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Teaching DC Statehood

This guide was created to support educators teaching the history of voting rights and the fight for DC statehood.

On Saturday May 15, 2021 and Saturday November 5, 2022, the DC History Center and Wikimedia DC host a virtual edit-a-thon to enhance Wikipedia entries relating to key figures and organizations critical to the history of Home Rule and the fight for DC Statehood

  • Wikipedia Event Page
  • Event Dashboard: Home Rule and the Fight for DC Statehood Wikipedia Edit-a-thon

This educational program is supported by a grant from the Office of the Secretary of the District of Columbia.

Researching DC History: Online Resources

DC Statehood Webliographies

Black Power in Washington, D.C., 1968-1998George Derek Musgrove

  • Authoritative site by the co-author of Chocolate City: A History of Race and Democracy in the Nation's Capital

Chronicling America - Library of Congress

  • A searchable database of digitized historic newspapers from 1836-1922. This resource includes 40 DC newspapers including The Evening Star and The Washington Times

DC Public Library Resources

DC Council Archived Hearings - Council of the District of Columbia

  • Access hearings video from 2012 onwards

Specific Sources

Lou Aronica (needs a Wikipedia page!)

Josephine Butler - Wikipedia page created May 2021

Charles I. Cassell (needs a Wikipedia page!)

Walter Fauntroy - Wikipedia Page

Arturo Griffiths (needs a Wikipedia page!)

Julius Hobson - Wikipedia Page

  • 'Statehood Is Far More Difficult’: The Struggle for D.C. Self-Determination, 1980–2017 by George Derek Musgrove. Washington History, Vol. 29, No 2, Fall 2017
  • Civil Rights Tour: Protest - Julius Hobson, Iconoclast, DC Historic Sites, DC Preservation League
  • Hobson Jumps Into Delegate Contest: Hobson to Run for Delegate as an Independent by Richard E. Prince, Washington Post, January 15, 1971 (Look at printed PDF)
  • Hobson and Supporters Map Third Party Plans by Ivan C. Brandon, Washington Post, March 29, 1971 (Look at printed PDF)
  • Hobson To Run for D.C. Council by Paul W. Valentine, Washington Post, February 21, 1974 (Look at printed PDF)
  • Tucker, 2 Moores, Hobson Sr., Barry Lead City Council Race by Douglas B. Feaver and Megan Rosenfeld, Washington Post, November 6, 1974 (Look at printed PDF)
  • D.C. Results Confirmed; Tally Still On: Winners Confirmed In District by Martha M. Hamilton, Washington Post, November 7, 1974 (Look at printed PDF)
  • Incomplete Returns in District VoteWashington Post, November 7, 1974 (Look at printed PDF)
  • Mayor, Council Sworn In: D.C.'s Fight for Home Rule Is Recalled Elected Mayor, 13 Councilmen Take Oaths by LaBarbara Bowman, Washington Post, January 3, 1975 (Look at printed PDF)

Anise Jenkins - Wikipedia page created May 2021

Samuel Jordan (needs a Wikipedia page!)

Lyndon B. Johnson - Wikipedia Page

Franklin Kameny - Wikipedia Page

Hilda Mason - Wikipedia Page

Hector Rodriguez (needs a Wikipedia page!)

Carlos Rosario - Wikipedia Page

Barbara Lett Simmons - Wikipedia Page

  • Obituary, Barbara Lett Simmons, 'faithless elector,' is dead at 85, Mike DeBonis, Washington Post, December 27, 2012

Sam Smith - Wikipedia Page

Walter E. Washington - Wikipedia Page