Events for June 11 - January 18

  • 15-Minute History: 1961 Arlington Transportation Planning with David Pearson

    Arlington Historical Museum 1805 South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, United States

    Join David Pearson, former AHS president, to learn about how Arlington County planned transportation in the early 1960s and what we now have as a result. Our speaker will use the maps in the current Map Exhibit on the second floor to explain the first General Land Use Plan (GLUP), show what was built, paths […]

  • New Exhibit: First in Frame: Arlington’s Early Residents

    Arlington Historical Museum 1805 South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, United States

    Discover the people who helped shape Arlington. This exhibit highlights early landowners and settlers whose decisions and choices laid the foundation for the county we know today. The Arlington Historical […]

  • New Exhibit: Mapping the Federal City, 1791: Arlington in the Original District

    Arlington Historical Museum 1805 South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, United States

    Step into the moment Arlington helped shape the nation’s capital. In 1791, surveyors under President George Washington mapped a 100-square-mile federal district along the Potomac River, placing forty sandstone boundary stones; […]

  • Bridges of Washington, DC: The Virginia Side

    Aurora HIlls Library/Community Center 735 18th Street, South, Arlington, VA, United States

    In the late 1700s, the first bridges, now completely gone, connected the new Federal City to the outside world. Throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, more and bigger crossings arose to support industry, allow the expansion of suburbs, commemorate cultural and civic leaders, and enhance the aesthetics of the District’s waterfronts and parks. Although the […]

  • History of Slavery on Roosevelt Island Evening Walking Tour

    Theodore Rosevelt Island Pedestrian Bridge Theodore Roosevelt Island, Washington, DC, United States

    See Theodore Roosevelt Island with a new lens. Walk the places where enslaved people lived and worked on "Mason's Island" plantation from 1792-1860s. This guided walking tour is sponsored by The Memorializing the Enslaved (MEA) Project, a joint effort of the Arlington Historical Society and the Black Heritage Museum of Arlington. The tour will educate […]

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