Last week was the 105th anniversary of the dedication of True Reformer’s Hall in Washington, D.C.
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True Reformer’s Hall stood in disrepair
in the 1960s.
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The building’s gymnasium was the site of many early games between African American basketball teams, including the Washington 12 Streeters led by Edwin B. Henderson.
True Reformer’s Hall was the first building in the post-Reconstruction period to be designed, financed, and built entirely by African Americans.
Within a year of its dedication, the building became the center of the region’s black basketball scene for more than a decade.
The structure is still standing today at the intersection of 12th and U in the N.W. section of D.C. It’s been nicely renovated and now houses the Public Welfare Foundation.
Across the street is Ben’s Chili Bowl, a favorite lunchtime stop for local business people and a favorite after dark hang out spot for nearby Howard University undergrads (it’s open ’til 4 a.m.). Just next door to Ben’s is the historic Lincoln Theater.
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The recently renovated building’s
important history was once
nearly forgotten.
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The United Order of the True Reformers, a black self-help organization, commissioned and owned the $46,000 five-story building as their headquarters. The second floor – the same spot where Duke Ellington later gave his first public performance – contained a dance hall that doubled as a basketball court.
It was on this court that the 12th Street Colored YMCA basketball team achieved national prominence.
“It can be said without any exaggeration,” the Washington Bee said upon its completion, “that it is the best office, store, hall, and lodgeroom building that the Negro owns in the United States.”
For the dedication ceremony, President Theodore Roosevelt wrote a letter, in which he declared :
No one can watch with more interest than I do the progress of the colored race; and with the colored man as with the white man, the first step must be to show his ability to take care of himself and those dependent on him.
Hmm.
Well, he’s right, ain’t he?
Make history now.
(Photos courtesy of the Library of Congress.)
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[...] When president-elect Barack Obama stopped at the famous Ben’s Chili Bowl diner in Washington, D.C. over the weekend, he was dining across the street from the historic black basketball venue once known as True Reformer’s Hall. [...]
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