DCNHT: Federal Triangle Guide

the john A. Wilson Building is Washington’s city hall, home to DC’s mayor and city council. When completed in 1908, it was known as the District Building (for District of Columbia). Cope and Stewardson of Philadelphia won the competition to design it in the Beaux-Arts style favored by the McMillan Commission, which was charged with remaking this area in 1901. The new DC government headquarters arose on a lot left empty after a spectacular 1897 fire destroyed a streetcar company’s “absolutely fireproof” electric powerhouse. The building originally housed three presidentially appointed commissioners who, with congressional supervision, governed DC from 1874 until 1974. Passage of the Home Rule Act of 1973 ended exclusive federal control over city affairs and allowed DC citizens to elect a city council and mayor. The DC Council creates the city’s laws and budgets, though its actions remain subject to oversight by the U.S. Congress. The Federal Triangle plan that emerged in the late 1920s called for demolition of this building in order to build a Great Plaza on 14th Street. But critics argued it would be wasteful to raze such an impressive marble structure, and citizens rallied to save it. The building’s name honors the late civil rights leader, home rule activist, and former DC Council chair, John A. Wilson. Pershing Park, across 14th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue, is a memorial to World War I and to General John J. Pershing, hero of World War I and mentor to World War II military leaders. Directly across Pennsylvania Avenue is Freedom Plaza, where a portion of L’Enfant’s Plan for Washington is rendered in white marble and black granite. Washington, DC: Capital and City 1300 BLOCK PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE

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