Even mundane buildings have the potential to reveal a
fascinating history, and in the case of the nondescript apartment building at 1320-1322 R Street,
its history includes a connection to an African American Congressman and an
innovative housing company that purchased it for the purpose of renting it to
an exclusive black clientele. Though
nameless today, the building was known as the Luray Apartments when
construction began in 1908.
The building was built for just $12,000, and was initially
not wired “for electricity or power.” It opened in April of 1909.
The building was one of
the first commissions for local architect Matthew G. Lepley, who had opened his
offices the same year the Luray was begun.
It was built for owner Thomas J. Kemp.
Lepley had been in Washington
in 1886, and later made headlines in the
Washington
papers when he was reprimanded by the War Production Board in 1942 when he
allegedly violated rules on house price limits and housing preferences for
government workers established during wartime.
The Luray was owned by the National Investment Company and
rented to white residents from 1914 to 1920.
The 1920 census revealed that only one of the eight apartments was
occupied by a family designated as black.
Census enumerators that year were instructed “to be particularly careful
in reporting the class mulatto. The word
here in generic, and includes quadroons, octoroons, and all persons having any
perceptible trace of African blood.”
Importantly, it was up the census taker to observe and determine race,
not the subject being interviewed. Families that year at the Luray were employed
as bookkeepers, laundress, laborers, machinists, and clerks.
The Washington Bee newspaper carried a photograph of the
Luray on the cover of its November
27, 1920 edition, with a story about its recent purchase by the
Mutual Housing Company, Inc., which was a newly formed real estate investment
business with offices at 1232 U
Street. An
editorial by editor Calvin Chase in the same edition called attention to the
work of the Company “doing the necessary work in the matter of housing the
colored people of the city of Washington.”
The company had bought the Luray for the express purpose of
changing its occupants from white to black, as part of the “City within a City”
mentality that had enveloped the overall neighborhood. Its President was Arthur Wergs Mitchell (1883-1968), and
it promoted and sold stock to middle and upper class African Americans to
fulfill a need in providing apartments to working class blacks. The full article is reproduced here.
Although he is now one of history's forgotten figures,
Mitchell (left) was once almost as well known among black college students as Jesse
Owens and Joe Louis. Mitchell's life
began in rural Alabama
in 1883, after which he studied briefly at Tuskegee Institute; He went on to
study law in Washington,
and thereafter became involved in politics when the Republicans sent him to Chicago in 1928 to
campaign for Herbert Hoover. Impressed by
Chicago's ward
system and patronage politics, he returned to the city and made a bid for a
congressional seat, changing political parties in an effort to oust black
Republican Congressman Oscar DePriest.
Throughout his career, Mitchell issued
bills holding state and local offices accountable for lynching and to prohibit
racial discrimination. In 1943, he resumed
the practice of law, and was also engaged in civil rights work, public
lecturing, and farming near Petersburg,
Virginia. He died at his home on May 9, 1968, and was interred on his
estate, “Land of a Thousand Roses,” in Dinwiddie County.
By the time the 1930 census was taken at the Luray Apartment
building, all of its residents were indeed classified as black. They paid monthly rents ranging from $50 to
$65, and were employed in myriad occupations, including a projectionist at a
local theater, chauffeur for a piano business, tailor, laundress, porter,
printer, waitress, and even a University Professor named Elwood Cox.
Mitchell’s Mutual Housing Company would continue to own the
Luray until shortly after 1949. It was
later owned by the Luray Limited partnership, who converted the building into
condominiums in 1987.
Copyright Paul K. Williams
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