2013 ANNUAL REPORT

TABLE OF CONTENTS

03 By the Numbers

04 The Mission

05 Letter from the President

06 Board of Directors | Advisory Board | Staff

07 Outreach & Events

10 Signature Project & Photos

12 Partnerships

14 Supporters

19 Volunteers

21 Financials

23 Plans for the Future

25 End Note: In the Beauty of the City

27 Contact Us

Cover Photograph: The majestic Beech grove photographed by James Osen in 2011 prior to the undertaking of the Signature Project. This photo shows the thick understory of invasive shrubs and ivy, now removed to make space for native vegetation. See page 10 for the Signature Project Report.

2013 BY THE NUMBERS

174,370 Dollars raised by the Conservancy in 2013 to meet the ongoing restoration and organizational needs of the Conservancy.

50,000 Partnership in Preservation (PiP) dollars won in a National Trust for Historic Places and American Express Partners in Preservation competition.

3100 Trees, shrubs and ground covers planted in the Beech Grove Signature Project area in the fall of 2013.

2700 Weed Warrior hours worked in the Park during 2013.

781 Volunteers contributing their time restoring Park.

39 Partners adding their time, energy, and expertise to leverage the Conservancy’s ability to restore the Park.

27 Acres of shaded woodlands, wildflower meadows, rustic bridges, waterfalls, and trails in Dumbarton Oaks Park.

15 Feet of South Stream Path torn out by stormwater overflowing Laurel Pool after the violent rainstorm on July 11th.

13 Neighboring organizations working with the Conservancy, including three embassies, two Harvard University study centers, and the Naval Observatory.

9 Public tours of the Park conducted by DOPC, including more than 150 people on the annual Georgetown Garden tour.

5 Acres of invasive plants removed including 50 trees and innumerable yards of shrubs, bags of ivy, garlic mustard, and stilt grass.

1 Dumbarton Oaks Park: a bucolic oasis for city dwellers, a portal to one of the great periods in the history of American landscape architecture – the Country Place Era, and last remaining wild garden by Beatrix Farrand. 3

THE MISSION

The mission of the Dumbarton Oaks Park Conservancy is to restore, promote, and maintain Dumbarton Oaks Park in partnership with the .

The Conservancy is proud to work with our partner, the National Park Service’s , in cooperation with Superintendent Tara D. Morrison and Chief Ranger Nick Bartolomeo.

Inscription composed by Mildred Bliss to honor Beatrix Farrand | 1933

Written in Latin and translated as follows:

May kindly stars guard the dreams born beneath the spreading branches of Dumbarton Oaks. Dedicated to the friendship of Beatrix Farrand and to succeeding generations of seekers after Truth.

4

LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT

2013 has been a year of great accomplishment for the Conservancy. Our mission is to restore, promote, and maintain Dumbarton Oaks Park- and this year we have begun to do just that!

Identified as one of 24 finalists in the National Trust for Historic Preservation’s Partners in Preservation program, we were awarded $50,000 toward our Signature Project. Combined with $50,000 we raised to meet a challenge grant from the National Park Foundation’s Legacy Projects program, we were able to finalize plans for the restoration of the first two acres of the Park, just inside the gates at the bottom of Lovers’ Lane.

In the meantime, spring came late but in full glory with forsythia in bloom just as it had been when the Park opened to the public for the first time on April 12, 1941. We celebrated our anniversary in elegant style at Villa Firenze with the generous hospitality of Ambassador Claudio Bisogniero and his wife, Laura Denise. Edith Wharton must have been smiling as her book, Italian Villas and Their Gardens, was held high by her niece, Beatrix Farrand, impersonated by none other than myself! It was a delightful evening and a wonderful example of the strength of the partnership we share with the park’s neighbor, the Embassy of Italy.

We continued to develop our partnership with the Georgetown Garden Club, which expanded its annual Georgetown Garden Tour to include Dumbarton Oaks Park. The proceeds from the tour paid for more than 24 Student Conservation Corps volunteers who worked in the Park in July to rebuild the streamside trail, ravaged by flooding.

Partnership is the key to our success and our most important partnership is with Rock Creek Park Superintendent Tara Morrison and her staff. The essence of private-public partnership is discovering how we can coordinate the skills, strengths, and resources we each have for the good of the Park. Together we are beginning to restore this severely deteriorated landscape.

As we forge new partnerships with local and national foundations, we are proud to have received grants from the Prince Charitable Trusts, The Morris & Gwendolyn Cafritz Foundation, and the Engelhard Foundation. We are especially excited that the Venable Foundation is supporting our plans for an educational program in cooperation with our neighbor, The Boys & Girls Club at the Jelleff Recreation Center.

Our plans for the future are ambitious, and we are making real progress with the support of our neighbors, friends, and community. We thank you so much for helping us realize a dream- to bring new health, vitality, and beauty to Dumbarton Oaks Park.

Rebecca Trafton, Board President 5

BOARD | ADVISORY BOARD | STAFF

Board of Directors

Dina Curtis George Seltzer

Elizabeth Gilbert Louis Slade

Mary Kopper Stella Tarnay

Sophia McCrocklin Douglas Dockery Thomas

Lindsey Milstein Elizabeth Thomas

Sam Morley Rebecca Trafton

Marc Nicholson Cecile Warnock

Michael Rankin

Executive Committee

Rebecca Trafton Elizabeth Thomas President Treasurer

Louis Slade Marc Nicholson 1st Vice President Corresponding Secretary

George Seltzer 2nd Vice President

Advisory Board

Helen DuBois Elizabeth Barlow Rogers

David Kamp Martin Rosen

Robin Karson Judith Tankard

Jane MacLeish D. Dodge Thompson

Reuben Rainey

Staff

Ann Aldrich Program Director

Committees: Executive, Legal & Finance, Governance, Development, Outreach & Communications, Events, and Restoration: Stormwater, Invasive, Meadows, and Signature Project

6

OUTREACH & EVENTS

Gardening with Nature Thursday, February 7th | the Center for Hellenic Studies

Board member Douglas Thomas delivered a lecture, Gardening with Nature, at the Center for Hellenic Studies, describing the landscape of her home in Salisbury, CT, Twin Maples, which includes more than 40 acres of sustainable meadows. Conservancy supporter Lea Berman hosted a tea in her home following the lecture. Funds raised by the event helped the Conservancy meet a $50,000 matching grant from the National Park Foundation for restoration of the Park.

A Celebration of Partnership Friday, April 26th | Villa Firenze

Villa Firenze, the home of Italian Ambassador Claudio Bisogniero and his wife Laura Denise, was the site of a Celebration of Partnership, feting the Conservancy, Rock Creek Conservancy, and our partners at Rock Creek Park, the National Park Service, the National Park Foundation, and the National Trust for Historic Preservation.

Jackson Art Center Open House Sunday, April 28th | The Jackson Art Center

The Jackson Art Center welcomed the Conservancy at their bi-annual Open House, an opportunity for community members to learn more about the history of the Park and the work of the Conservancy.

Open House in the Park Saturday, May 4th | Dumbarton Oaks Park

The Conservancy held an Open House in Dumbarton Oaks Park, welcoming the community to tour the Park and meet our friends, neighbors and kindred organizations including City Wildlife, The Levine School of Music, The British School, the Jackson Art Center, and Songbirds of Rock Creek Park.

7

Georgetown Garden Tour Saturday, May 11th | Dumbarton Oaks Park

The Georgetown Garden Club included Dumbarton Oaks Park in their annual Garden Tour, and we welcomed more than 150 first-time visitors to the Park. Board members provided historical information and photographs about the design of the Farrand landscape, as well as information about plans for restoration.

SCA in the Park Monday-Wednesday, July 15th-17th | Dumbarton Oaks Park

29 Student Conservation Association team members, paid for by the Georgetown Garden Club, spent 3 days in the Park, repairing damage done by violent storms on July 11th. SCA volunteers restored stone work along multiple dams and rebuilt sections of the stream trail that were impassable.

Conserving the Gardens of Beatrix Farrand Saturday, July 27th | Bar Harbor, Maine

The Beatrix Farrand Society hosted a symposium in Bar Harbor, Maine, focusing on restoring Farrand gardens. Conservancy Program Director Ann Aldrich and Board President Rebecca Trafton presented a lecture on the environmental challenges presented by the restoration of Dumbarton Oaks Park. A tour of various Farrand gardens provided insight and inspiration for Conservancy members, and the opportunity to network with colleagues from across the country has deepened our understanding of the landscape we are working to save.

A Day of Partnership with Casey Trees Saturday, October 26th | Dumbarton Oaks Park

On a beautiful autumn day, 45 volunteers from Casey Trees joined our Signature Project team to plant 48 native trees in the Beech Grove just inside the Park entrance. The trees were the gift of Casey Trees and represent the beginning of an exciting new partnership for the Conservancy.

8

Edith Wharton at Home- Life at the Mount Thursday, November 7th | Josephine Butler Parks Center

The Conservancy partnered with Washington Parks & People to host a lecture by Richard Guy Wilson, University of Virginia architectural historian, about Edith Wharton, novelist and aunt of Beatrix Farrand, the designer of Dumbarton Oaks.

Papering the Neighborhood Friday, November 15th | Georgetown and Glover Park

Conservancy board members and volunteers delivered 2,000 letters throughout the neighborhood, inviting the community to join us as members. One generous neighbor of the park offered a $25,000 challenge grant to energize our invitation. We have made hundreds of new friends interested in supporting the Conservancy and volunteering time in support of the restoration of the Park.

Jackson Art Center Holiday Open House Sunday, November 17th | the Jackson Art Center

For the second time in 2013, the Jackson Art Center gave the Conservancy the opportunity to reach out to neighbors and friends with information about the Park and the ongoing restoration. This event is an important opportunity to communicate with the Georgetown community, and we are so grateful for this valuable partnership.

9

RESTORATION IN THE PARK THE SIGNATURE PROJECT

Fall of 2013 was abuzz with the much-awaited installation of the Signature Project in the grove of majestic American Beech trees located at the entrance to the park. Even the two-week government shutdown was unable to stop the momentum of progress.

The first part of the project was the removal phase. The Care of Trees and their able-bodied arborists removed over 50 invasive trees in the area. Our loyal volunteers removed over 200 bags of ivy, cut numerous invasive vines and shrubs, and prepared the area for planting.

Meanwhile, the Edifice Group Inc. meticulously cleaned and re-pointed the historic Old Stone Pump House adjacent to the Old Stone Bridge. The only built structure in the park, it tells the story of the prior agrarian use of the land. This structure will serve as a storage shed for the Conservancy so that we can keep tools and materials on site for volunteer activities.

On one Saturday morning in late October, Casey Trees and 45 volunteers planted over 40 deciduous hardwood trees on the north slope of the grove, an area in much need of reforestation and erosion control. Over the next two weeks until early November, Conservancy volunteers, with the help of landscape contractor Aaron Deadman and his crew, planted over 40 shrubs, 20 trees, and thousands of Carex pennsylvanica plugs in the grove and on the east side of the site to create a vegetative edge to the park. New chain link fencing was installed at the Lovers’ Lane bridge to provide protection and a clean visual edge to the site. Standing at the Lovers’ Lane Bridge now, one can see the visual connection to the Old Stone Bridge through a grove of Beech that has been cleared of the invasives that were starting to strangle the historic trees. One can read the individual landscape elements now: Beech Grove, North Slope Forest, and Stream Valley running through the middle.

Spring of 2014 will bring the conclusion to the Signature Project with invasive removals and planting above the Dumbarton Oaks stone wall and in the Bridge Hollow area.

Liza Gilbert, Signature Project Committee Chair

10

The Care of Trees removes British School Environmental Club Norway maples, April 2013 removes English ivy, March 2013

Carefully removes the old mortar on And then puts historically accurate the Old Stone Pump House mortar back, October 2013

Casey Trees volunteers plant 40 Volunteers plant 3000 native trees, October 2013 groundcover plants, November 2013

11

PARTNERSHIPS

Partnerships are critical to the success of our mission to restore the Park, connecting us with the broader community and leveraging the possibility of a broader impact in the Park.

Our ever-expanding partnership network currently includes:

 AnBryce Foundation  Biohabitats, Inc.  The Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Washington  British School of Washington  Casey Trees  Center for Hellenic Studies  Citizens Association of Georgetown  City Wildlife  DC Greencorps  DC Water  District Department of the Environment  Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection  Edifice Group, Inc.  Embassy of Denmark  Embassy of Italy  Embassy of New Zealand  The George Washington University Center for Civic Engagement and Public Service  The George Washington School of Professional Studies, Landscape Design Program  Georgetown Garden Club  Georgetown Neighborhood Library  Hardy Middle School  Jackson Art Center  Jelleff Community Center  Larry Weaner Landscape Associates  Library of American Landscape History

12

 Montgomery County Conservation Corps/Latin American Youth Center  The Morris & Gwendolyn Cafritz Foundation  National Park Foundation  National Trust for Historic Preservation & American Express, Partnership in Preservation Program  North Creek Nursery  Potomac Appalachian Trail Club  Prince Charitable Trusts  Rock Creek Conservancy  Rock Creek Park, National Park Service  Rock Creek Songbirds  TTR Sotheby’s  Student Conservation Association  Venable Foundation  Washington Parks & People

13

SUPPORTERS | 2013

* Current Board member ** Current Advisory Board member

$10,000 and Above ($1,000 to $2,499, continued) Charles Engelhard Foundation Margaret & Stephen Gill Michael & Kathryn Hanley Mr. & Mrs. Newman T. Halvorson Jr. National Trust for Historic Michael & Evelyn Jefcoat Preservation Helen Kenney Prince Charitable Trusts Frederic C. Rich George “Buzz” Seltzer* $5,000 to $9,999 Nancy and Lou Slade* Sunny Alsup Elizabeth Thomas*

Cafritz Foundation Jane MacLeish** $500 to $999 National Park Foundation Agatha S. Barclay TTR Sotheby’s International Realty Suzanne and Rich Bissell Caitrine Callison $2,500 to $4,999 Melanie & Lynch Christian Helen R. DuBois** Richard Jackson Joelle Kayden Newton Kendig Sophia McCrocklin* and Bill Isaacson Otis L. Laury Ritzert Weiss Partnership Lucy McFadden Rebecca Trafton* Lindsey Milstein* Marc Nicholson* $1,000 to $2,499 Jo Ousterhout Acorn Garden Club Beverly Ramsay Anonymous, in honor of Rebecca Michael Rankin Trafton Schiffman/Jemeda Fund Suzanne Bauguess Joe and Carol Shull Bruce & Marjie Calvert Elizabeth Stevens Catto Charitable Foundation Robert Stowers Michael D. Donovan Christie & Jeff Weiss Elizabeth Gilbert* WoodwardWalsh Foundation

14

$250 to $499 ($100 to $249, continued) Nancy Folger Judy Bauer Bradford Gray Khris Baxter Giselle and Benjamin Huberman Charles Bell Jesse Joad Kathy Best Anne-Lise Jones Brian Boland-Doyle Randy Katz Clayton Bond Jean R. Lange A. Oakley Brooks Carl Leubsdorf Denise Buchanan Richard H. Levy William Burns Adam Looney Carol Carter Ann Marie Marenburg Sally Chapoton Beth Mullin Mary Ellen Connell Clifford Naeve Claire & Warren Cox Elizabeth Norton Brian Cox Linda Parshall M.C Coyle Martin Rosen Susan Crowley Elissa Rubin Walter Cutler Frederick Schwab Shaun Duncan Niente Smith Susan Edmunds James Springer Linzee Feigenbaum Ronald Thomas Judith Feigin Jessica Townsend Laura Feller Yoshine Uchimura Barbara Finney Edwin Williamson Bob Fleming Brian Fletcher $100 to $249 Stephanie Foster Ann Aldrich Russell & Jean Frisbie Adele Ashkar James Fuchs Michael Bahar Brian Gaul Ankie & Fran Barnes Emily Geuder

15

($100 to $249, continued) ($100 to $249, continued) Rose & Jean-Pierre Gombay Howard Owens Rolf Graage Dede Petri Susan Gutchess Michael Petricone David Hensler James Peva Ernest C. M. Higgins Alexander Platt Catherine Hirsch Lois Anne Polan Monika Holmgren-Konig John T. Pruski David Hultquist Frank Randolph Helen Ingalls Laird Reed Lucy James Page Robinson Martin Jeffries Shelley Ross-Larson Paul Kainen Ann Satterthwaite Danette Gentile Kauffman Tom Saunders Carol Kelley Edith Schafer Frances Kennedy Laine Shakerdge Mary Kopper* Joann Shorey Alan Kriegel John C. Sower Zoe Kulakowski Courtney Cook Spearman Miram Leder Tibbett Speer Shelley Livingston Mary Sper David Maloney Steve Steury Peter Marks Michael Stiglitz Camilla McCaslin Anne Symmes Sandy McKnight Judith Tankard** Margaret Menkart Carrington C. Tarr Helen Moore Nancy W. Tartt Morgan Care Pharmacy The Gregory Group Mary Mottershead Margaret Tomlinson Darwina Neal Janet Topolsky Matt O’Connell Elizabeth Jane Townsend

16

($100 to $249, continued) (Up To $99, continued) Barbara Trafton Mary Fox Peter & Frances Trafton William Gallagher Mary Jo Veverka Howard Garfinkel Jenonne Walker Judith Horowitz Stevenson Weitz Thomas J. Jenkins, Hr. J. Robinson West Julien LeBourgeois Dorothy B. Wexler Sue Livera Tina Weymann Geneve Maroon Carol Wheeler Julian Mazor Mikel Witte Laura Meisnere Peter Work Thomas J. Mitchell Yoga Hikes Amy Murphy Stephen Zipp Joan Nelson James Zurn Anne O’Connor Sherry Patten Up To $99 David Petrou David Amory Anne Reese Donald Baker David Roll Diane Bassett Lin Schmale-Tate Jane Battle Susan Sherman Ronda Bernstein John Snedden Judith Blumberg Pavel Snejnevski Louise Brodnitz Christine Steiner Eleanor Budic Stella Tarnay* Lynne Church J. Wayne Tomlinson Lucy Clark Jotham Trafton Sharon Conway Liza Trafton Harriet Davis Harry Carter Valentine Jr. Robert Dodds Michael Vergason Peter Dunkley John H. Vogel

17

(Up To $99, continued) Harry Carter Valentine Jr. Michael Vergason John H. Vogel Laurel Von Gerichten John Wheeler Amy Wickenheiser

18

VOLUNTEERS

We are grateful to our friends who have generously donated their time, resources and expertise to help restore Dumbarton Oaks Park:

Aaron David Designs- Goodman/Van Riper Photography Aaron Deadman Anne-Lise Auclair Jones & Hal Jones Lea and Wayne Berman J & G Landscaping Bittersweet Catering- Jody Manor The Jefferson James Blair LD Sound Services, Jeremy Wilson Allison Brown Marsha Lea Casbah Café Beth Mullin Café Bonaparte Siobhan O’Riordan Grace Cavalieri James Osen Embassy of Italy – Ambassador and Patisserie Poupon Mrs. Bisogniero, Donatella Joe A. Shull- Venable LLP Verrone, Renato Mirraco Phil Stamper Patricia Fairfield Robert Stowers Jared Green Cindy Taylor GWU School of Professional Studies, Warnock Studios, LLC Landscape Design- Adele Ashkar David Wooden The Georgetowner- Edie Schaefer Marilyn Worseldine

A special thank you to our Weed Warriors and other volunteers who toil (rain, shine, heat or chill) to free the Park from strangling vines:

AmeriCorps Embassy of New GWU Community Alumni/ae Zealand Building Community APO – GWU Chapter Epsilon Sigma Alpha, GWU Freshman Day Betsy Anderson Delta Zeta Chapter of Service British School Patricia Fairfield Garrett Gregory & Boy Environmental Club Ryan Fitzgerald Scout Troop 100 Joan Bennett GU Alumni/ae Hardy Middle School Colton Brown GU School of Public Carolyn Hill DC Green Corps Health Barbara Hill Joan Dickie Jared Green Christopher Horton Embassy of Denmark Cooby Greenway International Finance Embassy of Great GWU Alternative Corp Britain Break Program Helen Ingalls Jane MacLeish

19

Lindsey Milstein Thomas Pursley III Student Conservation Richard Miller Lou Rambo Association Montgomery County Anne Reese Joanna Sturm Conservation Corps Claude Reilly Alex Thomas Sam Morley Sonja Salminiitty Elizabeth Townsend Emily Penprase Buzz Seltzer Rebecca Trafton Pi Kappa Phi, GWU Joanna Shank Rosalie Wilkinson Chapter Mary Sper Nancy Yoshikawa Mike Prothero

& many, many more volunteers from around the metro area and the

world

Thank You!

Montgomery County Conservation Corps | October 2013 | Preparing the Signature Planting beds

20

Statement of activities* For the year ending December 31, 2013

Revenue

Donations from Advisory Board Members $ 12,600

Donations from Board Members 11,455

Corporate & Business Donations 5,200

Foundation Donations 57,500

Individual Donations (Less than $500) 22,608

Major Donations ($500 and Above) 61,750

Miscellaneous Group Donations 1,000

Events 7,060

Staff Donations 151

Total Revenue $ 179,324

Charting Our Financial Growth: 2010-2013

$200,000 $180,000 $160,000 $140,000 $120,000 $100,000 $80,000 $60,000 $40,000 $20,000 $0 2010 2011 2012 2013

* Unaudited

21

Statement of activities* For the year ending December 31, 2013

Expenses

Administrative Expenses

Consultancies $ 2,000

Events & Development 2,774

Fees 698

Insurance 3,115

Office Supplies, Meetings 3,206

Outreach & Development 3,886

Publicity 2,163

Salaries 34,654

Subscriptions& Memberships 150

Taxes 2,675

Total Administrative Expenses $ 55,321

Restoration Expenses

Invasive Removal $ 12,046

Signature Project 63,601

Stormwater 5,300

Total Restoration Expenses $ 80,947

Total Expenses $ 136,268

*Unaudited

22

PLANS FOR THE FUTURE 2014-2017

Organizational Goals

 Reorganize staff structure for smooth functioning and focused growth of the organization and effective management of interns and volunteers  Continue to expand the Board and strengthen committees with outside experts  Cultivate our strong partnerships with Rock Creek Park, the National Park Foundation, Park neighbors, educational institutions, and the wider community locally and nationally  Develop our volunteer corps through active partnership with institutions, organizations and businesses, and cultivate our existing volunteers for sustained commitment  Increase our fundraising capacity by implementing a development plan, growing a strong Development Committee, and refining our supporting software for greater efficiency

Restoration Goals

 Complete the Signature Project, including restoration of built elements and rejuvenation of native plant communities, honoring the spirit of Farrand’s 1920s design while adapting to 21st century sustainable practices  Develop and implement a detailed Maintenance Plan for the ongoing care of the Signature Project site; Lessons learned about maintenance of this smaller site will influence our stewardship of the entire Park.  Begin restoration of the Park’s five meadows, implementing ecological principles for sustainability and minimal maintenance  Extend our program for the installation of low-cost, low-tech stormwater remediation  Capture stormwater entering the Park from and the Naval Observatory  Continue working with immediate neighbors to facilitate their stormwater- capture plans in partnership with DDOE  Complete detailed and comprehensive plans for the restoration of the entire 27-acre Park, a multi-year and multi-million dollar challenge, in cooperation with Rock Creek Park

23

Programming and Interpretation Goals

 Refine and expand our programming with the Boys & Girls Club  Develop active educational programming in partnership with local public and private schools, from elementary to graduate-level  In partnership with Rock Creek Park’s interpretive experts, develop a docent corps to offer interpretation of historic aspects of the site and its ecological challenges and solutions  Share our ongoing studies of the Park’s environmental issues (stormwater and invasives and designs for ecological sustainability) with other sites facing similar challenges

24

End Note: In the Beauty of the City

Photo credits: James Blair

25

In the Beauty of the City

Dumbarton Oaks Park, Washington, D.C

The land is telling its truth again.

After Winter’s sleep, it shows us

what must be saved. Look at these

trees feathered with light,

the necklaces of foliage,

all here from Earth’s compassion.

In this harmony of place

presidents, poets, shepherds, and kings

must have talked of peace as they walked these paths.

While it’s true there’s not scale to measure

a treasure within a city, this one is

kept safe from the aridity of stricken places,

and destruction’s deadly face.

Instead, there is serenity here to pray against such visions.

Hope is the map that extends through these Oaks

under its house of sun,

where intellectual and natural worlds thrive.

Just look around at the surface of this earth

where we’ve come together, in the radiance

and glory of all this flowering which exists

in praise of its keepers.

Grace Cavalieri, May 4th, 2013

Grace Cavalieri produces and hosts

“The Poet and the Poem from the Library of Congress” for public radio

26

Snail Mail

PO Box 32080 Washington, DC 20007

E-Mail [email protected]

Office

Jelleff Community Center 3265 S Street NW Washington, DC 20007

Web:

Site | www.dopark.org

Facebook | Dumbarton Oaks Park Conservancy

Twitter | @DOaksPark

Instagram | dumbartonoaksparkconservancy

Foursquare | Dumbarton Oaks Park

Photo by James Osen 27