Past Features



2022 Annual Report

Historic Takoma had a busy year in 2022. The Takoma Authors project was launched, we celebrated the 25th anniversary of unification into one county, events resumed post-COVID restrictions, work on the archives continued, and more… Read the full annual report to members here.

Our work depends on member and community support. Please consider joining Historic Takoma (or renewing your membership for 2023).

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The Name “Takoma Park”

KIRO radio in Seattle, Washington recently ran a story about the relationship between place names in Maryland and Washington: Takoma Park, Maryland and Tacoma, Washington AND Mt Rainier, Maryland and Mount Rainier, Washington. You can read and listen to the story (featuring Historic Takoma’s archivist, Jim Douglas).

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Help Support Historic Takoma’s Programs

Historic Takoma is committed to documenting and sharing the history and culture of the Takoma Park community. In 2022 we were able to begin programming after a couple of years of COVID restrictions. We opened our public Reading Room, presented a program on the 25th anniversary of the unification of Takoma Park into one county, rejuvenated our archives work, initiated a project to collect works by Takoma Authors, presented workshops on researching house histories, and started regular postings on social media. In 2023 promises more….

But our programs depend on your financial support. Please consider making a 2022 end of the year contribution [DONATE] and becoming a MEMBER in 2023. Thank you for your support!

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Takoma Horticultural Club Donates Flower Show Trophies

Some of the donated trophies

The Takoma Horticultural Club recently donated to Historic Takoma eleven engraved trophy cups, plaques, bowls, and platters from the Club’s and other annual flower shows. These items, which date from 1933 to 1985, were handed down through the Club’s leadership over the decades. Ten of the eleven items are sterling silver or silver plated. Three of these are on display in Historic Takoma’s Reading Room.

Three trophies on display in Reading Room

Established in 1916, the Takoma Horticultural Club is the longest continuously operating civic group in Takoma Park. Producing flower shows was one of the Club’s main community activities for many decades. The full history of the flower shows can be found on the Club’s website. Following the donation of the items to Historic Takoma’s archives, volunteer Read More

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Unification Turns 25

Takoma Voice, July 1997

July 1, 2022, marks the 25th anniversary of the unification of Takoma Park into Montgomery County, ending 107 years of divided jurisdiction between Montgomery and Prince George’s Counties and capping a 17-year effort to become One City – One County. Historic Takoma is documenting this remarkable accomplishment with an oral history project involving the citizen activists, elected officials, and City staff who were instrumental in leading and implementing the unification effort. A new window exhibit at Historic Takoma traces the history of the unification of Takoma Park into one county; on September 18, 2022, Historic Takoma and the City of Takoma Park will present a program at the Takoma Park Community Center – Sam Abbott Citizens’ Center.

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Voices of Takoma Authors – Robin Broad & John Cavanagh

Robin Broad and John Cavanagh (American University and the Institute for Policy Studies, and co-authors of several books addressing environmental and social justice) will discuss their most recent, award-winning book: The Water Defenders: How Ordinary People Saved a Country from Corporate Greed. 

It is a tale replete with corporate greed, a transnational lawsuit at a secretive World Bank tribunal in Washington, violent threats, murders, and–surprisingly–victory. They will also discuss their own scholar-activist involvement in this Salvadoran gold mining saga as co-founders of a unique network of international allies that spearheaded the global side of the fight against mining in El Salvador and beyond.

Copies of the book will be available for purchase and authors signing.

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Upcoming Events

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Early Botany in Takoma and Sligo

The new window at Historic Takoma (7328 Carroll Avenue) features the story of the work of at least 40 botanists who visited the Sligo Creek watershed between 1876 and 1915, collecting about 700 plant specimens for deposit at the herbariums at the Smithsonian and the University of Maryland. The display is a work of a partnership between Historic Takoma and Friends of Sligo Creek. 

Plant collecting had been popular as an amateur pastime and scientific activity since the early nineteenth century and peaked in the Mid-Atlantic between 1900 and 1910. Dozens of botanists arrived in the DC area between 1884 and 1910 to work at the USDA and Smithsonian.

Learn more about these collectors, their work, and the mystery of the Takoma Bog when Michael Wilpers from Friends of Sligo Creek presents a talk at Historic Takoma at 7:00 PM on Wednesday evening, October 9.

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