INSIDE OUT AT THE NATION'S CAPITOL
Plenty of Ways to Enjoy Washington, D.C.

Story and photos by Lee Juillerat

High on Adventure, January 2019

 
 

The Capitol at night

 

The nation's Capitol - Washington, D.C. - is a place to see inside and out. There's a never-ending variety of things and places to see and experience.

Among the indoor delights are the many and varied dazzling Smithsonian and private museums, art galleries, theaters and public areas in the Supreme Court, Library of Congress and the halls of Congress.

The Supreme Court's Authority of Law

 
 
The Capitol at night
     
 
 

But there's also good reason to head outdoors to appreciate other sights, including the many memorials around the Tidal Basin - the Lincoln, Jefferson, Martin Luther King Jr., Vietnam Veterans, and Franklin Delano Roosevelt memorials and more - to the towering Washington Monument, Capitol Mall, Wharf area fish market, Arlington National Cemetery and the Capitol grounds.

Historic D.C. is a place to visit on foot, and it's easy to access. The Metro system provides easy travel from inside the city and from Arlington and Alexandria, both just across the Potomac River in Virginia.

The Jefferson Memorial

  The Lincoln Memorial  
 
The Jefferson Memorial
 
The Lincoln Memorial
 
 
 

The heart of D.C. is the outdoor National Mall, which stretches about 2-1/2 miles between Capitol Hill at the East end and the Lincoln Memorial at its West. Part of the allure is the architecture, from the classic elegance of the Lincoln and Jefferson memorials and White House to the raw power of the Martin Luther King, Vietnam Veterans and Korean War Veterans memorials. There's great diversity, too, from the simple elegance of the towering Washington Memorial to the varied architectural styles of the Hirshhorn, American Indian and African Art museums, Corinthian themed Supreme Court and the aptly named Smithsonian Castle.

The Supreme Court's Corinthian architecture

  The Court's spiral staircase  
 
The Supreme Court's Corinthian architecture
 
The Court's spiral staircase
 
 
  The Capitol at night  

While all are appealing during the day, they take on different auras at night. The Capitol is impressive by daylight but is even more ethereally elegant after dark. And viewed from Capitol Hill, the 555’5” tall illuminated Washington Monument seems to glow like a gigantic exclamation point.

 

 

The exclamation point Washington Monument

 
 
The Capitol at night
 
The exclamation point Washington Monument
 
 
  Washington DC fresh fish market   Washington DC fresh fish market  
Fresh fish choices abound at the Fish Market

Within walking distance from the Mall is the outdoor fish market. Located in the Wharf District near the Case Bridge, the market features local fish shipped in daily - clams, oysters, crab, lobsters, shrimp, salmon, smelt, octopus and beautiful, delectable varieties of fish along with warming cups of fresh crab soup and clam chowder. The market is at the north end of the Wharf, a still-growing development of high-rise luxury hotels, restaurants and shops that didn't exist five years ago.

  Martin Luther King Junior Stone of Hope  

Changes are constant in D.C. Multi-story housing units now dominate the Southwest/Capitol Waterfront district, also the location of the new DC United Soccer Stadium and, for the past decade, Nationals Park, home of the Washington Nationals baseball team. But more impacting are the memorials along the Tidal Basin. While the Jefferson and Lincoln memorials are elegant and the Vietnam Memorial evokes painful emotions, the Roosevelt and King memorials offer different personalities of the people they honor.

 



FDR and his dog Fala

 
 
King's 'Stone of Hope'
 
FDR and his dog Fala
 

King's memorial is steps away from the Lincoln Memorial, where King gave his famous "I Have A Dream" speech. The 30-foot tall "Stone of Hope,” an inscription wall, includes many of his quotations. The nearby Roosevelt Memorial is actually a series of waterfalls along a walkway that traces 12 years of American history, including FDR's landmark radio broadcasts, the Great Depression and World War II. It also includes a statute of his wife, Eleanor, who set an unequaled standard for First Ladies, while FDR's Memorial includes his dog, Fala.

  Ceiling in the Capitol   Marilyn Monroe painting  
 
Ceiling in the Capitol
 
Marilyn
 
 
  Washington DC electric subway between museums   'Car art' outside the Hirshhorn  
 
The electric subway between museums
 
'Car art' outside the Hirshhorn
 
 
  Lincoln's box at the Ford Theatre   The Newseum's Berlin Wall  
 
Lincoln's box at the Ford Theatre
 
The Newseum's Berlin Wall
 
 
 

During my visits to D.C., including two in the past two years, I've enjoyed places I savored nearly 50 years ago while in the Navy stationed at the Navy Yard. Old friends include the National Gallery of Art, Arena Stage, Library of Congress, National Art and Space Museum. During recent visits, places like the Newseum, International Spy Museum, National Museum of American History and Supreme Court have been among fresh attractions. Places I know took on new meaning, including the dazzlingly delightful U.S. Botanic Garden, with its resplendent display of plants, bushes and trees, and a behind-the-scenes tour of Ford's Theatre that provided insights of Abraham Lincoln's cowardly assassination.

 

Washington DC Botanic Garden

  Washington DC Botanic Garden  
Beautiful sights inside the Botanic Garden

Would I go again? Sure. Ever-changing places and sights remain to be seen and experienced in our nation's Capitol. Washington, D.C. is a city best seen inside and out.

Smokey the Bear fact-checking the story
Smokey the Bear fact-checking the story

About the Author:

Lee Juillerat is a semi-retired newspaper reporter-photographer who lives in Southern Oregon. He is a frequent contributor to newspapers and magazines, including Southern Oregon Magazine, Alaska Beyond and others. He is the author of several books, including two about Crater Lake National Park, one about Lava Beds National Monument. He can be contacted at 337lee337@charter.net

     
 
 
 
 
     
     

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