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Pennsylvania
Avenue National Historic Site Washington DC
Location: Pennsylvania Avenue between the Capitol and
the
White House.
The Old Post Office is located at 12th St. and Pennsylvania Ave., NW, Washington, DC Pennsylvania Avenue is certainly among the world's most
famous streets. While the Avenue serves work-a-day Washington as a major east-west
transit route, it is known the world over as the heart of the Nation's Capital.
Many Presidential inauguration parades and political protest marches have taken
place along Pennsylvania Avenue.
On September 30, 1965, the Secretary of the Interior,
with the President's concurrence, designated it the Pennsylvania Avenue National
Historic Site, encompassing the Avenue between the Capitol and the White House,
and a number of blocks around it. The L'Enfant Plan placed the Congress House (the
US Capitol Building) on Jenkins Hill and the President's House (the White House)
on a low ridge north of the mouth of Tiber Creek and connected them with a broad,
diagonal avenue.
The name Pennsylvania Avenue was first applied to this
avenue by Thomas Jefferson in a 1791 letter, but no one is sure why it was named
for the Keystone State. One theory holds that this was done in order to appease
Pennsylvania, which would see the federal capital move from Philadelphia to Washington
in 1800. Others hold that the city's diagonal avenues were named in a logical north
to south progression. Massachusetts, Connecticut and New York Avenues lie north
of Pennsylvania Avenue, while Maryland and Virginia Avenues lie to its south, just
as these states do on a map of the United States.
Pennsylvania Avenue became Washington's first downtown
street with shops, markets, and a financial district growing along it during the
19th century. However, at the end of the 19th century, and continuing into the 20th
century, the Avenue became an eye sore to local residents with tattoo parlors, rooming
houses, and cheap hotels lining the street. An early attempt at improving Pennsylvania
Avenue occurred when Congress authorized the construction of a new combined Post
Office Department and City Post Office building at 12th St. and the Avenue in 1892.
Designed in the Romanesque Revival style by Willoughby
J. Edbrooke, the building was completed in 1899, and its 315 foot tall clock tower
remains an Avenue landmark today. This building was followed in 1909 by the completion
of the District Building at 14th St. and (what was then) E St. Designed by Cope
and Stewardson in the Beaux Arts style made popular by the Chicago Columbian Exposition
of 1892, the building was constructed to house the District of Columbia government.
Still in use by the District's government today, it too remains an Avenue landmark.
Due to the Avenue's then blighted state, Congress created
the Pennsylvania Avenue Development Corporation on October 27, 1972 to plan and
carry out the Avenue's revitalization. Declaring its redevelopment to be in the
national interest, Congress directed that the Avenue be developed, maintained, and
used "in a manner suitable to its ceremonial, physical, and historic relationship
to the legislative and executive branches of the Federal Government and to the governmental
buildings, monuments, memorials, and parks in or adjacent to the area." In 1964,
the President's Council on Pennsylvania Avenue recommended all but the clock tower
of the Old Post Office be tore down and a demolition permit was granted in 1971.
Citizen protest saved the Old Post Office from the wrecking ball and led to a major
rehabilitation of the building being authorized by Congress in 1977.
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