Around the Mall & Beyond
Since its founding in 1967, the Anacostia Museum has grown from "storefront" concept to "neighborhood museum" to world renown for its innovative programs and service to the community
- By Michael Kernan
- Smithsonian magazine, January 1996, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
Stories: in 1810 Alethia Tanner purchased her freedom for $1,400 with extra money she made selling vegetables at Washington markets. Twenty-two years later, she manumitted her nephew, John Cook. He later established the 15th Street Presbyterian Church, one of the first churches in Washington for African-Americans, and became its founding pastor. There is a photograph of him here, a sturdy man with determined eyes.
In 1835 Cook fled the city after the Snow Riot, when whites attacked the store of merchant Beverly Snow for badmouthing them. Returning the next year, Cook opened a school for black youths, and five years later he built his church. He died in 1856 at age 66. The stated purpose of this exhibit is to document "how in the shadow of the monumental public buildings that dominated its landscape, an urban community slowly took shape in the decades before the Civil War."
Certainly no example of such community growth could be more perfect than the Anacostia Museum itself, a bootstrap operation that has made museum critic Kenneth Hudson's list of the world's most influential museums ("museums which have broken ground in such an original or striking way that other museums have felt disposed or compelled to follow their example"), a list that has omitted the Louvre, the Getty and the National Gallery.
"We're about identity and community, about what makes living in Washington good," says Anacostia director Steven Newsome. "The current show focuses not only on the infrastructures such as the Chesapeake & Ohio Canal that made Washington an urban center, but on the people who built it."
Incidentally, slavery was abolished in Washington, with compensation to slaveholders, in 1862. By this time, the city markets were mostly run by free blacks, and in 1863 one of them, Columbus Scriber, opened a flour and feed store at 119 E Street Southwest.
"Actually, this is the second exhibit we've done on early Washington," says Newsome, who succeeded the founding director, John Kinard, in 1991. "Three years ago we did 'To Achieve These Rights,' depicting the self-determination of African-Americans in Washington from 1791 to 1992. We don't consider these exhibits so much black history as urban history in which black Americans are at the center."
The Anacostia Museum is located across the Anacostia River four miles from the National Mall. It is seen by relatively few tourists, and that's unfortunate, given its long history of fascinating exhibitions, such as "The Harlem Renaissance: Black Arts of the Twenties"; "Climbing Jacob's Ladder: The Rise of Black Churches in Eastern American Cities, 1740 - 1877"; and "The Real McCoy: African-American Invention and Innovation, 1619 - 1930."
The museum got its start in 1967 when then Smithsonian Secretary S. Dillon Ripley took note of the fact that a large segment of Washington's population rarely if ever visited the imposing buildings on the Mall. He got the idea for a sort of storefront museum, a drop-in place without the fluted columns and grand staircases, an approachable place with hands-on exhibits. So he set the wheels turning.
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