Across the street from the famous theater where Abraham Lincoln was shot, the center holds a gift shop on its 1st floor, as well as a 34ft tower of Lincoln books (it's actually an aluminum sculpture) 鈥 a testament to how much has been written about the 16th president. The 2nd, 3rd and 4th floors have excellent exhibits covering the aftermath of his assassination. Tickets, available at Ford's Theatre box office, are free and include the historic theater and Petersen House.
Ford鈥檚 Theatre Center for Education & Leadership
Washington, DC
香港六合彩即时开奖's must-see attractions
13.4 MILES
One of America's most visited historic sites, Mount Vernon was the beloved home of George and Martha Washington.
0.68 MILES
The legendary exhibits at the National Air and Space Museum include the Wright brothers' flyer, Chuck Yeager's Bell X-1, Charles Lindbergh's Spirit of St鈥
0.5 MILES
Two buildings. Hundreds of masterpieces. Infinite enjoyment. It's easy to spend a full day at the National Gallery of Art, which showcases a whole range鈥
1.39 MILES
Anchoring the National Mall's west end is the hallowed shrine to Abraham Lincoln, who gazes across the Reflecting Pool beneath his neoclassical, Doric鈥
National Museum of African American History & Culture
0.51 MILES
Located in Washington, DC, the sensational National Museum of African American History & Culture is devoted exclusively to the documentation of African鈥
1.03 MILES
Since 1800, this is where the legislative branch of American government (ie Congress) has met to write the country's laws.
0.57 MILES
Play image association with the words 鈥淲ashington, DC,鈥 and chances are the first thing that comes to mind is the White House. The president鈥檚 pad is鈥
2.24 MILES
Sprawling across hills above the Potomac River in Arlington, Virginia, Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for America鈥檚 most revered鈥
Nearby Washington, DC attractions
0.02 MILES
After being shot at Ford鈥檚 Theatre, Lincoln was carried across the street to Petersen House. Its three tiny, unassuming rooms create a moving personal鈥
0.03 MILES
On April 14, 1865, John Wilkes Booth assassinated Abraham Lincoln here. Free timed-entry tickets provide access to the site, which has four parts: the鈥
3. Federal Bureau of Investigation
0.11 MILES
DC's concrete, brutalist FBI headquarters should be seen, if only to say you have laid eyes on the single ugliest building in the entire District. When it鈥
4. Martin Luther King Jr Memorial Library
0.17 MILES
Designed by famed modern architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, this low-slung, sleek central branch of the DC public-library system is an important鈥
5. Reynolds Center for American Art & Portraiture
0.19 MILES
The Reynolds Center is one of DC's finest museums. This Smithsonian venue combines the National Portrait Gallery and the American Art Museum into one鈥
6. Navy Memorial & Naval Heritage Center
0.24 MILES
The hunched figure of the Lone Sailor, warding off the wind with his flipped-up pea coat, is an oft-overlooked memorial in the city. The sailor waits鈥
7. Clara Barton Missing Soldiers Office Museum
0.24 MILES
Before founding the American Red Cross, Clara Barton set up shop in her DC boardinghouse to locate thousands of missing soldiers after the Civil War. You鈥
0.24 MILES
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt didn鈥檛 want a grand monument like the one that's now on the Mall. Rather, he said if there was to be a memorial to him鈥