A towering remembrance of the former Black community of Queen City is slated to be included in an Amazon-funded park next to HQ2. Arlington's Historical Affairs
Activists and politicians gathered on the steps of the U.S. Supreme Court building Tuesday after Politico published a leaked draft of a decision that would overturn Roe v. Wade.
National Landing Business Improvement District (BID) is hosting a virtual conversation about Green Valley's history on Feb. 24 in connection with Black History
A later artist’s rendition of Crandal Mackey’s raid on Rosslyn. This painting hangs in the Virginia Room at the Central Library. The depiction is hagiographic, cartoonish, and inaccurate, but indicates the significance of the event in Arlington’s history. Image used with permission of Arlington Library.
“Lyon’s Legacy” is a limited-run opinion column on the history of housing in Arlington. A version of this article first appeared in ARLnow.
Before 1900, the population of Arlington County was nearly 40% African-American. By 1950, it was less than 5%. Today, the number is still less than 10%. So what happened? Image by the author.
Carter Glass, delegate to the Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1901-02. (Image via Library of Congress)
Lyon’s Legacy is a limited-run opinion column on the history of housing in Arlington. The views expressed are solely the author’s.
“Discrimination! Why that is exactly what we propose… That exactly is what this convention was elected for to discriminate to the very extremity of permissible action under the limitation of the federal Constitution, with the view to the elimination of every Negro voter who can be gotten rid of.”
Carter Glass, Virginia Constitutional Convention, 1902
Arlington wasn’t always white. Before 1900, the population of the county was nearly 40% African-American. By 1950, it was less than 5%. Today, the number is still less than 10%.