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252:, mere miles from enemy territory. Engineers began a rushed campaign to fortify and protect the federal city by constructing a ring of forts around the city. In early August 1861, engineers in charge of the defenses of Washington identified the tall hill on the Dyer estate as a critical site for protecting against invasion along the three roads that converged from the northwest in Tenleytown. Construction of earthen ramparts and trenches began in earnest in August 1861 by the
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suddenly demanded that organizers pay for US Park Police to be present at each concert. Unable to fund this position which was more than the entire budget for the concerts, organizers cancelled the concert series for the 2014 season. The cancellation generated several news articles, Twitter outrage,
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to Thomas
Fletchall as "Fletchall's Chance." The western side draws from a patent called "Mt. Airy." The land passed through a variety of owners until a Treasury Department official named Giles Dyer acquired the land for his estate in 1853. Dyer died in 1856, and his wife Jane administered the farm,
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Fort Reno Park was formerly a part of a majority Black neighborhood existing from approximately 1860 to the early 20th century. The neighborhood was recorded simply as Reno, although the original developers of the land marketed their subdivision “Reno City.” Only a few physical remains of the
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in the 1700s, the area was controlled by a variety of
American Indian groups. High points such as the present park, were not as economically important to those societies as valleys, as evidenced by archaeological investigations in the area. However, a travel route along a ridgeline leading to
334:, a banker with large investments in the area, acquired two large plots at the location of the Dyer farmhouse and fort and donated them to the District of Columbia. Subsequently, the DC government built a reservoir and pump house at the site, destroying the remains of the ramparts.
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a petition with 1,600 signers, and the ire of public officials who stepped in to pressure the agencies to swiftly issue the permit and meet with the concert organizer to resolve issues. After this meeting, the 2014 line-up was announced.
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In 1866, the fort was decommissioned and the land was returned to the Dyer family. The outbuildings and anything that could be sold was liquidated. The earthen ramparts were left in place, with ramparts reportedly visible as late as 1895.
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on July 10–12, 1864. As anticipated by the military engineers, The
Confederates attacked from the northwest, crossing the Potomac near Harper's Ferry and coming down the river valley. Lookouts at Fort Reno identified troop movements near
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Eventually the fort had a dozen heavy siege guns and a contingent of 3,000 men, making it the largest fort of those surrounding
Washington, supported by a large garrison of soldiers in Tenleytown that at one point included
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array rising from a large underground bunker. A crew lived on site and maintained the facility. The tower was a part of a string of similar installations that connected the
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neighborhood exist, most prominently a singular fire hydrant located on one of the park's many hills and the original elementary school building, named for Jesse Reno.
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Public utilization of the land under Fort Reno Park has depended heavily on its nature as DC's highest point. As suburbanization pushed north and west of
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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.
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installation was constructed at Fort Reno, disguised as a water tower. Known as the "Cartwheel" facility, it was in fact a
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is working with the
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was established along the old ridgeline trail, which split into three major roads just south of the Fort Reno site.
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just miles from
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date to the 1860s, particularly the idea of a road connecting the high points that once served as redoubts.
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may precede
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Point Reno is the high point of the
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The highest natural elevation at Fort Reno, 409 feet (125 m), is lower than the top of the
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629:. Baltimore, Maryland: Rockbridge Publishing Company. pp. 127, 136–138, 145–150.
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The high point in Fort Reno is marked by a small metal disk set into the ground. The
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Forts on the
National Register of Historic Places in Washington, D.C.
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Cooling III, Benjamin
Franklin; Owen II, Walton H. (6 October 2009).
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from the site, in what was becoming an affluent white suburban area.
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Mr. Lincoln's Forts: A Guide to the Civil War Defenses of Washington
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Highest natural points of U.S. states, district, and territories
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American Civil War on the National Register of Historic Places
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National Park Service, DC Department of Parks and Recreation
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704:"Fort Reno Concert Series Canceled in Dispute Over Permit"
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Works Progress Administration in the District of Columbia
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Tenleytown, D.C. — Country village to city neighborhood,
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only locations in the District of Columbia to see combat
730:"Rock on: Fort Reno will take place in 2014 after all"
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572:"D.C.'s Puny Peak Enough to Pump Up 'Highpointers'"
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384:The 2014 series was the subject of drama, as the
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1103:D.C. Armory
1067:Union Stage
1002:Blues Alley
761:20 December
687:20 December
513:www.nps.gov
377:Music venue
358:White House
344:During the
223:land patent
201:community.
176:Reno School
151:during the
102: /
77:Coordinates
1594:Tenleytown
1548:Categories
1442:Washington
1362:New Mexico
1357:New Jersey
1232:California
977:The Anthem
858:Cowpuncher
773:References
661:24 January
518:2022-11-17
393:High point
366:Raven Rock
285:Rock Creek
228:Tenleytown
137:Tenleytown
90:77°04′33″W
87:38°57′07″N
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1417:Tennessee
1322:Minnesota
1297:Louisiana
1124:The Bayou
1022:Echostage
997:BloomBars
992:Black Cat
972:9:30 Club
855:Corkscrew
851:Cartwheel
583:1 January
281:Rockville
234:Civil War
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1367:New York
1342:Nebraska
1332:Missouri
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713:June 26,
420:See also
346:Cold War
214:piedmont
168:DC Water
68:Location
1457:Wyoming
1432:Vermont
1337:Montana
1277:Indiana
1257:Georgia
1252:Florida
1222:Arizona
1212:Alabama
867:Crystal
833:Former
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205:History
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362:Site R
174:, the
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1267:Idaho
862:Crown
496:Notes
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1382:Ohio
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763:2018
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663:2023
631:ISBN
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