The Mail on Sunday

The ultimate power trip to dazzling DC

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TWO: Don’t assume the awesome architectu­re of the Library of Congress can be seen only on dayt i me research t ri ps. You can re-enter the complex at night for free concerts or film screenings. The latest schedule includes classics such as Bonnie And Clyde and The Graduate. You can also get a theatrical thrill seeing Guys & Dolls, opening soon at Ford’s Theatre. It’s where John Wilkes Booth assassinat­ed Abraham Lincoln in 1865, and it’s impossible not to look at the Presidenti­al Box when you take your seat. Take a daytime tour and you’ll get to go on stage and see the back alley where Booth escaped.

THREE: Check out paintings of Barack and Michelle Obama at the

National Portrait Gallery – even t hough t hey’ r e not t o get her. Michelle is upstairs in the 20th Century Americans gallery, while her husband is below in the America’s Presidents section. The free museum has a stunning courtyard with a stylish cafe.

FOUR: Get a refresher course in presidenti­al history from the informatio­n sheets on the lobby walls of The Mayflower hotel. It’s where Presidents from Calvin Coolidge to Ronald Reagan held inaugurati­on balls, where J. Edgar Hoover loved to lunch, and where Monica Lewinsky and Bill Clinton infamously hugged at his 1996 fundraiser.

FIVE: Step back in time in The Mansion On O Street, a building that shares an architect with the Capitol and contains lots of its left-over tiles and wood carvings. It has more than 100 rooms and 70 secret doors ( the Hidden Doors Tour helps you find them).

SIX: Bookshops thrive in DC and favourites are Politics & Prose and Kramerbook­s on Connecticu­t Avenue. Carry one of their bags to look like a local. Both stores host author talks and political discussion­s. Kramerbook­s also has a bar and stages jazz nights.

SEVEN: Wait until night falls before touring (for free) the big political monuments. The vast figures in the Jefferson, Lincoln and Martin Luther King Jr Memorials look spectacula­r under spotlights, and park rangers patrol until about 11.30pm.

Add in the Washington Monument and the Vietnam Veterans Memorial and you’ll walk about three miles. Set aside two hours to see them all.

 ??  ?? IMPOSING: The White House, with the Washington Monument in the background. Below: The Lincoln Memorial
IMPOSING: The White House, with the Washington Monument in the background. Below: The Lincoln Memorial
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