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Robin Friedman

I have lived in Washington, D.C. for nearly 40 years and have gradually become fascinated by its local history, streets, and ambience. The past several years, I have been reading the "Images of America" books published by Arcadia Press. Images of America publishes small paperback books consisting of photographs and brief accompanying text which describe the local history of a particular community or group. They are accessible micro-histories in which the large world is writ small. The most recent book on local Washington, D.C. history is this work on the Park View neighborhood written by Kent Boese with Lauri Hafvenstein. Boese is a librarian with an interest in local history. In 2007, while looking to purchase a home, he chanced upon an old, vacant 1917 rowhouse in the Park View section of the city. Boese decided to take a chance on the property. In a 2010 interview in the Washington Post, he described finding the home and the neighborhood as a "happy accident". Hafvenstein also lives in Park View. She is an artist and a digital media professional with an interest in historic preservation.

The Park View neighborhood is located on the Georgia Avenue corridor in Washington D.C. beginning north of Howard University and continuing north to the current Georgia Avenue -Petworth Metro stop. A recent small local controversy arose when some residents of Park View tried, so far unsuccessfully, to change the name of the Metro station from Georgia Avenue -- Petworth to Georgia Avenue -- Petworth --Park View. The community is adjacent to the famous Soldiers Home in Washington D.C. which was the summer residence of Abraham Lincoln and until 1968 was available to D.C. residents for use as a park. Boese and Hafvenstein offer a brief photographic historical tour of Park View beginning with its origins in the Nineteenth Century and continuing to the changing community of the present day. The book is in six chapters of clearly presented photographs and text.

The opening chapter of the book shows Park View in the Nineteenth Century as a peaceful suburb consisting primarily of large estates. I learned that in the 19th Century a small park known as Schuetzen Park was built by German immigrants just north of Howard. Beginning just after the Civil War, the park hosted an annual "German Schuetzen Fest" attended by thousands until 1891 when the park was forced to close due to a ban on alcohol. This chapter of the book also includes interesting Civil War photographs of the area.

With the growth of population, Park View developed rapidly early in the 20th Century with the construction of long series of the rowhouses which still dominate the community. The second chapter of the book shows many photographs of the old rowhouses and of the way they were marketed. The community was part of a segregated Washington, D.C. The demographics were white until 1948 when the Supreme Court ruled unconstitutional the restrictive covenants under which properties were sold. By the late 1950's Park View was largely African American.

The next chapter of the book describes schools in Park View and the traditions the neighborhood as developed over the years for community activism. The book offers photos of construction and reconstruction and focuses on notables such as then Attorney General Robert Kennedy and first lady Lady Bird Johnson who visited and supported schools in the community over the years. The book continues with a description of community life in Park View with the sports, festivals and parades that have enhanced local life, culminating in the Caribbean Carnival that was established in 1993 and which now draws many spectators.

The heart of the book deals with the changes in the fortunes of the Georgia Avenue commercial strip which runs through Northwest Washington and through Park View. A series of photographs trace the rise, fall, and current revitalization of Georgia avenue from its days as a rural turnpike. There are pictures of streetcars, churches, restaurants, local food stores, blacksmith shops, nightclubs, pool halls, theaters, churches, and much more. Harry Houdini once appeared at the local police station where he was stripped, handcuffed, and jailed with his clothes in an adjacent locked cell. Within 20 minutes, Houdini emerged from his cell fully dressed in the company of the police officers charged with guarding him. With the destructive riots of 1968 and the rise of drugs, Georgia Avenue and Park View fell on hard times. With the construction of two Metro stations and community development and spirit, the area is on the upswing.

A final chapter of the book offers photographs of the grounds of the Soldiers Home and adjacent McMillian Reservoir from the days in which they were open to the public and offered opportunities for picnics and recreation.

I enjoyed learning about Park View, an area I have been through many times, in this photographic history of the community.