Rawlins Park
The first time the statue of Rawlins was moved occurred in the 1880s, but by 1931, it was returned to the park and has been there ever since. A major development in the park's history came in 1915 when the Interior Department selected the lot on the north side of the park to be its new headquarters. The building was later renamed United States General Services Administration Building after a larger building, the Main Interior Building, was built on the south side of the park in the 1930s. A tunnel runs underneath the park, connecting the two buildings.
The park encompasses almost 1.5 acres (0.6 ha), and is 150-feet (46 m) wide and 450-feet (137 m) long. There were plans to extend a line of parks similar to Rawlins Park all the way to the Old Naval Observatory, but the only one built is the Walt Whitman Park, located on the Rawlins Park's western edge. In addition to the statue of Rawlins, the park features a central marble fountain with a rectangular pond on each side. One of the redesigns that took place in the 20th-century involved transforming the park from residential to commercial, so office workers have a place to gather outside.
The statue of Rawlins is one of eighteen Civil War Monuments in Washington, D.C., that are collectively listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) and the District of Columbia Inventory of Historic Sites (DCIHS). The park itself is also a contributing property to the L'Enfant Plan, which is also listed on the NRHP and DCIHS.
Location and features
Location
Rawlins Park is rectangular, measures 1.44 acres (0.58 ha), and is located in the Foggy Bottom neighborhood of Washington, D.C. The park is bounded by E Street NW on the north and south sides, 18th Street NW on the east side, and 19th Street NW on the west side. New York Avenue NW terminates once it reaches 18th and E Streets NW. Another park, Walt Whitman Park, is located across the street from the 19th Street side.
The park, which measures 150-feet (46 m) wide and 450-feet (137 m) long, is on Reservation 13 and sited two blocks west of the White House grounds and two blocks north of the National Mall's Constitution Gardens. The park is below street level. There is a stairway on the west and northern sides to access the park, and two stairways on the east and southern sides to do the same.
Features
In the middle of the park is a marble fountain. On either side of the square-shaped fountain is a rectangular pond. Sodded grass and trees form a barrier between the terrace level of the park and the lower portion. There are additional trees plus shrubs and hedges that divide the park between the terrace sidewalk and the public sidewalks on its border. An ornamental iron fence is on all borders of the park, minus the stairways. There are wood benches along the terrace and lower sidewalks. Lampposts are on the grassy area between the two levels.
Rawlins statue
On the eastern end of the park is a statue of Civil War General and, during the Ulysses S. Grant administration, Secretary of War John Aaron Rawlins, who is the namesake of the park. The bronze statue depicts Rawlins standing on a granite base. He is facing west and wearing his military uniform. The statue was designed by Joseph A. Bailly and is one of eighteen Civil War Monuments in Washington, D.C., that are collectively listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) and the District of Columbia Inventory of Historic Sites (DCIHS).
History
18th and 19th centuries
In 1772, the area where the park is located was within the town limits of Hamburgh, a small industrial town along the Potomac River that is now the Foggy Bottom neighborhood. The town border was where the west side of the park stands today. Tiber Creek was one block south, and on the east, a tract of land owned by David Burnes. The area was rather swampy, so development was slow. Although the park is not found in the 1791 L'Enfant Plan, the plan was improved in 1792 by Andrew Ellicott and his team. From that point, the area was always designated as an open space. The first major development around the park was construction of The Octagon House for John Tayloe III in 1799. It is located on the corner of 18th Street and New York Avenue NW. Many social gatherings took place at Tayloe's house, but the surrounding area did not attract housing or office buildings.
By the 1870s, there was still minimal development of the lots surrounding what was then an open space. On June 10, 1872, Congress appropriated $10,000 for the statue of Rawlins to be installed in the park. The following year saw marked improvements of the area due to Alexander "Boss" Shepherd's vision of the city, including paved roads, gas and sewer lines, and sidewalks. Shepherd's friend led the Office of Public Buildings and Grounds, and in 1873 wrote:
This reservation was very much below grade and required heavy filling; soil for which was obtained from the White Lot (now The Ellipse), from the excavation made for the new State War and Navy departments and from a reservation on Massachusetts Avenue between Eleventh and Twelfth streets which was above grade...A few trees, evergreens etc. have been planted in this reservation and are doing well. Two small fountains have been constructed with an ornamental margin and center-piece of rock-work around, and in which plants have been planted.
— Orville E. Babcock,
Babcock referred to the open space as Rawlins Park, which became commonly used beginning in 1874, when Rawlins' statue was erected. (the granite base was installed the following year) That year also saw chain-link fencing and decorative lampposts installed in and around the park. Landscaping, including adding multiple trees, was started around this time with the planting of "six junipers, eight Virginia cedars, four dogwoods, one sassafras, one black walnut, three English maples, three spireas, one magnolia, four forsythias, one birch, one Japan quince, and one jasmine."
Even with these improvements, development around the park was minimal. In the 1880s, members of the Union Army veterans group, Grand Army of the Republic (GAR), did not like the fact one of the Civil War statues was placed in such a desolate area. After lobbying government officials, the statue was moved to Reservation 35, near Center Market. Even after the statue and its decorative urns were moved, the park was still called Rawlins Park. The United States Army Corps of Engineers began filling in marshes in the Foggy Bottom area during the 1890s. Some rowhouses on the southern and western sides of Rawlins Park were built during this time.