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Ben's Chili Bowl: 50 Years of a Washington, D.C. Landmark (Images of America)

Tracey Gold Bennett, Nizam B. Ali, Foreword by Bill Cosby

Ben's Chili Bowl: 50 Years of a Washington, D.C. Landmark (Images of America) Tracey Gold Bennett, Nizam B. Ali, Foreword by Bill Cosby Amazon Price: $13.59
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Total reviews: 3 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

A Washington D.C. Landmark Celebrates Fifty Years 5 out of 5 stars.
3 of 3 people found this review helpful.

On August 22, 2008, an unlikely Washington D.C. Landmark, Ben's Chili Bowl, will celebrate its fiftieth year in business at 1213 U. Street N.W. in the Shaw area of Washington, D.C. Ben's -- or the Bowl -- is famous for its chili, made to a secret formula -- which is spread liberally on its hot dogs and half smokes, and served frequently with cheese fries and shakes. Bens will celebrate its fiftieth anniversary with a concert at the Lincoln Theater on August 21 and a street festival on August 22. I had a chili dog and more cheese fries than I could eat during my most recent visit to the Bowl a couple of weeks ago.

The Bowl is located in the building which once housed the Minnehaha Theater, the first silent movie theater in Washington, D.C., and it is adjacent to the Lincoln Theater, itself a landmark of African American culture in Washington, D.C. for many years and recently restored. The interior of the Bowl -- with its stainless steel counter, its counter seats, tables, and large back room -- all of which have remained in use since the restaurant's opening -- are familiar to generations of Washingtonians. The Bowl has flourished through change and adversity. The owners recently purchased the adjacent property, which had been run-down and abandoned for many years, and will convert it into a bar with a theme similar to the restaurant. Ben's Chili Bowl also has opened two facilities at the new Washington Nationals baseball stadium.

As part of the fifty-year celebration, the Images of America Series has released this new book, "Ben's Chili Bowl: 50 Years of a Washington, D.C., Landmark," which consists of a pictorial history of the Bowl, its owners, its patrons, and its community over the past 50 years. Tracey Gould Bennett, a D.C. journalist and historian wrote the book with assistance from Nizam Ali, who now operates the Bowl with his brother, Kamal. Bill Cosby wrote the Foreward to the volume. Cosby is the Bowl's most famous patron, and, a sign inside the restaurant announces, is the only person who eats in the Bowl for free.

The book, as it must, also celebrates the past 50 year history of the U Street community of which Ben's Chili Bowl is a part. When the Bowl opened in 1958, the U Street corridor was the home of a thriving African American music and entertainment district in a still segregated Washington, D.C. In 1968, with the riots following the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr the U Street corridor was decimated. Ben's Chili Bowl remained open. It was allowed to stay open after the curfew and served both the police and firemen sent to control the riots and the members of the Stokley Carmichael's Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee which was headquartered across the street. In 1987, with the advent of construction for the Shaw Metro stop, business was reduced to a trickle as there was limited access to U Street. Ben's Chili Bowl remained open through a lean five years, usually with a staff of two. With the revitalization of U Street following the opening of the Metro and the recognition the Bowl has received, Ben's Chili Bowl is thriving as never before.

The opening chapter of Bennett's book shows photographs of U Street and the Bowl during the days of the late 1950s. Much of the book focuses on the Ali family which has operated the Bowl since its inception. Ben Ali, a West Indian immigrant from Trinidad, and his fiance Virginia Rollins, an African American from Chance, Virginia (100 miles south of Washington,D.C.) opened the Bowl with a $5,000 bank loan in 1958 and married in the face of laws then on the books prohibiting interracial marriages. They operated the Bowl until 2007 and then turned management of the business over to two of their sons, Nizam and Kamal who operate it today. The Ali family and its story figures prominently in this book.

Subsequent chapters of the book describe the famous patrons of the Bowl, from D.C. go-go singer Chuck Brown, to tennis star Serena Williams, to academic Cornel West, to Senator and presidential candidate Hilary Clinton, with innumerable celebrities in between. The Bowl's back room also has hosted political meetings of every stripe, from Congressional Republicans, who meet at the Bowl monthly, to the local D.C. Government, to many community activist groups. These meetings are documented in Bennett's book. But the most moving sections of the book are those which show the many everyday people of all races and walks of life who have patronized the Bowl regularly over the years. There is also an excellent gallery of photographs of employees of Ben's Chili Bowl -- some of whom have been with the Ali's for 30 years -- past and present.

From its simple origins, Ben's Chili Bowl has become a beloved and familiar part of Washington D.C. life with its chili-laced dogs, down-home atmosphere, African American heritage, and openness to pluralism. Ben's deserves to be celebrated on its 50th anniversary. I enjoyed recollecting the times I have had at the Bowl in reading this book.

Robin Friedman

Editorial Review:

From the days when U Street was hailed as Black Broadway to the current revitalization and gentrification of the new millennium, Ben's Chili Bowl survived it all. On August 22, 1958, West Indian immigrant Mahaboob Ben Ali and his fiance', Virginia Rollins, saw their dream realized as they opened a hot dog and chili shop on U Street. They never imagined that Ben's would become world renowned or such a beloved restaurant in the nation's capital. Today visitors to U Street will find a diverse and eclectic mix of residents, music venues, trendy shops, and, of course, the Bowl. The images in this book provide a look back over the 50-year history of Ben's Chili Bowl, U Street, the Ali family, and the patrons who have helped define Ben's as a vibrant cultural landmark.

Testament to Union: Civil War Monuments in Washington, D.C.

Kathryn Allamong Jacob

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Editorial Review:

Although the monuments of Washington, D.C., honor more than two centuries of history and heroes, five years of that history produced more of the city's public commemorative sculpture than all the others combined. The heroes of the Civil War command Washington's choicest vantage points and most visible parks, lending their names to the city's most familiar circles and squares -- Scott, Farragut, Logan, Sheridan, Dupont, and others.

In Testament to Union, Kathryn Allamong Jacob tells the stories behind the many District of Columbia statues that honor participants in the Civil War, predominantly Union, and testify to their sacrifice and valor. In her introduction, Jacob puts these monuments in historical context, describing the often bitter battles over control of historical memory, the postwar monument business (a lone soldier-in-granite model could cost a community as little as $1,000), and the rise of the "city beautiful" movement that transformed Washington. She then offers individual descriptions of forty-one sculptures, providing a lively and informative guide to some of Washington's most beautiful and moving works of art.

Organized geographically for easy use on walking or driving tours, the entries begin by listing the subject or title of the memorial along with its sculptor, medium, date, and location. Jacob describes its various elements and symbols, and she notes who commissioned the sculpture, who paid for it (or failed to pay in several cases), and who approved its design and placement. She also includes anecdotes and controversies that bring the monuments and their colorful history more fully to life. Admiral David Farragut's statue, for example, is cast from the propeller of his ship the U.S.S. Hartford, from whose rigging he shouted, "Damn the torpedoes! Full speed ahead!" during the battle of Mobile Bay. At the dedication of Lincoln Park's Emancipation Monument in 1876, the largest assembly of African-American to date, speaker Frederick Douglass shocked white listeners with thinly veiled criticism of the martyred Lincoln.

Edwin Remsberg's photographs of the monuments capture striking images of war and sacrifice -- the straining horses and terrified men of the cavalry grouping at the Grant Monument; the vivid tomb effigy of young John Meigs, depicting him as he was found dead in a field; the Pension Building frieze with its hundreds of finely detailed terra cotta soldiers and sailors marching and rowing across the face of the building. Along with swashbuckling generals atop pedestals bristling with cannon, unexpected subjects appear. A statue of John Ericsson, the Swedish-American who designed the Monitor and perfected the screw propeller for the Union Navy, is hidden in a circle of shrubbery beside the Potomac. A bas-relief of twelve nuns dedicated to the memory of various religious orders who nursed the wounded during the Civil War sits beside noisy Rhode Island Avenue. In addition to the enormous white temple to Lincoln on the Mall, four smaller statues of that president can be found in the city where he was assassinated.

Washington's Civil War sculptures bear silent witness to the struggle to preserve the Union. They are the fruit of conscious efforts to shape the nation's memory of that struggle. For tourists and long-time residents, and for anyone interested in the Civil War or public art, Testament to Union is a wonderful guide to these tangible connections to the nation's past and an era when public monuments packed powerful messages.

Our Changing White House

Wendell Garrett

Our Changing White House Wendell Garrett List Price: $45.00
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Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

awesome! 5 out of 5 stars.
0 of 0 people found this review helpful.

this book is very informative on what could be termed an "american castle". The book details how our monument of freedom has changed through its existence.

Editorial Review:

In many different ways the White House is living history, a reflection of our nation's past and a window to its future. The illuminating, well-written essays in this abundantly illustrated volume focus on the Executive Mansion's architecture, gardens, furnishings, and staff to reveal a White House forever changing and evolving. The volume also includes an essay on the personal experiences and recollections of the household staff, whose long-established tradition of service and decorum provides a key source of continuity over decades of change in the White House. This exquisite work is dedicated to the memory of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, who inspired the creation of the White House Historical Association. It evokes the spirit of the Executive Mansion, and of the presidents and first families who shaped its fascinating history. The essays included are an outgrowth of a White House Historical Association - sponsored symposium celebrating the two hundredth anniversary of the White House.

Camelot at Dawn: Jacqueline and John Kennedy in Georgetown, May 1954

Anne Garside

Camelot at Dawn: Jacqueline and John Kennedy in Georgetown, May 1954 Anne Garside List Price: $26.00
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Editorial Review:

An intimate photo essay of John and Jacqueline Kennedy's first year of marriage in their Georgetown home.

"I have just seen McCall's and so has Jack and we are so happy . . . They are the only pictures I've ever seen of me where I don't look like something out of a horror movie. If I'd realized what a wonderful photographer you were . . . I never would have been the jittery subject I was. Poor Orlando! Remember I wouldn't even eat a Good Humor. I was so lens-shy."—Jacqueline Kennedy, in a letter to Orlando Suero

In January 1954, the handsome junior senator from Massachusetts and his glamorous wife moved into a three-story townhouse at 3321 Dent Place in Georgetown. Although they would live here for only five months, the house was their first home after their wedding— the society event of the decade—and a place from which they could begin to prepare for the next step in their lives, one that would take John and Jacqueline Kennedy to the White House. In May of that year, Orlando Suero, a photographer with the Three Lions Picture Agency on his first major assignment, spent five days with the Kennedys. He enjoyed their full cooperation and the intimate access that would later, as Jacqueline became more anxious about her family's privacy, be denied to all but a few.

In more than twenty photo sessions, Suero documented a typical week in the young couple's life: Jack at his Senate office, catching up on work at home, and painting in the back garden; Jackie attending classes at Georgetown, gardening, and preparing for an evening of dinner and dancing; and the couple reading the morning papers around the breakfast table, looking through their wedding photos, hosting both casual and formal dinner parties, and tossing the football around with neighbors Bobby and Ethel Kennedy.

Suero's photographs capture the idyllic quality of the young couple's lives during their months in Georgetown. Not yet hounded by the media, John and Jacqueline in these images seem happier and more at ease than they would ever be again. Surprisingly, no magazine ever published Suero's complete photo essay. McCall's ran a few of his photographs that fall, but most of them have not been seen until now. In 1989, Three Lions Picture Agency owner Max Lowenherz donated the photographs to the Johns Hopkins University's Peabody Institute. For Camelot at Dawn, the Peabody Institute's Anne Garside has selected nearly one hundred of the most evocative and affecting pictures Suero took during his week in Georgetown. This remarkable document of John and Jacqueline Kennedy's first year of marriage recalls the romance and the promise embodied by their life together in America's last age of innocence.

Nazi Saboteurs on Trial: A Military Tribunal and American Law (Landmark Law Cases & American Society)

Louis Fisher

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Editorial Review:

Although huge in scope and impact, the 9/11 attacks were not the first threat by foreign terrorists on American soil. During World War II, eight Germans landed on our shores in 1942 bent on sabotage. Caught before they could carry out their missions, under FDR's presidential proclamation they were hauled before a secret military tribunal and found guilty. Meeting in an emergency session, the Supreme Court upheld the tribunal's authority. Justice was swift: six of the men were put to death--a sentence much more harsh than would have been allowed in a civil trial.

Louis Fisher chronicles the capture, trial, and punishment of the Nazi saboteurs in order to examine the extent to which procedural rights are suspended in time of war. One of America's leading constitutional scholars, Fisher analyzes the political, legal, and administrative context of the Supreme Court decision Ex parte Quirin (1942). He reconstructs a rush to judgment that has striking relevance to current events by considering the reach of the law in trials conducted against wartime enemies.

Fisher contends that, although the Germans did not have a constitutional right to a civil trial, the tribunal represented an ill-conceived concentration of power within the presidency, supplanting essential checks from the judiciary, Congress, and the office of the Judge Advocate General. He also reveals that the trials were conducted in secret not to preserve national security but rather to shield the government's chief investigators and sentencing decisions from public scrutiny and criticism. Thus, the FBI's bogus claim to have nabbed the saboteurs entirely on their own was allowed to stand, while the saboteurs' death sentences were initially kept hidden from public view.

Fisher provides an inside look at the judicial deliberations, drawing on the 3,000-page tribunal transcript, Supreme Court records, and the private papers of the justices and executive officials involved. He analyzes the deep disagreements within the Roosevelt administration, leading to a conclusion in 1945 that the process used against the eight Germans had been defective and, thus, that an entirely different procedure was needed to prosecute two later German saboteurs.

Nazi Saboteurs on Trial also reveals just how poorly the justices resisted wartime pressures and how badly they failed to protect procedural rights. Although Ex parte Quirin is cited as an apt precedent by the Bush administration for the trying of suspected al Qaeda terrorists, Fisher concludes that the 1942 decision was, in the words of Justice Felix Frankfurter, not a happy precedent. His book provides a sober cautionary tale for our current effort to balance individual rights and national security.

Montgomery C. Meigs: & Building Of Nation'S Capital (Perspective On Art & Architect)

William C. Dickinson

Montgomery C. Meigs: & Building Of Nation'S Capital (Perspective On Art & Architect) William C. Dickinson Amazon Price: $49.95
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At the age of thiry-six in 1852, Lt. Montgomery Cunningham Meigs of the Army Corps of Engineers reported to Washington, D. C., for duty as a special assistant to the chief army engineer, Gen. Joseph G. Totten. It was a fateful assignment, both for the nation's capital and for the bright, ambitious, and politically connected West Point graduate. Meigs's forty-year tenure in the nation's capital was by any account spectacularly successful. He surveyed, designed, and built the Washington water supply system, oversaw the extension of the U.S. Capitol and the erection of its massive iron dome, and designed and supervised construction of the Pension Building, now the home of the National Building Museum. The skills he exhibited in supervising engineering projects were carefully noted by political leaders, including president-elect Abraham Lincoln, who named Meigs quartermaster general of the Union Army, the most important position he would hold during his long and active military career. Meigs believed Washington, D. C., should be the reincarnation of Rome, the ancient capital of the Roman Empire. He endeavored to memorialize the story of the American nation in all the structures he built, expressing these ideas in murals, sculpture, and monumental design. Historians have long known Meigs for the organizational genius with which he fulfilled his duty as quartermaster general during the Civil War and for his unwavering loyalty to Lincoln and Secretary of War Edwin Stanton. This volume establishes his claim as one of the major nineteenth-century contributors to the built environment of the nation's capital.

Washington on View: The Nation's Capital Since 1790

John W. Reps

Washington on View: The Nation's Capital Since 1790 John W. Reps List Price: $65.00
By: Univ of North Carolina Pr
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The Sacred Geometry of Washington, D.c.: The Integrity And Power of the Original Design

Nicholas R. Mann

The Sacred Geometry of Washington, D.c.: The Integrity And Power of the Original Design Nicholas R. Mann Amazon Price: $16.95
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Editorial Review:

The Sacred Geometry of Washington, D.C. shows how a system of number and geometric proportion, employed in the temples and cities of many of the great civilizations of the past, is present in the original design of the United States capital. In 1791, as the immense new Federal City took shape upon the landscape, it had to define and balance the powers of the People, the States, the Judiciary, the Legislature and the President. The architect had to give symbolic form to a new democratic republic. But, over the centuries, imbalances crept into this plan. Nicholas Mann describes this story in fascinating detail and asks: if the symbolism of the capital city is intended to be a true expression of America’s heart, its innermost values, what can be done to restore the balance and integrity of its original, visionary principles?

City in Time: Washington, D.C.

Samuel M. Caggiula, Beverley Brackett

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Editorial Review:

From the Capitol building, home to Congress, to the Gothic revival style Smithsonian Castle, Washington, D.C. is an intriguing city. It’s the home of countless historical sites, incredible architecture, and beautiful art and monuments. There’s something special to see at every turn, and this fascinating volume presents the very best, as it is now and as it was back then. Step into the Hirshhorn Museum, designed by architect Gordon Bunshaft to resemble “a large piece of functional sculpture.” Gaze at the Lincoln Memorial, where Martin Luther King Jr. gave his “I Have a Dream” speech. Visit D.C.’s spookiest places, including the perhaps haunted Hay-Adams Hotel. Every spread is both attractive and enlightening.

 

Political Terrain: Washington, D.C., from Tidewater Town to Global Metropolis

Carl Abbott

Political Terrain: Washington, D.C., from Tidewater Town to Global Metropolis Carl Abbott Amazon Price: $60.00
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Editorial Review:

Washington, D.C., President John F. Kennedy once remarked, is a city of "southern efficiency and northern charm." Kennedy's quip was close to the mark. Since its creation two centuries ago, Washington has been a community with multiple personalities. Located on the regional divide between North and South, it has been a tidewater town, a southern city, a coveted prize in fighting between the states, a symbol of a reunited nation, a hub for central government, an extension of the Boston-New York megalopolis, and an international metropolis.

In an exploration of the many identities Washington has taken on over time, Carl Abbott examines the ways in which the city's regional orientation and national symbolism have been interpreted by novelists and business boosters, architects and blues artists, map makers and politicians. Each generation of residents and visitors has redefined Washington, he says, but in ways that have utilized or preserved its past. The nation's capital is a city whose history lives in its neighborhoods, people, and planning, as well as in its monuments and museums.


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