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Arthur Capper History Time Line July 5

The document summarizes the history of the Arthur Capper public housing project in Washington D.C. from its opening in 1958 until its redevelopment in the 2000s. It discusses how the project was located next to originally segregated housing projects and how many of its early residents were displaced from urban renewal efforts. It also describes the redevelopment of the project beginning in the 1990s using HOPE VI funding, which replaced the public housing with mixed-income developments and significantly reduced the number of public housing units.

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Johanna Bockman
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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
488 views13 pages

Arthur Capper History Time Line July 5

The document summarizes the history of the Arthur Capper public housing project in Washington D.C. from its opening in 1958 until its redevelopment in the 2000s. It discusses how the project was located next to originally segregated housing projects and how many of its early residents were displaced from urban renewal efforts. It also describes the redevelopment of the project beginning in the 1990s using HOPE VI funding, which replaced the public housing with mixed-income developments and significantly reduced the number of public housing units.

Uploaded by

Johanna Bockman
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Arthur Capper History Timeline

Saturday, July 5, 2014


Johanna Bockman
Sociology and Anthropology Department
George Mason University
Blog: Sociology in My Neighborhood: DC Ward 6
The Beginnings
January 21, 1958: The first family (the Keeseckers) moved into
the Arthur Capper public housing project. 707 households
would live in the project.
Arthur Capper was not segregated, but placed next to originally segregated
housing:
Carrollsburg Dwellings built in 1941 for African Americans.
Ellen Wilson Dwellings built in 1941 for whites.
St. Paul AUMP Church was already in the neighborhood, constructed in 1924.
Many residents were displaced from SW DC urban renewal.
By 1960, DC cleared out 23,500 residents in order to build a mixed-income,
primarily middle- and upper-income community in SW.
In 1990s, Capper-Carrollsburg residents would be displaced again. Thus, they
are a twice-cleared community, part of the nationwide trend of double
displacement.
Source: http://www.jdland.com/dc/timeline.cfm; Post, 1/2/58, 1/22/58; Vale, Lawrence J. 2013. Purging the Poorest:
Public Housing and the Design Politics of Twice-Cleared Communities. Chicago: U of Chicago Press.


1950s Arthur Capper Map
Arthur Capper Site Today
Arthur Capper
1865-1951
Senator from Kansas, District of
Columbia Committee, from 1919 for
5 terms. He advocated for low-
income housing.
Family of slavery abolitionists.
First President of Topeka branch of the
NAACP, on the national board of the
NAACP for over 30 years. He was an anti-
segregationist.






http://sociologyinmyneighborhood.blogspot.com/20
12/07/who-was-arthur-capper.html
Hilyard R. Robinson, architect
1899-1986, born in DC.
Howard University
Architecture Professor.
Modernist architect:
Langston Terrace
Dwellings, possibly first
African-American public
housing (1936).
Lincoln Park (12
th
and E.
Capitol) (1974)
Capper - Carrollsburg
1969: NCHA claimed it had exhausted its reserves and in much debt. Possible that
NCHA would go into bankruptcy.
1970: City-wide public housing rent strike, which removes the Director of Housing
Authority and forms the Tenants Advisory Board, which must be consulted on all
policies made by the Housing Authority.
1973: DC is allowed to have Home Rule.
January 1975: First Home-Rule Mayor Walter Washington begins and inherits
heavily indebted public housing.
January 1979: Marion Barry becomes mayor and implemented a city-wide
renovation program for public housing.
November 1981: 1101 7
th
St, SE, reopened after renovation was supposed to
start in 1973.

Source: DC Archives, Post 4/18/1968.
1968 Plans for Capper Plaza
Proposal: Amphitheater, pavilion, wading pool, play field,
track, seating arrangements, game rooms, craft rooms,
meeting rooms, refreshment areas, shops, toilet facilities,
laundromat.
Based on similar playgrounds in NYC done by Pomerance &
Breines, M. Paul Friedberg, MOMA, with funding from Astor
Foundation and political support from Mrs. Johnson.
Part of the SE Freeway will cut the area off from rest of SE,
such as complex could well-knit the remaining neighborhood
together: "something which has been needed in the
Southeast area for a long time."
Source: DC Archives
1970: MLK Food Co-op opens at 1011 7th St SE,
led by Beatrice Gray
Capper-Carrollsburg
Redevelopment
1995-2001: DC Control Board in operation. DCHA receiver, David Gilmore, has sole
right to transfer property and negotiate the terms without public hearings.
March 1998: last Capper high-rise, at 6th and Virginia, closed.
March 1999: DCHA and the Marine Corps sign an agreement to transfer (for
$500,000) approximately 13 acres of the Arthur Capper Dwellings site at 7th and K
Streets, SE.
October 2001: HUD awards a $34.9 million HOPE VI grant to DCHA to replace
Arthur Capper and Carrollsburg projects with mixed-income housing.






Source: http://www.jdland.com/dc/timeline.cfm, Post 11/7/98.
HOPE VI Program
1993: HOPE VI program began
To replace those severely distressed public housing units (6% or 86,000 units). Turned
into destruction of public housing and creation of mixed-income neighborhoods.
As of 2008, HUD data showed that only 24% of the original public housing residents had
relocated to completed HOPE VI developments.
Lawrence Vale notes striking parallels between two eras of urban clearance (1930s-
1960s urban renewal and 1990s-2000s HOPE VI).
Ellen Wilson Dwellings was one of the first HOPE VI programs.
1979: Virginia Williams, resident representative, told Mayor Barry: We have a priority. I
would very much like to see us keep our eye on Ellen Wilson. This property is right up on
Capitol Hill and if we aren't careful folk will take it right from under us.
1988: Ellen Wilson Dwellings closed for renovation, never reopened.
1999: First residents move into the Townhomes on Capitol Hill (the redeveloped Ellen
Wilson), one of the first mixed-income redevelopments of public housing in the US.
Source: DC Archives, http://www.jdland.com/dc/timeline.cfm; Post 11/3/2013; HOPE VI PROGRAM AUTHORITY AND FUNDING
HISTORY, http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/documents/huddoc?id=DOC_9838.pdf; Vale, Lawrence J. 2013. Purging the Poorest:
Public Housing and the Design Politics of Twice-Cleared Communities. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.


Arthur Capper Redevelopment
1995-2001: DC Control Board in operation. DCHA receiver, David Gilmore, has sole
right to transfer property and negotiate the terms without public hearings.
March 1998: last Capper high-rise, at 6th and Virginia, closed.
March 1999: DCHA and the Marine Corps sign an agreement to transfer (for
$500,000) approximately 13 acres of the Arthur Capper Dwellings site at 7th and K
Streets, SE.
October 2001: HUD awards a $34.9 million HOPE VI grant to DCHA to replace
Arthur Capper and Carrollsburg projects with mixed-income housing.
December 2006: new Arthur Capper senior building completed
Nov. 7, 2007: Demolition of old Arthur Capper senior building.
May 2008: Construction on Capitol Quarter can begin.
November 2012: Construction finishes at Capitol Quarter, the townhouse portion
of the Capper/Carrollsburg redevelopment.
2013: Navy Yard Neighborhood Association (NYNA) formed.
Info: http://www.jdland.com/dc/timeline.cfm, Post 11/7/98.
Arthur Capper History Timeline
Saturday, July 5, 2014
Johanna Bockman
Sociology and Anthropology Department
George Mason University
Blog: Sociology in My Neighborhood: DC Ward 6

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