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 4 of 4)
Over the years the museum expanded. The original building had many problems, and the area became drug-infested, so in 1985 the museum moved a mile up the hill to a site known as Fort Place.
Somewhere along the line the word "Neighborhood" was dropped from the name, for the museum's scope now reached far beyond the limits of Anacostia. For one thing, Kinard's own considerable travels in Africa resulted in lectures, lunchbox forums and special exhibits on international topics.
Of course, the dropping of the word had nothing to do with the museum's popularity. Attendance is well above 100,000 a year, including several school groups each weekday.
As Kinard, who died in 1989, once said, "This museum, if it is to survive, must [enmesh] itself more in this community in the future than it has in the past. . . . We cannot present a full diet of history and leave undone research on the urban problems that plague our community. . . . This museum, unlike any other museum anywhere on Earth, cannot be a place where we just show beautiful things and say pretty words about our history. It must be an advocate for a better way of life for the young and older people alike."
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