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Greater
U Street Heritage Trail: City Within a City
The
DC Heritage Tourism Coalition, in collaboration with The Historical
Society of Washington, D.C., inaugurated its second neighborhood
trail, City within a City, a 14-stop walking route that tells
the story of the Shaw/U Street neighborhood.
For half a century, during the years of segregation, U Street
was the nation's Black Broadway, and the heart of African American
business and culture in Washington, D.C. Located near Howard University,
the U Street neighborhood was home to Edward Kennedy "Duke"
Ellington. Its theaters and clubs hosted some of the great names
in American jazz -Cab Calloway, Pearl Bailey, Sarah Vaughn, and
Jelly Roll Morton, to name a few.
African
American leaders in science, law, education, and the arts also
walked these streets - people such as Thurgood Marshall, Dr. Charles
Drew, Langston Hughes, and the opera star Madam Evanti.
Today, you can see many of the sites that were familiar to these
show business greats-the restored Lincoln Theatre, the True Reformer
Building, the 12th Street YMCA, the Whitelaw Hotel, and the revived
Bohemian Caverns, where the Ramsey Lewis Trio recorded the album
In Crowd.
A free guidebook to the trail is available from businesses along
U Street and from the museum of the African American Civil War
Memorial and the reception desk at the True Reformer Building.
The
trail is easily accessed from the Cardozo/African American Civil
War Memorial/Shaw Metro stop on the Green Line.
In addition to learning about some of the rich African American
history, the trail includes a wide variety of Victorian style
architecture and a large park with a dramatic water cascade.

(l.to r) Paul Williams, Virginia
Ali, Adelaide Robinson,
Jim Graham, John Snipes, Scott Pomeroy, Kathy Smith
and Frank Smith
More information about the trail can be found
at:

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