The image of a sole
shopkeeper tending his roadside stand at 1st Street and Florida Avenue, NE at
first does little more than remind Washingtonians about the rural nature of
what was then still considered the edge of town, when the image was taken
shortly after the turn of the twentieth century. Upon closer inspection, however, the image
reveals walls covered with philosophical sayings and observations, some of
which might not ever be explained. The
image certainly is a rare snapshot of a lifestyle experienced by hundreds of
thousands of post Civil War African Americans that eventually flooded
Washington DC in the search for jobs in the decades following the War.
The man and
proprietor of the stand is Keith Sutherland, who pronounced his name “Keitt.” He had been born enslaved in Charles County,
Maryland about 1854, and escaped to Washington in 1862. He first worked polishing shoes around the
Treasury building, and recalled in a 1900 Washington Post article about
watching President Lincoln’s funeral possession pass by, with a white horse
tied behind the hearse. He then resided,
as did hundreds if not thousands of freed blacks, in a contraband camp in a
large vacant Square just south of 12th and S Street, NW, where the
Garrison Elementary school now exists.
The squalid conditions, bars, poolrooms, tents and shacks extended
southward for a block in an area appropriately coined “Hell’s Bottom.”
Sutherland eventually opened a ramshackle food stall at 1111 R Street,
in the heart of Hells Bottom. In 1897, a
Post article reported that there were hundreds of such stands, located in
nearly every alley of the city. It read:
“The alleys of this city are filled with
colored cook-shops, which heretofore have paid no license fee…only the police
and the people who visit the numerous alleys and little streets of the city
know how many of these cook-shops exist. The colored people generally resort to
these places for pigs' feet, meat pie, and substantial provender prepared by
the old mammies and quaint old colored men who run them, and cook dishes to the
taste of the people of their race.” (Washington Post, January 1, 1897). At the time, Sutherland was fined $25 for not
having a license, as a new enforcement took place.
In 1900, Sutherland was interviewed at his stand in Hell’s Bottom,
which offers a rare glimpse into life in the neighborhood at the time. He stated: “There were two very lively places in those days. One was a triangular
square at Rhode Island avenue and Eleventh street. It was here that an eloquent
colored preacher, who went by the name of ‘John the Baptist,’ used to hold
revival services, which were attended by the newly-freed slaves. The revival
was all right, but the four or five barrooms in the neighborhood used to hold
the overflow meetings, and when the crowds went home at night you couldn’t tell
whether they were shouting from religion or whisky.