"Anacostia River Trail" by NPS photo: M.Marquez , public domain
AnacostiaBrochure |
Official Brochure of Anacostia Park in the District of Columbia. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
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Anacostia Park
Washington, D.C.
Anacostia Park
"The Eastern-Branch
[Anacostia
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
River] is one of the safest and most commodious
harbors in America,..and
is abundantly
capacious."
—Maryland newspaper on location of national capital city, 1791
When the national capital city was
planned in the early 1790s, the land
bordering the Anacostia River was envisioned as an ideal location for shipping,
industry, and other commercial activities
that would develop the economy of the
new city. However, by the late 19th century, the Anacostia River had become
silted up by runoff from agricultural
activities farther upstream. In the early
20th century, reclamation of the Anacostia River "flats" transformed the
swamp lands into the riverside parks—
what we know today as Anacostia Park.
Present-day Anacostia Park spans over
1,200 acres stretching the length of the
A view of Washington, D.C,
from the south bank of the
Anacostia River, 1834
Anacostia River from the Frederick
Douglass Memorial Bridge north
approximately five miles to the District/Maryland line. The park includes
Kenilworth Park and Aquatic Gardens,
Langston Golf Course, and the Robert
F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium.
the developed recreational facilities, the
northern part of Anacostia Park near
Kenilworth Aquatic Gardens provides
one of the best places in the region in
which to see wildlife.
Anacostia Park is a multi-use recreational park, with shoreline access, a
swimming pool, multi-use pavilion, ball
fields, trails, and picnic areas that
attract visitors from throughout the city
and across the nation. The park also is
home to the United States Park Police
Training Center and helipad, as well as
the Urban Tree House and the Aquatic
Education Center. While the southern
portion of the park (below the railroad
bridge and boat ramp) contains most of
Agriculture
Planning for the National Capital City
The Nacotchtanks
cept for the city was based upon classic
European plans, which provided for
public buildings to be located on
prominent geographic features,
grand boulevards that radiated
outward and connected public buildings and parks, and
large public spaces that
served as appropriate
settings for the public
building. This ambitious
architectural and landscape design also
included a detailed street
plan that extended from the
Potomac River to its Eastern Branch, as the Anacos- .
tia River then was called.
Along the Eastern Branch, harbors, markets, and industrial sites
were envisioned.
In 1790, President George Washington
selected the 10-square-mile area
around the confluence of the
Potomac and Anacostia Rivers
as the seat of the new federal
government. The site
appealed to him because
Georgetown in Maryland
and Alexandria in Virginia,
both established in the
1750s, already were thriving port cities along the
Potomac River. The Anacostia River offered the
potential of deep-water
ports and was poised for sig
nificant harbor development.
Long before the arrival of the first European explorers, a vibrant
American Indian culture evolved around the abundance of fish,
game, and other natural resources in the Anacostia River area
for at least 10,000 years. In the 17th century, the Nacotchtank
Indians were the primary residents along the eastern shore of
the Anacostia. Prosperous farmers, gatherers, hunters, and
traders, the Nacotchtanks lived in the vicinity of what is now
Boiling Air Force Base. Jesuit priests later Latinized the Algonquian place name of Nacotchtank to Anacostia.
Englishman John Smith explored the Anacostia, or Eastern
Branch of the Potomac, in 1608. Smith's arrival heralded both
the rapid settlement of the land east of the Anacostia River by
English landowners and the rapid decline of the Nacotchtanks.
Ravaged by European diseases, the weakened band suffered
from raids by competing Indians and attacks by English settlers. By the 1670s, the Nacotchtanks had been driven from the
region.
Washington commissioned
Frenchman Pierre L'Enfant to develop
plans for the new capital. L'Enfant's con
Historic print of the first
Native American village in
what is now Anacostia
Anacostia in Modern Times
white homeowners of means interested in owning property outside the
original boundaries of the capital city.
The company did not offer homes to
African Americans. This first effort at
marketing "suburban" housing never
caught on and the company suffered
from poor sales.
The end of tobacco production in the
region hastened the breakup of the
mammoth plantations. With the land
available for development, residential
communities slowly began to form in
Anacostia. The opening of the Washington Navy Yard in 1799 spurred residential settlement in Anacostia as
large numbers of workers made their
homes directly across the river from
where they worked.
The Good Hope community emerged
as a settlement around Jenkin's Tavern in the 1820s, when Good Hope
Road was the major established link
between Washington, D.C., and south- Anacostia historic district, c. 1865
ern Maryland. The early residents of
Good Hope and the other communities in
In 1854, John Van Hook and his real estate
Anacostia were primarily English, Irish, and
partners formed the Union Land AssociaGerman, along with a small number of free
tion. They named their housing developblacks. Most of these residents were bluement Uniontown and sought to cater to
collar workers or farmers.
The creation of the Freedman's
Bureau settlement at Barry Farms in
1867 further dissuaded most whites
from buying property in the Anacostia area. It is a great irony that after
Van Hook's business collapsed, the
famed African American orator and
abolitionist, Frederick Douglass, purchased Van Hook's home and office
at Cedar Hill and established his residence there. (Today, the National Park Service administers the Frederick Douglass
National Historic Site.)
Development of Anacostia Park
The appointment of the McMillan Commission by the U.S. Congress
in 1901 set the stage for the development of Anacostia Park. Among
its recommendations, the Commission urged that the Anacostia
"flats" follow the model of the East and West Potomac Parks—that
the swamps be "reclaimed" and the new lands used as gardens and
recreation space for public use.
Historical Society of Washington, D.C.
Civil War Fortifications
When fighting broke out between Union and Confederate forces
in April 1861, the capital city was vulnerable to attack from proSouthern sympathizers in Maryland and from other points. A ring
of forts was developed around the capital city and included an
extensive system of earthen forts that stretched into what is today
the District of Columbia, Virginia, and Maryland. The forts established to guard the eastern approaches to the city, Fort Greble
(current day Anacostia), Fort Carroll, and Fort Mahan (located
just north of Benning Road), were three of the larger rudimentary
earthen outposts located east of the Anacostia River.
In 1933, management and oversight responsibilities for Anacostia
Park were turned over to the National Park Service.
During the Great Depression, funding was provided to public works
projects in Anacostia Park. Segregated golf courses, swimming
The reclamation of the silted Anacostia River and its transformation
into a public park was an ambitious plan that would take several
decades to complete. The Anacostia River and Flats Act of 1914
called for "continuing the reclamation and development of the Anacostia River" and tidal plains.
To accomplish this task, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers constructed a seawall on the banks of the Anacostia, dredged the river
bottom, and used the sediment to fill in the wetlands behind the
wall. Park construction and landscaping projects continued throughout the 1920s and 1930s, surviving a series of cost overruns, work
stoppages, and setbacks. This "reclamation" entailed the destruction
of a vast natural wetland system. However, at the time the value of
wetlands was not understood and they were generally thought of as
"malarial swamps."
Langston Golf Course
The Bonus March
Watershed and Environment
The most significant historical event that
occurred in Anacostia Park was the location in the park of the "Bonus March"
campsite. Reeling from the effects of the
Great Depression, a large group of World
War I veterans marched to Washington,
D . C , in the spring of 1932 to demand the
immediate payment of a wartime bonus.
Once in the nation's capital city, many of
the Bonus Marchers established a camp
The Anacostia River is a tidal freshwater
river that fluctuates approximately three feet
twice per day. The river has suffered greatly
from decades of wetland destruction,
uncontrolled runoff, illegal dumping, inadequate sewage facilities, industrial wastes,
and other forms of pollution. Nonetheless,
the river and watershed support a wide variety of plants, birds, mammals, reptiles and
amphibians (as well as people!).
at Anacostia Flats, where they created shanties from cardboard boxes
and scraps of wood. By June 1932, close to 11,000 people had gathered in the "fully integrated camp."
Land grants to wealthy Englishmen placed
much of the property in the Anacostia region
in the hands of a few elite families. Tobacco
was the primary cash crop. Fertile land,
expanding European markets, the presence
of the nearby deep-water port at Bladensburg, and the availability of large numbers of
enslaved Africans facilitated the regional
supremacy of tobacco production.
Tobacco farming, however,
rapidly exhausted the soil
and led to the demise of
* the industry in the immediate area. Siltation of the
river led to the closing of the
Anacostia River to oceangoing vessels by 1800,
thus ending hopes that
the Anacostia would rival
the Potomac as a river of
"grand commerce."
Tobacco, once the primary crop
Anacostia Communities
A view of the Anacostia
River along the shoreline
of Anacostia Park
Anacostia Park's
playing fields offer
opportunities for
soccer and other
recreational activities.
The Bonus
Marchers' camp
at Anacostia
Flats, 1932
After Congress refused to meet the demands of the marchers, President Hoover ordered
General Douglas McArthur to remove them by force. Police and military personnel (including a tank unit led by Major Dwight D. Eisenhower) attacked the marchers on July 28,
1932, knocking down and setting fire to their shelters. Those not injured in the battle drifted back to their homes without the sought-after bonus.
The realization that a healthy river means a
healthy community has led to intensified
efforts in recent years to restore and
upgrade the Anacostia River and the surrounding communities to clean and livable
conditions.
Visitors enjoy a scenic view from the boardwalk
at Kenilworth Aquatic Gardens.
Ironically, Anacostia—known to contemporary residents as a predominantly black part of Washington, D.C.—was a majority white
section of town until the late 1950s and early 1960s. Integration of
the Anacostia public swimming pool in June 1949 sparked race
riots in the park. The public schools were integrated following the 1954
Supreme Court decision
that outlawed separate
schools for black and
white students. As the
suburban areas developed and white families
left the city, the influx of
black residents reduced
the white population of
Anacostia from 82 percent in 1950 to 37 percent by 1967.
Anacostia storefront near the
park entrance
pools, and playing fields were built as part of an attempt by Secre
tary of the Interior Harold Ickes to provide recreation facilities for
both the white and black residents. Langston Golf Course opened
in 1939 to provide a golf course for African American
golfers. Established as a nine-hole course, the
^ ,
w
golf course was enlarged to 18 holes in
1955. Although other golf courses were
desegregated in the 1950s, Langston Golf
Course continues to serve as the home
course for Washington's black golfing com
munity.
In 1938, the National Park Service acquired
Kenilworth Aquatic Gardens, which were developed
between 1882 and 1921 by Civil War veteran W. B. Shaw, who
dammed his farmland to create a series of ponds and a private
pleasure garden. Between 1921 and 1938, the gardens were operated as a commercial venture that was open to the public. Today,
the garden features many varieties of water lilies. By the late
1930s, development of Anacostia Park was still underway and had
extended the park to the District/Maryland line. The Robert F.
Kennedy Stadium structure was built during the early 1960s and
named in honor of Kennedy after his assassination in 1968.
Anacostia Park
Washington, D.C.
Anacostia Park
(2
North
Metro
Hill Restrooms
UM0 Boat launch
U l Self-guiding trail
U
| : /*J Swimming
Golfing
0 5 Marina
E 4 Visitor information
U P Parking
O S Wheelchair accessible
Acknowledgments
Visiting the Park
With more than 1,200 acres and
11 miles of shoreline, Anacostia
Park is one of Washington, D.C.'s
largest and most important parks,
with diverse recreational opportunities, natural areas, and historic
sites. Included in Anacostia Park
are Kenilworth Park and Aquatic Gardens and the restored
Kenilworth Marsh. The Aquatic
Gardens' annual Waterlily Festival in July attracts thousands of
visitors at the peak blooming season; a
boardwalk from the garden ponds leads
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
into the restored tidal marsh, one
of D.C.'s last surviving tidal wetlands. Hundreds of acres are
available for ballfields, picnicking, basketball and tennis
courts, and recreational river
access. The Anacostia Park
Pavilion provides space for roller
skating and special events. The
award-winning Urban Tree
House provides an educational
connection to every state's
American heritage. The District of Columbia
Division of Recreation and Parks operates a
swimming pool and the Aquatic Education Center in lower Anacostia Park, as well
as the Kenilworth-Parkside Recreation
Center in Kenilworth Park. The
historic Langston Golf Course
offers an 18-hole course as well
as a driving range, and three
concession-operated marinas
and a public boat ramp provide
access to the tidal Anacostia
River for recreational boating.
Above the railroad bridge, and
extending upriver to Kenilworth
Park, much of the Anacostia
Park river bank is forested. The upper Anacostia is a favored place for kayaking and
canoeing through natural areas; the lower
section is favored by sculling
and rowing crews for its broad,
flat water. Anacostia Park's many
river access opportunities also
provide for fishing, birdwatching, and just relaxing! It is a
haven from the nearby urban
hustle and bustle, and thousands
of people annually come to Anacostia Park for recreation and
relaxation. You come, too!
The Anacostia Park brochure is a cooperative
project of the Cultural Resources Diversity Initiative and National Capital Parks-East, National
Park Service (NPS), and the National Parks
Conservation Association (NPCA)/D.C. Communities Program.The project was funded by the Challenge Cost Share Program of the National Park
Service, the Seraph Foundation, and the Marpat
Foundation. Alan Spears of NPCA and Antoinette
J. Lee of NPS wrote the text. MapQuest.Com
prepared the map, and Sue Dodge provided editorial and design services. Moriba N. McDonald
of NPS coordinated the brochure project and conducted research on historical illustrations.
Stephen Potter, Stephen Syphax, Gary Scott,
James Rosenstock, and Frank T Faragasso provided valuable comments on the text. The project
benefited from the support of Robert Stanton, former NPS director; Tom Kiernan, lantha GanttWright, and Francisco Morales-Bermudez of
NPCA; Fran P. Mainella, NPS director; Katherine
H. Stevenson, deTeel Patterson Tiller, John Robbins, Samuel N. Stokes, Major F. Horsey, John
Hale, Janet Braxton, Lori M. James, Tina Short,
and Clarenda Drake, all of NPS.
How to obtain copies of this brochure:
Call National Capital Parks-East at 202-690-5185
April 2002