Bellevue is a residential neighborhood in far
Southeast and
Southwest in
Washington, D.C., United States. It is bounded by
South Capitol Street, one block of Atlantic Street SE, and 1st Streets SE and SW to the north and east; Joliet Street SW and
Oxon Run Parkway
The Oxon Run Parkway is a corridor of federal park land in the Washington Highlands neighborhood of Washington, D.C. The Parkway once extended across the District's southern corner in a crescent from Hillcrest Heights to Oxon Hill but most of it ...
to the south;
Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue
Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue (also known as MLK Ave) is a major street in the District of Columbia traversing through both the Southwest and Southeast quadrants.
Route
Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue SW begins at the southwestern tip of the Dis ...
SE,
Shepherd Parkway
Shepherd Parkway is part of the Civil War Defenses of Washington. It includes two forts (Forts Greble and Carroll), of which some remains still exist. The parkway runs along the high ground opposite the Anacostia Freeway (Interstate 295) from Joi ...
, 2nd Street SW, and Xenia Street SW to the west. Bellevue was created from some of the earliest
land patents in
Maryland, and draws its name from a 1795 mansion built in the area. Subdivisions began in the 1870s, but extensive residential building did not occur until the early 1940s. Bellevue is adjacent to a number of
federal
Federal or foederal (archaic) may refer to:
Politics
General
*Federal monarchy, a federation of monarchies
*Federation, or ''Federal state'' (federal system), a type of government characterized by both a central (federal) government and states or ...
and city agency buildings.
About the neighborhood
Early land patents and creating Bellevue
On June 20, 1632,
Charles I of England gave of land covering most of what is now the modern
U.S. state of
Maryland to
Cecil Calvert, 2nd Baron Baltimore as a
proprietary colony. The charter had originally been granted to Calvert's father,
George Calvert, 1st Baron Baltimore, but the 1st Baron Baltimore died before it could be executed, so it was granted to his son instead. On September 4, 1663, a
land patent was issued to
Thomas Dent Sr.
Col. Thomas Dent Sr., Gent. (1630–1676), Justice, Sheriff, and member of the Lower House of the Maryland General Assembly.
Thomas was born about 1630 in the Parish of Guisborough, Yorkshire, England, making him slightly less than thirty year ...
for a tract known as "Gisbrough". This tract was roughly in the area that is now
Joint Base Anacostia–Bolling
Joint Base Anacostia–Bolling (JBAB) is a 905-acre (366 ha) military installation, located in Southeast, Washington, D.C., established on 1 October 2010 in accordance with congressional legislation implementing the recommendations of the ...
between Malcolm X Avenue SE/MacDill Boulevard SE and Giavannoli Street SW, the northern end of Bellevue, and the southern end of
Congress Heights
Congress Heights is a residential neighborhood in Southeast Washington, D.C., in the United States. The irregularly shaped neighborhood is bounded by the St. Elizabeths Hospital campus, Lebaum Street SE, 4th Street SE, and Newcomb Street SE on ...
. On September 7, a land patent was issued to William Middleton for a tract known as "Berry". This smaller tract covered what is now the southern end of Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling and the southern part of Bellevue.
After Thomas Dent died in 1676, his widow married Colonel John Addison and had a son, Thomas, by him. Although Rebecca Dent-Addison had children by her first husband, her remarriage appears to have caused a family rift and she deeded Gisbrough to Thomas alone. Col. Addison enlarged his estate by purchasing two adjacent tracts, "The Pasture" and "Pencott's Invention", from step-son Peter Dent in December 1686. The stream
Oxon Run and its banks were patented to Addison in 1687, and named "Glennings". Addison then purchased an extensive new estate,
Oxon Hill
Oxon Hill is an unincorporated area and census-designated place (CDP) in southern Prince George's County, Maryland, United States. Oxon Hill is a suburb of Washington, located southeast of the downtown district and east of Alexandria, Virginia. It ...
, in 1695.
"Berry", too, became part of the Addison family's holdings. William Middleton left "Berry" to his nephew, Richard Hanson. Hanson's descendant,
Thomas Hawkins Hanson
Thomas Hawkins Hanson, Sr. (1750–1812) was a planter from Maryland. He was born in Maryland to Samuel and Anne Hanson. Hanson served as a captain in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War. He married a widow, Rebecca (Dulaney ...
, married Thomas Addison's widow, taking possession of Berry as well as other property.
The Addison lands, including Gisbrough (later spelled "Gisborough" and "Giesborough"), stayed in the Addison family for the next century. In 1795,
Walter Dulany Addison
Walter Dulany Addison (January 1, 1769 – January 31, 1848) was an Episcopal clergyman who served as Chaplain of the United States Senate (1810–1811).
Early years
Walter Dulany Addison was born at Annapolis, Maryland on January 1, 1769, the ...
(who owned Oxon Hill) and John Addison (who owned Gisbrough) deeded of their land to their brother, Thomas Grafton Addison. He built a large home on a high point on the land, and named the mansion "Bellevue".
19th-century Bellevue
Thomas Grafton Addison sold about half of Bellevue by 1826, and at his death the remainder was transferred to local planter Zacariah Berry Sr. to pay debts. Zacariah died in 1845, and deeded Bellevue to his grandsons, Washington Berry Jr. and Zacariah Berry Jr. Their father (and Zacariah Sr.'s son), Washington Berry Sr., managed Bellevue as a farm and operated a fisher from the site. When Washington Berry Sr. died in 1856, he will several plantations to his two sons provided they divested themselves of Bellevue to their five sisters.
In 1860, members of the Berry family sued to have Washington Berry Sr.'s will overturned and Bellevue subdivided into numerous small lots and sold off. The court action was successful, but the
American Civil War broke out before the court order could be enforced. Because Bellevue occupied high ground suitable for artillery, the U.S. federal government seized the property, demolished Bellevue mansion, and built
Fort Greble
Fort Greble was an American Civil War-era Union fortification constructed as part of the defenses of Washington, D.C. during that war. Named for First Lieutenant John Trout Greble, the first West Point graduate killed in the U.S. Civil War, it p ...
(located west of the intersection of Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue SW and Elmira Street SW). All but the far southern part of Belleveue and all of Berry were surveyed and subdivided in 1863 by the government, and five of the seven lots (consisting of Bellevue) purchased by John Alexander Middleton and members of the Berry family. The land was resurveyed in 1867, and subdivided further. The Blue Plains estate and the far southern part of Bellevue were surveyed and subdivided in 1868. (They remained the property of Thomas W. Berry.) In the 1870s, the owners of Belleveue sold off various lots to members of the public.
In 1873, the U.S. federal government purchased of Bellevue (consisting of the western half of the old Berry tract) and added this land to the adjacent Naval Gun Factory. This land was known as the Bellevue Annex to the Naval Gun Factory until 1923, when the federal government opened the
United States Naval Research Laboratory on the site. The laboratory remains on the tract in the 21st century.
20th-century development
In 1906, the District of Columbia constructed the five-story Home for the Aged and the Infirm at Blue Plains, adjacent to the southeast corner of Bellevue. The facility fell into serious disrepair in the 1940s, and staffing issues became critical. The facility was renovated in the 1960s and renamed D.C. Village. A U-shaped complex of residential cottages, a new modern infirmary, an auditorium, and chapel were constructed at the site, and D.C. Village was lauded nationwide as a model elder-care facility. But in the 1970s, D.C. Village began admitting indigent and acute-care patients other nursing facilities could not care for. In 1980, the facility began accepted patients under the age of 60, essentially converting into an acute-care long-term care facility. Extensive financial problems and an exodus of staff led to a number of patient deaths and lawsuits. Courts ordered the facility to stop accepting new patients in 1993, and by 1996 D.C. Village had only 230 patients for its 800 beds. After years of political battles over the facility's future, D.C. Village closed in late 2007.
Most residential development occurred in the 1940s, as the farms and forests of Bellevue were transformed into two-bedroom residential
townhouses for military personnel working at nearby
Bolling Air Force Base.
In 1943, the first public school was built in Bellevue. This was Walter B. Patterson Elementary School, built on a site at Chesapeake Street SW and Nicholls Avenue SW (now Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue SW). Due to critical resource shortages caused by World War II, the structure was meant to be temporary. Despite its small size, more than 900 students crowded into it. Even the site was a poor one: Planes taking off from Bolling Field roared over the school, and school and military officials warned about damage to children's hearing and the potential for a plane crash. City officials wanted to build a much larger elementary school on the east side of Bellevue, on a site bounded by
South Capitol Street, South Capitol Terrace, Danbury Street, and Elmira Street, but had no funds to do so. But local anger over the site was so great that just six months after the school opened, D.C. officials asked the federal government for $430,000 to build a new, permanent structure at the South Capitol Street site. The request was granted, and the school was open by fall 1946.
The 60-bed Hadley Memorial Hospital opened in Bellevue in 1952. The original owners sold it to Metropolitan Health Associates (a local group of physicians) in 1990, and sold again to a national group, Doctors Community Healthcare, in 2000. It was converted to a long-term acute-care nursing facility in 2001, and was renamed Bridgepoint Hospital-Hadley Campus after a 2006 sale.
Once a thriving commercial hub, Bellevue declined during the mass exodus of the middle-class from the District of Columbia in the 1960s. The
District of Columbia Fire Department built its Fire Department Training Center on Shepherd Parkway SW near the southwest corner of the neighborhood.
On January 31, 1970, the city opened the Potomac Job Corps Center east of D.C. Village. In the fall of 1970, the Madeline V. Leckie Elementary School opened at the old Patterson Elementary site on Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue SW.
Bellevue lost most of its retail business in the 1980s, when a sharp rise in the use of
crack cocaine
Crack cocaine, commonly known simply as crack, and also known as rock, is a free base form of the stimulant cocaine that can be smoked. Crack offers a short, intense high to smokers. The ''Manual of Adolescent Substance Abuse Treatment'' calls ...
in the city led to soaring crime rate.
Another federal facility relocated adjacent to Bellevue when, in 1984, the
Architect of the Capitol moved its Lanham Tree Nursery from Poplar Point to at vacant site at the intersection of Blue Plains Drive SW and Shepherd Parkway SW.
Poverty in the Bellevue neighborhood worsened from 1980 to 2000. The Bellevue/Congress Heights/
Washington Highlands neighborhood cluster had a poverty rate of 26.1 percent in 1980. While the rate remained steady until 1990 (27.2 percent), it rose significantly to 34.0 by 2000. More than 46 percent of all children in the cluster were living in poverty. Only the
Navy Yard neighborhood (poverty rate of 50.3 percent in 2000), the
Buena Vista/
Knox Hill
Knox may refer to:
Places United States
* Fort Knox, a United States Army post in Kentucky
** United States Bullion Depository, a high security storage facility commonly called Fort Knox
* Fort Knox (Maine), a fort located on the Penobscot Rive ...
/
Garfield Heights
Garfield Heights is a city in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, United States. It is a suburb of Cleveland. The population was 28,849 at the time of the 2010 census.
Geography
Garfield Heights is located at (41.421423, -81.602682).
According to the Uni ...
/
Woodland cluster (poverty rate of 47.3 percent in 2000),
Barry Farm (poverty rate of 47.3 percent in 2000), and then
Douglass/
Shipley Terrace/
Skyland
''Skyland'' (full French title: "Skyland, Le Nouveau Monde", or "Skyland, The New World"), is a CGI animated series developed in France in partnership with Canada and Luxembourg for television channels France 2 in France, Teletoon in Canada, Nic ...
cluster (poverty rate of 46.2 percent in 2000) had higher poverty rates in the city. In comparison, the poverty rate for all of Ward 8 was 38 percent, while the childhood poverty rate for the ward was greater than 50 percent. Numerically, the Bellevue/Congress Heights/Washington Highlands cluster had the second-most people living in poverty (10,270) of any area in the city. (The
Columbia Heights/
Mt. Pleasant cluster had the most residents in poverty
1,328 while the third-largest concentration was in the
Crestwood/
Petworth
Petworth is a small town and civil parishes in England, civil parish in the Chichester (district), Chichester District of West Sussex, England. It is located at the junction of the A272 road, A272 east–west road from Heathfield, East Sussex ...
cluster
,769) The Bellevue/Congress Heights/Washington Highlands cluster also had the highest numerical concentration of African Americans in poverty (9,997).
21st-century changes
In 2005, a 119-unit condominium townhouse development, Danbury Station, opened on Danbury Street SW. Financed in part by the city, units ranged in price from the high $200,000s to the low $300,000s, and 24 units were offered at below-market rates to low-income people.
One analysis in 2013 indicated a neighborhood still undergoing decline. Researcher Emily Dimiero created a "gentrification index" which analyzed factors associated with
gentrification, and concluded that from 2000 to 2010 the Bellevue/Congress Heights area had continued to decline. At the upper end of decline (dropping 14 to 12 percent) were
Friendship Heights,
Mayfair
Mayfair is an affluent area in the West End of London towards the eastern edge of Hyde Park, in the City of Westminster, between Oxford Street, Regent Street, Piccadilly and Park Lane. It is one of the most expensive districts in the world. ...
/
Hillbrook, and
Deanwood. In the second tier of decline (11 to 9 percent drops) were
Van Ness (also called Forest Hills),
Fairlawn/
Twining, Congress Heights/Bellevue, and
Eastland Gardens
Eastland Gardens is a small residential neighborhood, located in northeast Washington, D.C. It is bounded by Eastern Avenue NE to the north, the Watts Branch Tributary to the south, CSX Transportation tracks to the east and the Anacostia River to ...
/
Kenilworth.
However, some improvements in the area occurred after 2010. In 2011, a new Metropolitan Police Department Evidence Control Facility was constructed on D.C. Village Lane SW. Patterson Elementary School underwent a complete renovation in 2014.
Community of Hope, a local nonprofit, opened the four-story, $26 million Conway Health and Resource Center at 4 Atlantic Street SW in January 2014. The medical center was the first healthcare clinic to open in the neighborhood. The District of Columbia provided $15 million to fund the center, with $6 million coming from the federal government, $1.75 million from billionaire
William E. Conway Jr.
William E. "Bill" Conway Jr. (born August 27, 1949) is an American billionaire businessman, investor and philanthropist. Conway serves as Co-Executive Chairman of the Board, Founder of the The Carlyle Group, Carlyle Group. He also serves as Ch ...
, and $2.75 million from other private donors.
In 2015, the 49-unit Trinity Plaza
mixed-use apartment and retail complex opened at the intersection of South Capitol and Atlantic Street SW. In 2015, a local real estate firm concluded that Bellevue is "on the cusp of new economic development growth." The firm pointed to redevelopment of the South Capitol Shopping Center into a mixed-use facility, construction of the new Bellevue/William O. Lockridge Public Library, completion of the Danbury Station and Trinity Plaza housing developments, streetscape changes, and abandoned-property seizures.
Crime in Bellevue remains persistently high post 2010, however. In 2014, the Bellevue/Congress Heights/Washington Highlands neighborhood cluster had the most incidents of violent crime (murder, rape, shootings, stabbings, assault) of any neighborhood cluster in the city.
The
Federal Bureau of Investigation
The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is the domestic intelligence and security service of the United States and its principal federal law enforcement agency. Operating under the jurisdiction of the United States Department of Justice, t ...
ranked Bellevue/Washington Highlands the nation's 22nd most dangerous neighborhood. The following year, Bellevue/Congress Heights/Washington Highlands ranked second in the city (behind Columbia Heights/Mount Pleasant) for the most incidents of violent crime. Thirteen of the area's 375 incidents of violent crime were homicides, and 182 incidents were assaults.
Crime statistics for Bellevue specifically show that the community had just 25 assaults, eight burglaries, and 14 robberies in 2015.
The combination of high crime and poverty meant that housing prices in the Bellevue/Congress Heights/Washington Highlands area were some of the most inexpensive in the city. The median price in 2013 for a one-bedroom apartment was $750, making the area the third least-expensive area of the city in which to rent an apartment.
In November 2016, ''The Washington Post'' described Bellevue as a neighborhood undergoing a positive transformation.
About Bellevue
Bellevue overlooks
Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling
A joint or articulation (or articular surface) is the connection made between bones, ossicles, or other hard structures in the body which link an animal's skeletal system into a functional whole.Saladin, Ken. Anatomy & Physiology. 7th ed. McGraw- ...
, and is just 10 minutes by car from the
United States Capitol.
Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling, the Naval Research Laboratory, the D.C. Fire Department Training Center, the D.C. Metropolitan Police Academy, the District of Columbia Water and Sewer Authority's Blue Plains Advanced Wastewater Treatment Plant, and the Architect of the Capitol's tree nursery are adjacent to Bellevue to the west. The neighborhood is overwhelmingly residential, with most housing consisting of detached single-family homes. Most of the housing in the area was built in the 1940s.
Mezzo-soprano
A mezzo-soprano or mezzo (; ; meaning "half soprano") is a type of classical female singing voice whose vocal range lies between the soprano and the contralto voice types. The mezzo-soprano's vocal range usually extends from the A below middle C ...
opera singer
Denyce Graves grew up on Galveston Street SW (now Gainesvilla Street SW) in the Bellevue neighborhood. Colonel Edward M. Lavin (USAF, Retired) grew up on 1st Street SW in the Bellevue neighborhood.
Library
In 2009, work began on a $15 million replacement for the Washington Highlands Library. The new building was designed by architect
David Adjaye. The D.C. Public Library board of trustees voted in July 2011 to rename the new building Bellevue after the neighborhood where it is located. But in September 2011,
D.C. Mayor Vincent C. Gray
Vincent Condol Gray (born November 8, 1942) is an American politician who served as the mayor of the District of Columbia from 2011 to 2015.
He served for one term, losing his bid for reelection in the Democratic primary to D.C. Council member ...
introduced legislation to rename the building after William O. Lockridge, a local community activist who died in January 2011. The library board and a local group, Friends of the Bellevue Library, opposed the renaming, pointing out that Lockridge advocated sharply reduced library spending in favor of more welfare programs. The
Council of the District of Columbia
The Council of the District of Columbia is the legislative branch of the local government of the District of Columbia, the capital of the United States. As permitted in the United States Constitution, the district is not part of any U.S. state ...
, however, approved Gray's bill. After three months of political wrangling, the library was formally named the William O. Lockridge/Bellevue Library, and it opened on June 13, 2012.
Playgrounds
The federal government turned Fort Greble over to the District of Columbia in the late 1930s, and in October 1942 the District government began construction of a playground on the site. Common-use buildings were added and the playground upgraded to a recreation center in the mid 1960s. These building were temporarily closed in 1995 when a city budget crisis left the
District of Columbia Department of Parks and Recreation
The District of Columbia Department of Parks and Recreation (DPR) is an executive branch agency of the government of the District of Columbia in the United States. The department plans, builds, and maintains publicly owned recreational facilities ...
with too few staff to keep them open. In 2012, the District government announced a $30 million program to upgrade a number of playgrounds and recreation centers throughout the city. The improved recreation site, which now included a community garden, a
splash pad, outdoor classroom space, new picnic tables and outdoor grills, and renovated basketball court and bleachers, opened in August 2013.
About 1948, the
National Capital Planning Commission opened a second playground in Bellevue, the Bald Eagle Recreation Center. The recreation center received renovations from private groups and a donation from the campaign of Mayor
Marion Barry in February 1995. A dance studio was added in 1996, and the center underwent a major city-financed renovation and refurbishment in 2001. A literacy center opened at Bald Eagle in 2004. The recreation center was due for a $2.5 million renovation in 2011, but the city rescinded this spending item and agreed to spend only $1 million. In 2012, the city spent $7 million on the Bald Eagle Recreation Center. New facilities included the Dr. Arnold W. McKnight Boxing Annex, a gymnasium with boxing ring, fitness center, locker rooms, and showers.
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