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Racial Myth & Memory 2029

Picture of Civil Right mural from Carolina Friends School's Civil Rights Bus Tour

A Washington, DC Case Study

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Fall 2029 | A Three-Day Immersion into the Capital City

Washington, D.C. was designed to be a city of magnificent intentions, yet its very foundations were laid by enslaved laborers. We move beyond the Mall’s marble facade to explore the "secret history" of the District—from the slave pens that once sat in the shadow of the Capitol to the vibrant Black "Broadway" of U Street—examining how power is curated, remembered, and resisted.

Themes and Sites

  • Theme 1: The Architecture of Erasure. Exploring the "Federal City" vs. the "Local City."
    • Site: The National Mall & Decatur House. Examining the paradox of the White House being built by enslaved people and the nearby slave markets that operated until 1850.
  • Theme 2: The Black Broadway & Gentrification. The rise and "renewal" of historic Black spaces.
    • Site: U Street/Shaw Corridor. Once the heart of Black culture and the site of the 1968 uprisings.
  • Theme 3: The Sanctuary of Intellectual Resistance
    • Site: Cedar Hill (Frederick Douglass House) and Howard University. Centers of abolitionist thought and global Black leadership.
  • Theme 4: The Curation of Memory
    • Site: National Museum of African American History and Culture. Analyzing how we tell the national story vs. the local reality.

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Until we reckon with history, we’re not going to be free. I think there’s something better waiting for us that we can’t get to until we talk honestly about our past. 

Bryan Stevenson, Founder and Executive Director of the Equal Justice Initiative, Montgomery; Author of Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption