Mount Vernon Square is bounded on the east by 7th Street NW, on the west by 9th Street NW, on the north by Mount Vernon Place, and on the south by a two-block section of K Street NW that is slightly offset from the rest of K Street.
The square was in the original L'Enfant Plan for the city but in the early 1800s was divided into four triangles by the intersection of Massachusetts Avenue and New York Avenue.[2] The old Northern Liberty Market stood along Seventh Street until 1872, when it was demolished by Governor Alexander Shepherd in a night raid with two to 300 men.[4] The roadways were removed in 1882 at the request of residents who complained that "in its former condition the constant passage of vehicles of all descriptions through the park made it unpleasant and oftentimes dangerous for those frequenting it."[2]
In the late 19th and early 20th century, the city's furniture stores and more economical department stores such as Goldberg's and Kaufman's were located along 7th Street NW in the 7th Street shopping district, most of which was in the neighborhood now known as Mount Vernon Square. Further south, just below today's Chinatown, the 7th Street corridor met the F Street corridor with its more upscale apparel and department stores.[7]
In 1999, the library became the headquarters for the Historical Society of Washington, D.C.[8] The City Museum of Washington opened in the library in May 2003, but closed less than two years later.[9]
In 2008, a sculpture was installed on the lawn at the south side of the square - "The Hand" created by Jim Fauntleroy in the 1960s for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference’s Poor People’s Campaign.[10]
The Washington Convention and Sports Authority took over the library building in 2011, renting it out for events.[11] The building underwent significant renovations in 2018, to accommodate a new Apple Store and exhibit space for the Historical Society.[12]
Mount Vernon Square also refers to the neighborhood northeast of the square (though the official name for this neighborhood is Mount Vernon Triangle), extending north to O Street and east to New Jersey Avenue.[13] In the early 20th century, Victorian-style townhomes occupied the area, and the 7th Street shopping district was the city's vibrant commercial strip (along with more upscale F Street), until the Great Depression, when the area went into a steep decline.[2] During the 1968 Martin Luther King Jr. riots, the area around the square suffered rioting, arson, and extensive vandalism.[2]
On the north, M or O Street NW according to the source, and the Shaw neighborhood
From the eastern boundary of the square to New Jersey Ave. is the Mount Vernon Triangle neighborhood, often mentioned together with the Mount Vernon Square neighborhood
On the west, either Thomas Circle or 10th St. NW and the Logan Circle neighborhood
Old and new convention centers
In 1977, the city used eminent domain to purchase several blocks southwest of Mount Vernon Square.[2] Over the next few years, the homes and businesses on these blocks were razed. The old Washington Convention Center was constructed on the area block bounded by New York Avenue NW, 9th Street NW, H Street NW, and 11th Street NW.[17] Construction on the center began in 1980, and it opened on December 10, 1982.[18] At 800,000 square feet (74,000 m2), it was the fourth largest facility in the United States at the time. However, during the 1980s and 1990s, numerous larger and more modern facilities were constructed around the country, and by 1997 the Washington Convention Center had become the 30th largest facility.[19]
In 1998, construction began on a new larger convention center, occupying several blocks directly north of Mount Vernon Square.[20] The new convention center was completed in 2003, and renamed the Walter E. Washington Convention Center in 2007.[21]
Commercial development
Many small businesses existed around Mount Vernon Square before the construction of the convention centers.[22] One of the last businesses to exist on the west side of the square was a Chinese restaurant named Nan King (which was one of the first restaurants in the city to serve dim sum), which was open until 1979.[23] By 2004, Alperstein's Furniture was the only store on 7th Street to survive through the construction of the Metro station and the new convention center.[24] It closed in 2014, with a restaurant moving into its building.[25]
Across from the northwest corner of the square is the Washington Marriott Marquis, the largest hotel in the city, which opened in 2014.[31] The lot at the southwest corner of the square was the former site of the old Washington Convention Center, now the CityCenterDC development, which opened in 2015.[32]
^Mazzucca, Tim. "Firms Fight Over Office With Downtown Image." Washington Business Journal. June 6, 2005; White, Suzanne. "901 New York A Go for PoGo." Washington Business Journal. February 3, 2003; White, Suzanne. "Boston Properties Signs Anchor Tenant at 901 New York." Washington Business Journal. March 19, 2002.