City Cast DC logo

Get To Know DC’s Black Landmarks

Posted on February 1, 2023   |   Updated on September 30, 2025
Kaela Cote-Stemmermann

Kaela Cote-Stemmermann

True Reformer Building. (Aude/Wikimedia Commons)

True Reformer Building. (Aude/Wikimedia Commons)

Black History Month has a special significance in a place like D.C. where there is SO much history. But it can be easy to miss.



High school students (and sisters) Lily and Eliza Dorton founded the DC Civil Rights Tour app to educate users on local Black history and landmarks.



The app has an interactive map with 17 different landmarks. Users can explore the visual and audio elements to learn about each spot and the people behind it. Here are a few places that are included:


Frederick Douglass’s home at Cedar Hill (bdinphoenix/Flickr)

Frederick Douglass’s home at Cedar Hill (bdinphoenix/Flickr)

🏢 The True Reformer Building

This U Street building was home to the Grand Fountain of the United Order of True Reformers, a Black fraternal organization that eventually became the largest Black-run business in the U.S. between 1881 and 1910. It was the first building in the country to be designed, financed, built, and owned by African Americans.



🎨 Alma Thomas Residence

Artist Alma Thomas moved from Georgia to D.C. when she was 16 and lived in a row house in Logan Circle. She became an internationally-renowned artist and her work is now featured in the MET, the Whitney, and the National Museum of American Art.



📚 Cedar Hill

Frederick Douglass lived in Anacostia for the last 20 years of his life. The orator, author, and famed abolitionist was born into slavery but escaped and made his way to D.C. in 1878, where he continued his work writing and speaking as a lobbyist for civil rights.



“We're hoping to expand our app further by going into locations in Alexandria, in Maryland, in other places in Virginia, and more places in Washington,” said Lily Dorton.



Download the app
and learn more about how it was made.

Share article

Hey DC

Get smart about D.C. with our news roundup and analysis.

Can't subscribe? Turn off your ad blocker and try again.

Neighborhood Guides

See All
Neighborhood GuidesApril 8

Get to Know 11th Street NW in Columbia Heights

11th Street in Columbia Heights is one of my favorite hangout spot in the District. You can garden, snack on crispy pig ears, and grab fr...

11th Street NW, Columbia Heights. (Google Maps)
Neighborhood GuidesMarch 11

How To Spend a Day In Harpers Ferry

Harpers Ferry is everything a day trip should be: cute, accessible, packed with activities, and most importantly, has lots of great food....

Harpers Ferry view from The Point hike. (Westend61/Getty Images)
Neighborhood GuidesFebruary 18

How To Spend a Day In Frederick

Less than an hour drive away from D.C., Frederick is full of historic charm, bookshop nooks, antique emporiums, and quiet hikes.

A look toward the church steeples in Baker Park in Frederick. (WilliamSherman/Getty Images)
Neighborhood GuidesJanuary 15

Finding the Best Block In DC: Takoma

Start at Lost Sock Coffee Roasters, a small-batch specialty coffee roaster located in the old Takoma Theatre.

Statue of Roscoe. (BeyondDC/Flickr)
Neighborhood GuidesDecember 10, 2025

Walk A Mile On Pennsylvania Ave SE

Welcome to the another installment of our walking series, where we pick a D.C. street to walk a mile on and see what cool stuff we can fi...

Starting off at the Congressional Cemetery. (Annie Rees/City Cast DC)
Neighborhood GuidesNovember 20, 2025

Where To Eat At Eden Center

Eden Center is the most exciting strip mall you’ll ever go to. It's back halls are packed with dozens of Vietnamese bakeries, delis, bill...

Mall at Eden Center. (Kaela Cote-Stemmermann/City Cast DC)
Neighborhood GuidesNovember 10, 2025

Your Guide to DMV Airports

Yes, take the Blue or Yellow line to the Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport stop.

American Airlines plane on runway at Reagan National Airport. (The Washington Post/Getty Images)
Neighborhood GuidesNovember 6, 2025

Walk a Mile On Florida Avenue

Welcome to another of our walking series, where we pick a D.C. street to walk a mile on and see what cool stuff we can find along the way!

Walking Florida Avenue in my Maison Bar a Vin hat thinking about coffee from the Royal. (Kaela Cote-Stemmermann/City Cast DC)