Message from Principal Hedlund

Dr. Phyllis HedlundPrincipal Newsletters

Principal's Newsletter

Dear Families,

Next week is Black History Spirit Week at Shepherd Elementary! Join us as we celebrate! Please tune into our school’s virtual all-school meeting on Friday, February 18th from 9:15- 10:00am. The theme for all-school will focus on Black Entrepreneurship.

Please see below for important information regarding our school’s Black History Month Spirit Week! Shepherd’s Black History Month Spirit Week

Monday, 2/14- Pan- African Flag Day/Spread the Love (Please wear red that represents the blood uniting the people of the African Diaspora).

Tuesday, 2/15- Black Excellence Day ( Please wear HBCU pride gear, career costumes, etc.)

Wednesday, 2/16- Pan- African Flag Day/Black Lives Matter Day (Please wear your favorite BLM t-shirt or Black t-shirt representing the people of the African Diaspora.)

Thursday, 2/17- Book Character Day (Please wear the outfit of your favorite Black book character *clothes only)

Friday, 2/18- Pan- African Flag Day/Shepherd Mustang Day (Please wear your Shepherd gear to represent the diversity of our school or green representing the abundant natural wealth of Africa)

Please pay careful attention to the announcements below.

Enjoy your weekend,

Phyllis

Upcoming Events

Tuesday, February 15th 8:45 am Coffee and Conversation 1st grade

Week of February 13th Black History Month Spirit Week (see attached flyer)

Monday, February 14th Happy Valentine’s Day

Wednesday, February 16th Staff Meeting 3:30 pm MPR

Wednesday, February 16th LSAT 4:30

Wednesday, February 16th PTO 6:30

Friday, February 18th Black History Month All School Meeting

Week of February 20th February Break

DCPS Assessment Guides for Families

Is attached to this email

Passport to Black History in the District

This February, explore Black History in the District of Columbia.

Document your progress through the sites here.

A. Phillip Randolph Monument

Union Station, neat the Starbucks at the boarding gates

Honors the labor leader and civil rights leader who served as the leader of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, the first black union to successfully negotiate a contract with a major employer, when the Pullman Company agreed to increase wages, shorten hours, and pay overtime to its black workforce.

Anacostia Community Museum

Smithsonian Institution

1901 Fort Place, SE

Examines changing concepts of “community” while maintaining strong ties to Anacostia and the region. John Kinard (1936-1989), its first director, developed the museum to be responsive to the cultural and educational needs of area residents. The museum moved to this site in 1987 and offers exhibits and programs with a special interest in African American culture.

Anthony Bowen/Underground Railroad Site

Described at Sixth and Water streets, SW

Anthony Bowen (ca.1805–1872), born enslaved in nearby Prince George’s County, Maryland, moved to Washington in 1826 and became legally free by 1830. He helped to found the St. Paul AME Church in 1856 and established a Sunday Evening School for children and adults. Both met in his home in the 900 block of E Street, SW (now part of the Southeast-Southwest Freeway). An active abolitionist, Bowen met freedom-seekers at the Sixth Street wharf and sheltered them at his home.

Banneker Park

Marked at L’Enfant Promenade, SW, south end

Benjamin Banneker (1731–1806), born in Baltimore County, Maryland, grew up on a tobacco farm and worked into adulthood as a planter. With disciplined self-study, Banneker became an exceptionally learned astronomer and mathematician. In 1791 he assisted Andrew Ellicott on the survey of the territory designated for Washington, DC. Banneker used sophisticated instruments to observe stars at night. His calculations were used to determine where to place the 40 boundary stones that would mark the 10 square miles of the new federal district. The marker sits atop a hill that offers dramatic views of the city.

Emancipation Memorial

East Capitol Street NE, Lincoln Park

Located in Lincoln Park on Capitol Hill, the Emancipation Memorial features President Abraham Lincoln with the Emancipation Proclamation in his right hand and holding his left hand over the head of a liberated slave kneeling at his feet. The bronze statue, designed by sculptor Thomas Ball, was built almost entirely with funds donated by former slaves and dedicated in 1876. The statue was unveiled on the 11th anniversary of Lincoln’s death, with Frederick Douglass delivering the keynote address to President Ulysses S. Grant and more than 25,000 people in attendance.

Frederick Douglas National Historic Site

1411 W Street SE

Preserves and interprets Cedar Hill, where Frederick Douglass lived from 1877 until his death in 1895. The historic house sits on top of a 50-foot hill and eight acres of the original estate and house is furnished with original objects that belonged to Frederick Douglass

Decatur House/Slave Quarters

748 Jackson Place, NW

This historic house museum, completed in 1818 for white naval hero Stephen Decatur and his wife Susan, contains one of Washington’s few remaining slave quarters. The two-story service wing, where enslaved people lived and worked, runs along the H Street side of the house and now serves as the exhibit gallery and gift shop. A permanent exhibit tells the story of Charlotte Dupuy, who grew up enslaved in Kentucky and married Aaron Dupuy, also enslaved. The Dupuys and their two children were owned by U.S. Representative Henry Clay, who moved the family to this house in Washington in 1827. Charlotte Dupuy unsuccessfully sued Clay for her freedom.

Freedom Plaza

National Mall and Memorial Parks, Pennsylvania Avenue at 14th Street

Originally Western Plaza, it was renamed in 1988 in honor of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. who wrote his “I Have a Dream” speech at the nearby Willard Hotel. A time capsule with relics from King’s life, including one of his Bibles, is buried in the plaza and will be opened in 2088.

Frederick Douglass Museum and Hall of Fame for Caring Americans

320 A Street, NE

Frederick Douglass (ca. 1818–1895), the leading black statesman of his time, lived the last 25 years of his life in Washington. In 1870 he arrived from Rochester, New York, as corresponding editor of the New Era newspaper. Douglass and his wife Anna Murray Douglass lived in 316 A Street and later purchased 318. In 1877 they moved to Cedar Hill in Anacostia. Numbers 316, 318 and 320 became the Museum of African Art in 1964, the first U.S. museum of its kind. In 1987 the museum—now the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African Art—moved to the National Mall. Today the houses serve as the Frederick Douglass Museum and Hall of Fame for Caring Americans

Lincoln Memorial

National Mall

Site where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his “I Have a Dream Speech” and Marion Anderson performed in concert after being denied access to the DAR Constitution Hall because of her race.

Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial

West Potomac Park, 1964 Independence Avenue NW

Dedicated in 2011, the memorial honors Martin Luther King, Jr.’s legacy and the struggle for freedom, equality and justice.

National Museum of African American History and Culture

Smithsonian Institution Constitution Avenue, NW, between 14th and 15th streets

A place where all Americans can learn about the richness and diversity of the African American experience.

African American Civil War Memorial

1925 Vermont Ave, NW

Commemorates the military service of hundreds of thousands of Civil War era African American soldiers and sailors. Etched into stainless steel panels of the memorial are names identifying 209,145 United States Colored Troops (USCT) who responded to the Union’s call to arms.

Duke Ellington Residences

1805 and 1816 13th Street, NW

Edward Kennedy “Duke” Ellington, the internationally renowned composer and musician, spent his teenage years at 1805 13th Street (1910- 1914) and then at 1816 13th Street (1915- 1917). He later attributed his professional success to his parents, his music teachers, and the patrons of Frank Holliday’s poolroom at 624 T Street. Ellington formed “The Duke’s Serenaders” here before moving to New York in 1923. He became a hit in Harlem, and launched a recording career that brought him worldwide fame. Throughout his 50-year career, Ellington returned often to Washington to perform, frequently staying at the nearby Whitelaw Hotel.

Howard Theatre

620 T Street NW

A premiere showcase for more than 70 years from its opening in 1910, two decades before Harlem’s Apollo Theater. Native Washingtonians Duke Ellington and Mary Jefferson performed here, as did Ella Fitzgerald, Jackie “Moms” Mabley, and Motown’s great acts. In 1970 the theater closed after audiences dwindled in response to desegregation and the 1968 riots. The theater was declared a historic landmark in 1974, and re-opened in 1975 with go-go and rock ‘n’ roll. A few years later it closed again. In 2012 the dramatically restored Howard opened.

Lincoln Theater

1215 U Street NW

Located on Black Broadway, next to Ben’s Chili Bowl, the Lincoln Theater hosted artists such as Duke Ellington, Pearl Bailey, Ella Fitzgerald and Billie Holiday and served the African American community during segregation. It remains an active theater.

The Mary McLeod Bethune Council House National Historic Site
1318 Vermont Avenue NW

Mary McLeod Bethune used the power of education, political activism, and civil service to achieve racial and gender equality throughout the United States and the world. She was the first African American woman to serve as a college president, founded the National Council of Negro Women, Inc. (NCNW), and the first African American woman to head a federal agency.

Thurgood Marshall Center for Service and Heritage/ 12th Street YMCA Site

1816 12th Street, NW The

This social service and community center for the Shaw neighborhood occupies a hallowed building—the former home of the 12th Street YMCA, the nation’s first black YMCA. The Y was founded in 1853 in the Southwest Washington home of Anthony Bowen, a minister and formerly enslaved conductor on the Underground Railroad. Originally built in 1912 and restored in 2000, the center now honors Thurgood Marshall, the first black Supreme Court Justice. Marshall strategized here with other lawyers on the landmark 1954 Brown v. Board of Education school desegregation cases.

The Whitelaw Hotel

1839 13th Street, NW

Now a condominium building, the Whitelaw, built in 1919, was an apartment hotel that hosted black guests who were not allowed to stay at other DC hotels. Joe Louis, Benny Carter, Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington all stayed at The Whitelaw.

Fort Stevens

13th and Quackenbos streets, NW

Fort Stevens was built in 1861 on land partially owned by Elizabeth Thomas, a free woman of color and a farmer. Soldiers tore down Thomas’s house to expand the fort. Thomas was consoled with a promise of compensation for her property by President Abraham Lincoln during a visit to Fort Stevens, but there is no record that she was ever paid. On July 11, 1864, Fort Stevens was the site of the city’s only Civil War battle when General Jubal A. Early’s Confederate troops advanced from Silver Spring down Seventh Street Turnpike (now Georgia Avenue) and attacked. President Lincoln was on the ramparts during the second day of fighting. Union forces were able to repel the enemy, but nearly 900 soldiers were killed or wounded on both sides. Thomas, born in 1821, continued to live at Fort Stevens until her death in 1917.

(Here I Stand) in the Spirit of Paul Robeson monument

Georgia Avenue & Kansas Avenue & Varnum Street NW

Celebrates Paul Robeson who never actually lived in the District. The college football star and internationally renowned singer/actor grew up in New Jersey, graduated from Rutgers and Columbia, and spent influential portions of his life in Harlem, London and Philadelphia. However, Robeson was as renowned for his outspoken opposition to the Spanish Civil War (and his vocal pro-Russian sentiments) as he was for his work in the theater.

Howard Hall

607 Howard Place, NW, Howard University Campus

Howard Hall is the oldest remaining building at Howard University. It was built as the home of General Oliver Otis Howard (1830–1909), a white Civil War hero, Freedmen’s Bureau commissioner, and president of the university from 1869 until 1874. The university was named after Howard in recognition of his service as one of the founders. In 1909 the university purchased the house and used it for offices and classrooms. The house was beautifully restored in 1998 and serves as the university’s Alumni Center.

Howard University Gallery of Art

Lulu Vere Childers Hall, Howard University Campus

The Howard University Gallery of Art was established in 1928. Professor James Herring (1897–1969), founder of the Howard University Art Department, and James A. Porter (1905–1970), professor and artist, were its first directors. Originally set up in the lower floor of historic Rankin Chapel (1895), the gallery moved to Founders Library and then, in 1961, to its current home in Childers Hall, which honors Lulu Vere Childers, former dean of the School of Music. The African American art collection includes works by Henry O. Tanner, Edmonia Lewis, Archibald Motley, Romare Bearden, and many others.

Mount Zion United Methodist Church, Heritage House, Parsonage, and Cemetery

1334 29th Street, NW

Mount Zion United Methodist Church is the oldest black congregation in the city. It was formed in 1816 when congregants from the Montgomery Street Church (now Dumbarton United Methodist Church) decided not to accept racist treatment by their white fellow church-goers. The present church was completed in 1884. The cemetery comprises the Old Methodist Burying Ground, founded in 1809, and the Female Union Band Cemetery (1842).

Promotion Committee

Please join us to discuss promotion 2023 (date, time, place, logistics). We are trying to make this process more inclusive this year and assist in the planning and execution of this special day for our oldest Mustangs! Our next meeting will be 3/3/22 at 8:00 am here .