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| Washington Monument |
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| World War II National Memorial |
One of the most striking things about Washington D.C. is how hard it works to memorialise itself. The buildings are to an unbelievable, and consistent scale and - most uniquely - covered in quotations. They fill the ornamentation of the Library of Congress and the Capitol, they add pertinence to monuments and purpose to buildings: "Taxes are what we pay for a civilised society - Oliver Wendell Holmes" emblazons one of the federal revenue buildings for example. Literally writing one's own history.
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| Lincoln Memorial |
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| The National Mall |
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| The Vietnam War National Memorial |
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| The Tidal Basin, with the Thomas Jefferson Memorial in the background |
One of my highlights of the weekend was walking around the frozen basin. The snow, and the time of year, meant I near enough had the route to myself. Very serene, and the perfect atmosphere to take in the various memorials that line it, all unique in their characters. The Martin Luther King Memorial opened in 2010 and was very powerful. The FDR Memorial stretched over several hundred metres, and was designed so that you walked through different sections of his career, the carvings to represent which were all set slightly differently to evoke different senses of history. (Does that sound pretentious? I hope not, it was just very effective!)
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| Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial |
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| Franklin D. Roosevelt Memorial |
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| Thomas Jefferson Memorial |
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| The Wright Brothers Plane, one of many highlights of the National Air and Space Museum - I also saw Buzz Aldrin's space suit and touched the Moon (rock). |
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| The Library of Congress (my happy place) |
The Library of Congress was a phenomenal building - just so ornate! It was built after the British torched the original congressional library housed in the Capitol in the 1800s . . . Thomas Jefferson donated almost 5,000 of his own private collection to start the new library, and they are on display today. I also got to see the first map of the United States (Montreal is just marked as 'Iroquois Lands') and a Gutenberg Bible.
By the time I came out of the library, the city was under Winter Storm Alert - the snow was pretty intense. The roads were emptied and nobody was on the streets. It was very peaceful for me, especially as the roads in the centre are so wide and I was able to wander in the quiet and really enjoy the snow. Definitely a content little K.D. Luckily there is a tunnel connecting the library and the Capitol building, so I popped straight through to do a tour.
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| The Capitol Building |
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| The Library of Congress |
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| The Supreme Court |
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| The Folger Shakespeare Library |
Speaking of contentedness, the Folger (who knew) is one of the leading Shakespeare research institutions in the world. Not only was the inside beautiful, with ornate jesters tiled into the floors. While I wasn't able to go into the reading rooms, they had a fascinating Renaissance Cryptology exhibit - those guys were sneaky!
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| Georgetown University |
I visited Lizzy (my friend from Edinburgh who is on exchange at Georgetown if you didn't know, TOP LASS) in Georgetown. A fabulous bubble only 20 blocks from where I was staying - but so different. Home to most of the members of Congress, it is extremely well-to-do. We even saw the pub where J.F.K. proposed! It was so nice, and surreal, to catch up over cupcakes so far from home. By the time I was heading home, the city was in shut down - I had to walk all the way back. Again, very peaceful and pleasant in the snow fall. The next morning it was already mostly melted however, and it was POSITIVE two degrees - practically tropical!
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| The Capitol Building |
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The Arlington Cemetery
The cemetery serves as the national burial site for members of the U.S. military and over 400,000 American servicemen and women are buried here along with members of their families. It is also where J.F.K. and his family are laid to rest. I've been to the World War Two graves and been dumb-struck by their scale, but this was something else - stretching for acres and acres over rolling hillsides. From its peak you can view the whole D.C. skyline and get a glimpse of the Pentagon. A very impressive and poignant location.
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| The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier |
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