How America's Capital Became Its Most Dangerous City: Washington, D.C.

Washington, D.C. was designed from scratch to be the grandest capital in the Western world — Pierre L'Enfant's boulevards, the marble dome on the hill, a city where the architecture was supposed to match the ambition. For a while, it did. U Street's Black Broadway rivaled Harlem before Harlem existed. The Howard Theatre and the Lincoln Theatre drew Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald, and Cab Calloway. Industrial Bank funded hundreds of Black-owned businesses that white institutions wouldn't touch. By 1950, more than 800,000 people called the District home. Then it came apart. White flight drained the tax base. The 1968 riots gutted the commercial corridors that had taken a century to build. Entire blocks of 14th Street and 7th Street sat as rubble for thirty years. The crack epidemic turned neighborhoods into war zones, and a twenty-four-year-old drug dealer named Rayful Edmond ran a $2-million-a-week cocaine operation a mile from the Capitol. In 1991, Washington recorded 482 murders — a rate nearly eight times the national average — and earned the title no one wanted: murder capital of the United States. Mayor Marion Barry was arrested on camera smoking crack in an FBI sting. By 1995, the city was $722 million in debt, and Congress sent in a financial control board that stripped the elected government of its power. But the deeper story isn't about drugs or crime or bad leadership. It's about the only American city whose residents were never given the democratic tools to fight back. For ninety-nine years, Washington had no elected mayor. Congress still controls the budget, still overrules local laws, still refuses the District a vote. The city built to symbolize self-governance denied self-governance to the people who actually lived there — and every crisis it faced was made worse by that original contradiction. Sources John P. Richardson, Alexander Robey Shepherd: The Man Who Built the Nation's Capital (Ohio University Press, 2016) J. Samuel Walker, Most of 14th Street Is Gone: The Washington, DC Riots of 1968 (Oxford University Press, 2018) Briana A. Thomas, Black Broadway: African Americans on the Great White Way (The History Press, 2021) "The Forgotten History of U Street," Washingtonian, February 2017 "1968 Riots: Four Days That Reshaped Washington, D.C.," The Washington Post, March 2018 Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, District of Columbia, A 30-Year Review of Homicides in the District of Columbia, 2004 Annual Report

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