View of the Mall in 1870
When this photo was taken around 1870, the Mall still had most of its original layout, although much would change in the coming years. The bottom third of the photo shows trees on the west Capitol grounds. Left of center are the three white domed buildings of the old U.S. Botanic Garden, before it was moved to its present-day location on the south side of the Mall. The sharp white line to the right of the Botanic Garden is a path through the grass, but just above it is a segment of the old Washington City Canal, which has not yet been covered over. The canal is barely discernible as it jogs to the right, but then it continues to the Potomac River at an angle in the upper right center of the photo. The unfinished Washington Monument is faintly visible rising directly in front of the river a short distance to the left of where the canal runs into the river. Along the right side of the photo runs Pennsylvania Avenue, which looks empty because the long exposure of the photo has made all moving objects disappear. The black marks in the center of the road are streetcar tracks. Looking much rougher is Maryland Avenue SW, which runs along the left edge of the photo. A natural gas storage tank rises next to it, at about where the Air and Space Museum now stands. The short dark tower rising near the river is the Smithsonian Castle. What other early landmarks can you pick out in this view?