Stops include the Carnegie Library, now the DC Historical Society; Statue commemorating Louis Daguerre, on the grounds of the Smithsonian American Art Museum and National Portrait Gallery; the home and office of Belva Lockwood, first woman admitted to the U.S. Supreme Court bar; the United States' first telegraph office, operated by Samuel Morse; the Old Patent Office, now the Smithsonian American Art Museum; Ford’s Theater in Lincoln’s Time; Clara Barton's Missing Soldiers Office; Photographer Matthew Brady’s Studio; Center Market in the present-day location of the National Archives; the National Gallery of Art, before it was built; and the National Archives and Records Administration.
Created by USNatArchives
Andrew Carnegie Funds Libraries
Daguerre Creates an Original Form of Photography
Two Lawyers Change History
Morse Messages Around the World
The Patent Office Moves In, then Out
Lincoln is Assassinated
Clara Barton Helps Soldiers
Mathew Brady Captures the Civil War in Images
Records Replace Produce
Art Comes to the Capital
The National Archives Preserves America's Records
We have noticed that javascript either isn't supported or is disabled in your browser. This website requires javascript.