DC -- U Street Heritage neighborhood:
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- Specific picture descriptions: Photos above with "i" icons next to the bracketed sequence numbers (e.g. "[1]
") are described as follows:
- UST_090125_028.JPG: Garnet Patterson Junior High School
- UST_090516_083.JPG: (Stop 9)
A Magic Place
14th and T Streets NW
Louis Armstrong and Sarah Vaughn were two of the nationally famous entertainers who played at a club at the northeast corner of 14th and T Streets, once home to the popular Club Bali, also called the New Bali . in the memory of one former customer, it was a magic place, its rear garden lit with strings of lights in the summertime.
Club Bali was one of many nightclubs that made the U Street area a mecca for music lovers from the jazz era of the 1920s to the Motown sound of the 1960s. the magic often continued late into the night, as name entertainers, winding down after formal engagements, played to intimate gatherings into the wee hours of the morning in the many tucked-away, after-hours clubs located throughout the neighborhood.
Fourteenth Street was a place shared, uneasily, by black and white Washingtonians in segregated Washington. Black and white people owned, managed, and patronized stores on this important commercial corridor, which both connected and divided the mostly black community on the east from the mostly white community on the west.
While the white-owned people's drug store at the corner of 14th and U refused to serve African Americans at the counter, most of the predominantly black clubs such as the Bali welcomed whites, making the nightclub scene in Washington one of the city's few integrated social settings.
Today, both 14th Street and U Street are once again becoming venues for the arts and night-life, as theaters, restaurants, and clubs begin to reuse this neighborhood's historic buildings. buildings that were once car showrooms, such as the one once occupied by the Bali, are proving to be well suited to the needs of Washington's innovative and thriving small theaters.
- Wikipedia Description: U Street Corridor
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The U Street Corridor is a collection of shops, restaurants, nightclubs, galleries and residences along a nine-block stretch of U Street in northwest Washington, D.C. It extends from 9th Street on the east to 18th Street and Florida Avenue on the west. Most of this area is part of the larger Shaw neighborhood with the western end entering the Dupont Circle neighborhood. It is served by the U Street Metro Station.
History:
Founding and early history:
The U Street area is largely a Victorian-era neighborhood, developed between 1862 and 1900, the majority of which has been designated as a historic district. The area is made up of row houses constructed rapidly by speculative builders and real estate developers in response to the city's high demand for housing following the Civil War and the growth of the Federal government in the late 19th century. The corridor became commercially significant when a streetcar line operated there in the early 20th century, making it convenient for the first time for government employees to commute downtown to work and shop.
The 1960s:
While the area remained a cultural center for the African American community through the 1960s, the neighborhood began to decline after racially restrictive real estate covenants were removed by the Shelley v. Kraemer Supreme Court decision of 1948, allowing African Americans access to housing throughout the area. Following the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. in 1968, the intersection of 14th Street and U Street was the epicenter of violent and destructive riots by African-American residents. Following the riots, and the subsequent white flight of residents and businesses from the area, the corridor became blighted. Drug trafficking rose dramatically in the mid-sixties and for many years the intersection of 14th and U Streets was the center of drug trafficking in Washington, DC. At times, hundreds of addicts would fill the streets in a carnival-like atmosphere, waiting for drug shipments to arrive.
The 1990s and beyond:
Gentrification began in the 1990s, following development in Adams Morgan and later Logan Circle. More than 2,000 luxury condominiums and apartments were constructed between 1997 and 2007.
Music and culture:
U Street has long been a center of Washington's music scene with the Lincoln Theatre, Howard Theatre, Bohemian Caverns, and other clubs and historic jazz venues. While always racially diverse, the area was predominately white and middle class until 1900. As Washington became progressively more segregated, the neighborhood emerged as a fashionable neighborhood for Washington's African-American residents. U Street became the city's most important concentration of businesses and entertainment facilities owned and operated by blacks, while the surrounding neighborhood became home to many of the city's most prominent African Americans. Until the 1920s, when it was overtaken by Harlem, the U Street area was home to the largest urban African American community in the United States. In its cultural heyday, it was known as "Black Broadway", a phrase coined by singer Pearl Bailey. Duke Ellington's childhood home was located on 13th street between T and S street. The Lincoln Theater opened in 1921, and Howard Theater in 1926.
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