A Day At the Picture Show DIVISION & NANNIE HELEN BURROUGHS AVENUES NE The two-story Art Deco style building to your left was once the Strand Theater. Abe Lichtman, a Jewish businessman whose theaters catered to black patrons, opened the 600-seat Strand in 1928. Lichtman also operated the Lincoln and Howard theaters in Northwest DC. Initially adults paid 15 cents and children paid 10 for first-run movies on Saturday afternoons. The Strand building also housed a pool room, dance hall, pharmacy, and doctor’s office. From 1972 until 2008, the original H.D. Woodson Senior High School stood about a block to your right. Far Northeast’s only high school was an innovative, nine-story academic/vocational school intended to inspire its community. Instead, over time diminishing city funding, lack of mainte- nance, and design flaws led to its deterioration and, in 2008, its demolition. The school’s name, though, reflected its commu- nity’s aspirations. Howard Dilworth Woodson (1876–1962), a Deanwood leader and one of a handful of black licensed architectural engineers in the District, designed government buildings throughout the United States as well as hundreds of private structures in DC. Locally he designed Union Station’s roof, the Metropolitan Baptist and Vermont Avenue Baptist churches, and houses along 49th Place in Deanwood. Woodson led residents in successful battles for public schools and parks, water and sewer systems, street paving and lighting. And he helped form key civic groups, including the Northeast Boundary Civic Asso- ciation, the Far Northeast Council, and the Far Northeast Business and Professional Association.
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