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Kenilworth Park and Aquatic GardensDinner plate sized flowers seem to float among four foot diameter leaves.
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Kenilworth Park and Aquatic Gardens
Places

There are places within places in the park.  Many come for the summer flowers in the man made ponds.  Others for the marshes that surround them on three sides.  The National Park Service preserves a balance between a man-made world and the natural world it depends on.

 

Surrounding the ponds on three sides are some of the original tidal wetlands of Washington, DC, and wetlands altered by the government.  When Walter Shaw bought his 30 acres, 7 acres of wetlands were thrown in for free as they were viewed as worthless.  That sentiment continued until the 1960s when the value of these buffers in filtering water, controlling floods, and as habitat was recognized.  In the early 1990s the Anacostia River had silted in again, and dredging was called for. 

 

This time, many agencies worked with the National Park Service rebuilding wetlands destroyed 70 years earlier. These are best viewed from the River Trail and Boardwalk, also great for birding year round.   

 

The area that gives shape and life to the ponds and wetlands is the  Anacostia River.  A short walk down the river trail brings one to a view of the relaxed flow from the suburbs to inner city, a delightful commute by canoe.  

 

What will you discover here that sooths your soul and excites you?                                       

 

Artillery at Antietam  

Did You Know?
Over 500 cannons particpated in the Battle of Antietam, firing over 50,000 rounds of ammunition. The cannonade was so severe that Confederate artillery commander Colonel S.D. Lee described the battle as "artillery hell."

Last Updated: November 19, 2006 at 15:12 EST