香港六合彩即时开奖

Daughters of the American Revolution Museum


This neoclassical behemoth is supposedly the largest complex of buildings in the world owned exclusively by women. They own the entire city block! Enter from D St to reach its museum, where you'll find two galleries and a series of 'Period Rooms' furnished to reflect how Americans decorated their houses between the late 17th century and early 20th centuries. Guided tours of the rooms are offered from 10am to 2:30pm Monday to Friday and from 9am to 5pm on Saturday.

If the DAR鈥檚 name sounds familiar, it鈥檚 possibly because in 1939 the ladies barred African American contralto Marian Anderson from singing at its hall. Anderson then performed her famous civil rights concert on the Lincoln Memorial鈥檚 steps. The DAR eventually changed its policies and mended fences with Anderson.


香港六合彩即时开奖's must-see attractions

Nearby attractions

1. Organization of American States

0.08 MILES

A forerunner to the UN, the OAS was founded in 1890 to promote cooperation among North and South American nations. Its main building on the corner of鈥

2. Art Museum of the Americas

0.11 MILES

The Organization of American States operates this small art museum in a separate building on its property. It features changing exhibits of modern and鈥

4. Second Division Memorial

0.14 MILES

This memorial in the Ellipse honors the US Army Second Division's dead from WWI, WWII and the Korean War.

5. C&O Canal Lockkeeper's House

0.15 MILES

At the northeast corner of Constitution Gardens, this 1835 stone gatehouse is a remnant of the days when the Washington City Canal flowed through this鈥

6. Department of the Interior Museum

0.16 MILES

Responsible for managing the nation鈥檚 natural resources, the Department of the Interior operates this small museum to educate the public about its current鈥

7. Octagon Museum

0.18 MILES

Designed by William Thornton (the Capitol鈥檚 first architect) in 1800 for one of the largest slave-owners in the state of Virginia, this minimally鈥

8. Ellipse

0.18 MILES

The expansive, oval-shaped park on the White House's south side is known as the Ellipse. It's studded with a random collection of monuments, such as the鈥