According to one observer, when the monument the Revisiting Series examined this week was unveiled on M and Connecticut Streets NW, the place was absolutely buzzing. The heroic bronze figure sat draped in his academic robe, book in hand, and looked out on the streets packed with the wide spectrum of adoring fans: men, women, and children “of all races and nationalities.”
Revisiting the Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Monument
Elsewhere in the Ist-a-verse
The Red Sox has permeated nearly every facet of Bostonist's lives. When they're not live-blogging the games, waxing poetic about the games, thanking Curt Schilling for his splendid work, or telling Dane Cook to watch his hair, they're watching certain presidential candidates hop on the Red Sox bandwagon (sorry, Gothamist). The Sox are so branded on the local brain that people are using the Series to spice up their sex lives. Speaking of spice, Bostonist...
Madama Butterfly @ Washington National Opera
The opening night of Washington National Opera's final production of the fall, Giacomo Puccini's Madama Butterfly, offers yet another opportunity to wonder why in the world this opera remains so popular with American audiences. Most opera fans, myself included, love this opera because the music, especially for the title character, is some of the most memorable that Puccini penned. However, the libretto by Giuseppe Giacosa and Luigi Illica tells a story that should inspire disgust....
American History Museum Plans Katrina Exhibit
Back in April we noted that the National Museum of American History will be closing at the end of the summer for a two-year renovation project. Today we're hearing a little more about what the museum plans to feature — aside from the Star-Spangled Banner Project — when it opens back up in 2008. Evacuation signs, lace valances stained at the high-water mark, and personal rosaries are among the artifacts that curators and historians...
Nats Look to Arrest Orioles During First Beltway Battle
After 22 straight scoreless innings, things looked bleak for the Nationals. With their highly-anticipated Battle of the Beltway on tap, the Nats had to beat the Cubs and Kerry Wood making his first start of the season. Well, a little bit of lineup shake up did the trick as four players, including Damian Jackson and Marlon Anderson, homered in a 5-3 victory over the Cubs. Firmly in fourth place, the Nats can now look ahead to their three-game showdown against their natural regional rivals, the Orioles.
American History Museum to Close for Renovations
An abstract flag, made of lightweight, reflective polycarbonate and approximately 40 feet long and up to 19 feet high will soar above the entrance to the new Star-Spangled Banner gallery and will become the new central focal point of the second floor where more than two-thirds of the museum’s visitors enter. Visitors to the flag gallery will experience the 30 by-34 foot wool and cotton Star-Spangled Banner in a new setting with floor-to-ceiling glass windows designed to evoke the “dawn’s early light” in which Francis Scott Key saw the flag, still flying above Fort McHenry in Baltimore Harbor in 1814.We're all for the Star-Spangled Banner project, which has been responsible for the conservation of the famous flag since 1998. But let's just hope museum director Brent Glass spares us the certain torture that would be involved if the new gallery also includes a looped audio feature. Think of the poor security guards and other museum employees being forced to listen to our national anthem over and over and over and over again. The horror.
Francis Scott Key's New Role in Local History?
If you get a few moments during the day, do yourself a favor and read Jefferson Morley's cover story in the Post Magazine if you didn't catch it this past weekend. Any longtime DCist reader knows about our love for local history and Morley's well-written and well-researched article, "The Snow Riot" -- which looks at Washington's forgotten first race riot -- is a great read.

