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December 2011

This May, the Library of Congress started streaming some of America’s oldest recorded music on its new National Jukebox website, which features more than 10,000 audio tracks produced by the Victor Talking Machine Company between 1901 and 1925. Among the offerings: John Philip Sousa marches, early Tin Pan Alley rags, Black Broadway tunes, Irving Berlin numbers, and Enrico Caruso arias. See www.loc.gov/jukebox.

IN 1864, THE SAME YEAR that Congress mandated funds for Arlington Cemetery, Abraham Lincoln commissioned $25,000 for construction of Washington, D.C.’s first naval hospital, just blocks from the Capitol. Two years later, the 50-bed facility received it first patient, a 24-year-old African American seaman named Benjamin Drummond. Over the last decade, the Old Naval Hospital Foundation has raised more than $10 million to renovate the three-story building. Its monumental cast-iron fence, gardens, and horse ambulance stables have been restored to their original appearance. Opening in July, the building and grounds will host Hill Center, which executive director Diana B. Ingraham describes as a “vibrant, campus-like community center for cultural enrichment, lifelong learning, and civic engagement.” See www.hillcenterdc.org.

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