WASHINGTON, DC.- The first comment sounds a lot like a pundits critique; the second, a National Mall tourists observationboth reminders of an enduring dichotomy, which to some currently symbolizes the nations capital. However, these assessments of Washington, D.C., were, in fact, made within two years of the most famous of civil conflicts and are displayed in the
Anacostia Community Museums new exhibition, How the Civil War Changed Washington, on view through Nov. 15.
In this exhibition, Curator Alcione Amos offers a fresh approach to Civil War history, with her focus on the evolution of the capital city, contextualizing its history and significant events with intriguing stories of some individuals who came here and contributed to the citys growth.
How the Civil War Changed Washington is not an account of the historic battles of the North versus South, said Camille Giraud Akeju, the museums director. It is an examination of how this conflict affected the nations capital in terms of the citys infrastructure, social imperatives and daily life.
Organized into nine sections covering before, during and after the war and featuring 18 artifacts, the exhibition examines the social and spatial impact of the Civil War, which resulted in dramatic changes in the city.
Before the war, Washington was a sleepy, sparsely populated town with German, Jewish and Irish enclaves, transient political residents, enslaved Africans, free but Black Code-constrained African Americans, unpaved streets, an unfinished Capitol and Washington Monument among other important buildings as well as a fetid canal where the National Mall is now located. With the war came a population boom. Between 1860 and 1870, the citys population increased from 75,080 inhabitants to 131,700, and the African American population increased from one-fifth to one-third beginning a trend of growth that continued until a century after the war when African American would become the majority.
The exhibition tells of the several tenuous routes of transition from enslavement to freedom and, later, to opportunities in home ownership and business success in the city where emancipation was first granted in the nation. Wartime work expands to provide women new opportunities in the federal work force, education and industry. The federal government is reimagined, local business flourished and modernization took hold spurring improvements in transportation, safety, law and health as well as expansion in adult recreation (prostitution). Forts built in the hilly terrain around the city became new neighborhoods and parks after the war, expanding the citys footprint and accommodating the flood of refugees and newcomers.
Exhibition highlights include:
Women of the Arsenal tableaua tribute to 19 women workers killed in explosion at the Washington Arsenal
Juxtaposition of urban and plantation slavery, the presence of free African American population and the life of contrabandsrunaway slaves to the safety of military forts
The soldiers lives in the camp settlements
John Washingtons handwritten narrative of his flight to freedom to Washington
Oyster shells and champagne bottle corks, excavated where the Smithsonians National Museum of the American Indian now sits, remind of the prevalence of ladies of the night
The Arnold Map, which would have compromised the war for the Union if it had gotten into enemy hands
Hookers Division Mapa users guide to houses of ill repute in Washington
Barry Farmthe first single-home development established in far southeast for newly freed
African Americans ◦Clarina Howard Nicholsfeminist and copyist at the Quartermaster Department, friend of Mary Todd Lincoln and an advocate for poor African American women
◦ Solomon BrownRenaissance man, poet, scientific lecturer, Smithsonian employee, member of the Washington, D.C., House of Delegates and Barry Farm resident
◦ Contract used by freed man Tobias Henson to mortgage his daughters labor to pay off final third of debt incurred to buy her freedom
◦ Audio/video station providing narratives by current residents on their Civil War-era ancestors and interactive maps on Washington neighborhoods during the war and today
Discussion of traffic circle monuments to generals
The enduring legacies of Civil War to the nation were preserving the union and emancipating African Americans. For Washington, D.C., however, the legacy was the influx of women into the federal workforce, growth of African American community and physical expansion of city.
The exhibition comes full circle into the 20th century in the final sections by reviewing the generational progress of particular individuals, families, religious institutions and neighborhoods.