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Most Endangered Places 2001
Carter G. Woodson House
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Most Endangered Places for 2001
Carter G. Woodson House
1538 9th Street, NW
In
1915, Carter G. Woodson (1875-1950), a Harvard-trained historian and
DC Public Schools teacher, founded the Association for the Study of
Negro Life and History. In 1922, he moved his operations to 1538 9th
Street, NW, living and working in that row house until his death. In
the intervening years, Woodson successfully established Black history
as an academic discipline and fought to correct the commonly-held belief
that African Americans had made little or no contribution to the development
of the American nation. In 1926, Woodson established Negro History Week
(now Black History Month). This row house is where it all began. Although
the Association for the Study of African American Life and History still
owns the house, it moved out in 1971. Empty for over a decade, the house
where the father of African American history worked for 38 years has
a leaking roof, broken windows, and other interior damage. A registered
national and local landmark, the Carter G. Woodson House is on the National
Trust for Historic Preservation's list of 11 Most Endangered Places
in the United States for 2001. The National Park Service is currently
conducting a special resources study to determine alternatives for the
possible development of the home as a National Historic Site under NPS
stewardship.
Co-chairs: Alexander M. Padro and Marc Fetterman
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