transportation

    Though Rosa Parks may be the face of peaceful resistance to segregation on public transportation, she was not the first to adopt the strategy. Claudette Colvin, Ellen Harris, Maggie Lena Walker, Ida B. Wells, and Charlotte Brown are just some of the individuals who took a stand against racist policies enacted after the Civil War. In Washington, D.C., one of these civil rights activists whose name has been almost forgotten was Barbara Pope. In 1906, she claimed her right to remain in the first-class seat which she had paid for, rather than be moved to the segregated car.

    February 25, 2026

    • Washington, D.C.

    By Isabel Sans

  • Young African American man in Civil War era military uniform.

    Frederick Douglass’s Son Charles Pioneered Black Baseball in D.C.

    Washington, DC, has a rich baseball history stretching back over 160 years. But long before the Nationals and Senators of Major League Baseball and the Negro leagues’ Homestead Grays won over legions of fans, famed abolitionist Frederick Douglass’s son Charles paved the way for black ballplayers in the District.

    February 25, 2026

    • Washington, D.C.

    By Ethan Ehrenhaft

  • Grainy photos of large group of Union Civil war soldiers

    During the Civil War, Roosevelt Island Was Home to Black Troops and a Freedman’s Camp

    While it’s known today for its forested hiking trails and outdoor memorial to America’s 26th president, Theodore Roosevelt Island played a prominent role in Washington, DC’s Civil War history. In 1863, the island became home to Camp Greene, training grounds of the 1st United States Colored Troops (USCT), a Black infantry regiment recruited in the District.

    February 20, 2026

    • Washington, D.C.

    By Ethan Ehrenhaft

  • A modern photo of the exterior of the Peirce Mill, a three story brick building

    “I Catered for the Best People”: Hattie Sewell, a Black D.C. Entrepreneur in Rock Creek Park

    In the 1920s, entrepreneur Hattie Sewell looked to put her extensive experience in the hospitality industry to work turning around the Peirce Mill Teahouse in Rock Creek Park. But as a Black businesswoman in the 1920s, Sewell faced harsh blow back, even as her business thrived.

    February 16, 2026

    • Washington, D.C.

    By Isabel Sans

  • The Completion of Washington, D.C., project, Washington, D.C., Plan

    “A Great City to Be”: Architect Leon Krier’s Plan to “Finish” Washington D.C.

    Should the National Mall really be a National Lake? Leon Krier thought so! The Luxembourgish architect came to D.C. in the 1970s and saw Washington as an unfinished sketch waiting to be painted in full. Read about his fantastical plans to "finish" our capital city.

    January 14, 2026

    • Washington, D.C.

    By Isabel Sans

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Featured Topics

Sketch of the mythical fuan by Pearson Scott Foresman. [Source: Wikipedia]

Halloween

12 Posts

A group from Ecuador marches to Kalorama Park during 1971 Latino Festival. (Source: Reprinted with permission of the DC Public Library, Star Collection © Washington Post)

Hispanic Americans

4 Posts

Painting of George Washington on white horse with British soldiers walking alongside. Groups of soldiers stand on either side of the frame.

Revolutionary War

8 Posts

Abraham Lincoln, bearded man wearing suit and bowtie.

Abraham Lincoln

22 Posts

Woody Guthrie, 1943 (Library of Congress)

Music History

34 Posts

The Washington Mall from behind the Washington Monument, with the museums and other buildings visible in the distance

National Mall

16 Posts

German actress Hedwig Reicher wearing costume of "Columbia" with other suffrage pageant participants standing in background in front of the Treasury Building, March 3, 1913, Washington, D.C. (Source: Library of Congress)

Women's History

54 Posts

Mary Church Terrell stands with three African American men in 1953. (Reprinted with permission of the DC Public Library, Star Collection, © Washington Post.)

Black History

86 Posts

Popular Content

  • Roberta Flack in 1971. (Source: Wikimedia Commons)

    Arlington's Roberta Flack Gets Her Start at Mr. Henry's

    Before she topped the charts and won Grammys, Roberta Flack was a humble music teacher from Arlington, Virginia with a velvet voice and fierce perfectionism. Discover how Capitol Hill nightclub Mr...

    September 4, 2014

    By Phillip Jackson

  • Constantino Brumidi (Source: Library of Congress)

    The Michelangelo of the Capitol

    In the U.S. Senate's sculpture collection, there are plenty of busts of instantly recognizable historical figures such as Presidents Theodore Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln. But enshrined alongside...

    February 13, 2015

    By Patrick Kiger

  • As the nation geared up for World War I, inventor Thomas Edison urged the government to fund and create a laboratory to further research toward national defense. It took a few years, but he finally got his wish. (Photo source: Wikipedia)

    Thomas Edison's D.C. Invention

    Thomas Edison is most known for his many inventions at his New Jersey lab. But, he also has a very unique connection to Washington as the instigator behind the Naval Research Laboratory.

    January 27, 2015

    By Mark Jones

  • Fred Rogers on the set of "Mister Rogers' Neighborhood" (Fred Rogers Company)

    Mister Rogers Comes to Washington

    Fred Rogers, creator and host of the longtime children's television landmark Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, is most closely associated with Pittsburgh, where he produced his program at local PBS station...

    February 27, 2018

    By Nick Scalera


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Boundary Stones

Boundary Stones explores local history in Washington, D.C., suburban Maryland and northern Virginia. This project is a service of WETA and is supported by contributions from readers like you.

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