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Tenleytown is zoned to: Janney Elementary School [9] Alice Deal Middle School [10] Jackson-Reed High School [11] Tenleytown is the location of several independent schools, including National Presbyterian School (PS-6) and Georgetown Day School, whose 2021 campus expansion allowed its lower and middle schools to join the high school in Tenleytown.
The Grant Road Historic District is located on the 4400 and 4500 blocks of Grant Road NW in the Tenleytown neighborhood of Washington, D.C. The 4400 block begins north of Tenley Circle at the intersection with Wisconsin Avenue, then crosses Fort Drive.
Aerial view of Tenleytown from the southwest, looking towards Fort Reno Park and Wakefield.Tenley Campus is at the bottom right. Tenley Campus sits atop a knoll, fronting the western edge of Tenley Circle, at the intersection of Nebraska Avenue, Wisconsin Avenue, and Yuma Street NW in Northwest Washington, D.C.'s Tenleytown neighborhood.
Fort Reno's annual free summer concert series started in the Summer of 1968, amid social unrest following the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. [7] The 2014 series was the subject of drama, as the National Park Service suddenly demanded that organizers pay for US Park Police to be present at each concert.
Fort Reno was a major fortification of the Civil War Defenses of Washington, located in what is now the Tenleytown neighborhood of Washington, D.C. The fort sat on the highest natural point in the District of Columbia. [1]
DC Circulator Woodley Park–Adams Morgan–McPherson Square Metro: Columbia Road NW / 16th Street NW Westbound 42, 43, D32, H1, H3, H4, S2, S9, W47 DC Circulator Woodley Park–Adams Morgan–McPherson Square Metro: Irving Street NW / 14th Street NW Columbia Heights station: Eastbound Metrobus: 52, 54, 59, D32, H4, H8, W47 DC Circulator
Here are the complimentary ticket days, who is eligible and how to get your free ticket: Free Early Admission Day. On Aug. 14, all community members can receive free gate admission if they arrive ...
Reno was a town and then neighborhood in Washington, D.C. that existed from the 1860s into the mid-twentieth century on the ground that is now Fort Reno Park in the Tenleytown neighborhood. The town's residents were largely African American, which eventually led to its clearance for Fort Reno Park and Alice Deal Middle School.