Anacostia Community Museum Announces “Our Environment, Our Future”

2023 Theme Focuses on Environmental Justice and New Center

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As part of a multi-year focus on community issues, the Smithsonians Anacostia Community Museum has announced Our Environment, Our Future as the theme for 2023. Through planned exhibitions, programs and the opening of a new Smithsonian Center, the museum will examine the topic of environmental justice in the Washington metropolitan area using the lens of race and gender. This theme deepens the museums existing work in pioneering community-centered practices and critical environmental justice conversations.

Our Environment, Our Future is part of a five-year initiative, Transforming America, that looks closely at how racial inequality plays out in the lives of everyday people in communities across the Washington region and beyond, leading up to 2026, the 250th anniversary of the founding of the United States. This initiative reflects the museums mission and vision by collecting and using community stories to show not only a communitys challenges, but their triumphs as well.

Our multi-year focus, Transforming America, is entering its third year, said Melanie Adams, the Roger Ferguson and Annette Nazareth Director of the museum. Since 2021, we have been examining different societal and racial justice issues that impact our communities. Each year through these specific themes, and through our exhibits and programs, the Anacostia Community Museum will continue to foster discussions and learning. In 2021, the museum focused on food equity, and in 2022, we focused on housing equity. Now, for 2023, we turn our focus to the environment.

The highlight of the year will be the launch of the Smithsonians Center for Environmental Justice at the Anacostia Community Museum on Earth Day, April 22. The center seeks to create a future in which environmentalism is a cornerstone of civic engagement through which residents contribute to the development of healthy, equitable communities. The center encourages a humanities-led framework that places traditional scientific research and data in the context of daily life. Center staff will organize symposiums, panels, fellowships, an Environmental Justice Academy that will engage young people living in the region, as well as continue the work of well-known programs like Growing Community, the long-standing community gardening program.

On May 19, To Live and Breathe: Women and Environmental Justice in Washington, D.C. opens to the public. This exhibition highlights the stories of local women and their efforts to ensure that all communities are safe and healthy. The stories in this exhibition provide visitors with inspiring examples of women facing great odds who are tireless in their efforts to protect their families, their neighbors and their communities.

In 2023, the museum has a number of special programming days planned, including Earth Day (April 22), exhibition opening weekend (May 1921), Juneteenth (June 19) programming and the Anacostia Community Museum Founders Day (Sept. 15). In addition to these special programming days, a Farmers Market will be held at the museum every Saturday from April 22 through Sept. 16 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. An updated calendar is available.

About the Museum

Founded in 1967, the Smithsonians Anacostia Community Museum shares the untold and often overlooked stories of communities furthest from justice in the greater Washington, D.C., region. In celebrating stories of resiliency, joy and strength, the museum inspires those who visit to translate their ideas into action. For more information about the museum, visit anacostia.si.edu or follow the museum on Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook and Instagram.

Anacostia Community Museum Launches Augmented-Reality Tour of Southwest D.C.

“Before the Bulldozers: Historic Southwest D.C. Exposed” Explores the Impact of Urban Renewal on the Neighborhood

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“Before the Bulldozers: Historic Southwest D.C. Exposed” is a new app-based walking tour from the Smithsonian’s Anacostia Community Museum that leads users through the historic Southwest Washington, D.C., neighborhood and the story of its turbulent redevelopment. As part of the museum’s yearlong focus on housing justice, “Before the Bulldozers” recalls the Southwest community—and its displacement—in vivid detail. The free app uses location-based storytelling, augmented reality and immersive audio to examine larger issues of housing inequality through the lens of Southwest.


Visitors can download the “Before the Bulldozers” app for iPhone and Android devices on the museum’s website. Users should bring a pair of headphones for the best experience and start the tour at the Waterfront Metro Station, as the app is GPS activated at the site. A 45-minute video version of the tour is available on the museum’s website for people to join the experience remotely. Students across the Washington region are able to participate in this program thanks to Google, which donated 100 Google Pixel phones for pre-arranged school tours.


Starting in 1950, Southwest became one of the first and largest neighborhoods in the country targeted for “urban renewal,” a process in which the federal government razed schools, houses and places of worship to create space for development by claiming eminent domain. In Southwest, urban renewal aimed to upgrade the neighborhood, but disproportionately displaced over 20,000 African Americans. As a result, the new development leveled the majority of Southwest and destroyed a tight-knit, multi-generational African American community. Similar outcomes from urban renewal became commonplace in U.S. cities following the destruction of the Southwest community. 


Today’s Southwest neighborhood is unrecognizable to former residents. As the neighborhood experiences a current economic boom and struggles to keep its affordable community intact, “Before the Bulldozers” offers lessons from the not-so-distant past. 


“‘Before the Bulldozers’ gives audiences eyes and ears to the historic stories that shaped Washington, D.C.,” said Melanie Adams, director of the Anacostia Community Museum. “By moving through the Southwest neighborhood, seeing how the area changed and learning at whose cost those changes came to be, audiences better understand the role housing inequity plays out in everyday life—in D.C. and beyond.”


Created in partnership with Walking Cinema, “Before the Bulldozers” revives stories from those who witnessed, documented and even participated in the neighborhood’s evolution. These stories derive from the oral histories of displaced community members and the D.C. Public Library’s Joseph Owen Curtis Photograph Collection. 


“‘Before the Bulldozers’ is a story that starts in Southwest but then ripples out to communities across the United States in the 1960s and ’70s,” said Michael Epstein, founder and director of Walking Cinema. “Like all Walking Cinema projects, the story arose from walks and conversations with residents, historians and community groups.”


The walking tour follows three characters: an amateur photographer determined to capture his endangered community on film, an architect whose vision of a gleaming new Southwest captured the imagination of city planners and a current-day resident of the new Southwest grappling with the paradox of gentrification. The route begins at the Waterfront Metro Station and ends at Waterfront Park. As part of the tour, participants are encouraged to enter D.C. Public Library’s Southwest Branch, which contains in-depth resources, a small gallery of photos and a hidden surprise as part of the tour. 


Guided tours are available for school groups and adults. To join a tour, the public can go to “Before the Bulldozers” for schedules. Registration is required two weeks in advance.

About “Our Housing, Our Future”

“Before the Bulldozers” is part of the Anacostia Community Museum’s yearlong feature on housing injustice, titled “Our Hosing, Our Future.” In 2022, the museum is examining themes of housing and how racial inequality plays out in the lives of everyday people in Washington. “Our Housing, Our Future” brings the stories of people subjected to housing inequity to light. Visitors are encouraged to think critically about what makes a cohesive community, question how and why communities disappear and envision how people can build a more equitable future. The yearlong focus includes in-person and digital exhibitions, community programs and educational partnerships.

About the Museum 

Founded in 1967, the Smithsonian’s Anacostia Community Museum shares the untold and often overlooked stories of communities furthest from justice in the greater Washington, D.C., region. In celebrating stories of resiliency, joy and strength, the museum inspires those who visit to translate their ideas into action. The museum will be closed Sept. 18 through Oct. 31 as it prepares for new installations. For more information about the museum, visit anacostia.si.edu or follow the museum on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.

Anacostia Community Museum Presents “We Shall Not Be Moved: Stories of Struggle from Barry Farm-Hillsdale”

Online Exhibition Focuses on Housing Equity and Justice in Historic DC Neighborhood

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As part of a yearlong focus on housing equity and justice in Washington, D.C., the Smithsonian’s Anacostia Community Museum will present the online exhibition, “We Shall Not Be Moved: Stories of Struggle from Barry Farm-Hillsdale.” Available online beginning April 4, “We Shall Not Be Moved” asks virtual visitors to investigate housing equity in Washington through the lens of the historic neighborhood Barry Farm-Hillsdale. The exhibition features diverse stories of the people and places that made up the neighborhood, and it challenges visitors to think about how and why a vibrant, strong community can disappear. “We Shall Not Be Moved” challenges visitors to think about the stories they encounter in the exhibition and identify similarities to other communities that have been destroyed across the U.S.


“This online exhibition reflects the museum’s continuing effort to uplift the stories of diverse communities in the region and show their challenges and their triumphs,” said Melanie Adams, director of the Anacostia Community Museum. “Specifically, the Barry Farm-Hillsdale neighborhood was made up of African American activists, business owners and was even home to the first African American employee at the Smithsonian, Solomon Brown. These are more than stories about housing, they are also stories of the loss of community and how that loss continues to impact us today.”


Created for the settlement of African Americans after the Civil War, the Barry Farm-Hillsdale community was a self-contained, 375-acre site in Washington’s Anacostia neighborhood. Barry Farm-Hillsdale was once a strong, cohesive African American community that pioneered building schools, churches and civic organizations. The community thrived into the early 20th century. It no longer exists.


Through a series of maps, historic photos and oral-history excerpts, the interactive exhibition asks visitors to investigate what happened to the historic community of Barry Farm-Hillsdale. They will weigh how factors in community change—such as eminent domain, new housing opportunities in other neighborhoods, rezoning and gentrification—affected those living in Barry Farm-Hillsdale. By better understanding how race-based policies affect the lives of historically marginalized peoples, visitors learn to question what is happening in their own neighborhoods and how to make housing more equitable.


The exhibitions is curated by Alcione Amos, whose book Barry Farm-Hillsdale in Anacostia: A Historic African American Community inspired the exhibition.


“The stories of the historic community of Barry Farm-Hillsdale deal with activism and solidarity and how important these are for the survival of communities,” Amos said. “The exhibition inspires visitors to actively improve the life of their neighborhood and protect their communities from disappearing in the process.”


Visitors can interact with the virtual exhibition starting April 4. It will be available online throughout 2022.


“We Shall Not Be Moved” is part of “Our Housing, Our Future,” the museum’s yearlong focus on housing equity and justice in Washington.

About “Our Housing, Our Future”

In 2022, the Anacostia Community Museum will examine themes of housing and how racial inequality plays out in the lives of everyday people in Washington. Titled “Our Housing, Our Future,” this year’s theme brings the stories of people subjected to housing inequity to light. Through the lens of Washington’s Barry Farm-Hillsdale and Southwest neighborhoods, visitors are encouraged to think critically about what makes a cohesive community, question how and why communities disappear and envision how people can build a more equitable future. The yearlong program includes in-person and digital exhibitions, community programs and educational partnerships.

About the Museum

Founded in 1967, the Smithsonian’s Anacostia Community Museum shares the untold and often overlooked stories of communities furthest from justice in the greater Washington, D.C., region. In celebrating stories of resiliency, joy and strength, the museum inspires those who visit to translate their ideas into action. For more information about the museum, visit anacostia.si.edu or follow the museum on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.