BFFs: The German-American Friendship Garden

All the memorials on the National Mall were erected for a reason and the German-American Friendship Garden is no different.  Nothing is here by accident. 

 

In 1988 at the end of his presidency, Ronald Reagan and West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl dedicate the garden.  The German American relationship went through a lot during Reagan’s time in the White House. Germans opposed, but nonetheless accepted, deployment of Pershing II missiles.  Then there was the time Kohl roped Reagan into laying a wreath at a cemetery where SS soldiers were buried.  That didn’t play well here.  But Reagan wanted to show a strong German American alliance to the Soviet Union, and a garden across the street from the White House was one way to do that.  A year later, the Berlin Wall comes down and two years after that East and West Germany reunite.

Duration
2 hours
Group Size
2 to 6

Above It All - Washington National Cathedral

Washington National Cathedral is a Gothic masterpiece. Perched on a hill overlooking the city it is the second largest cathedral in the country and the 6th largest in the world. It is a living work of art filled with stained-glass, hand-carved wood, and wrought iron. While a modern structure (finished in 1990) it is constructed in the old-world way and has no structural steel.

Duration
2 hours 30 minutes
Group Size
1 to 6

Hidden on Capitol Hill

Few people think beyond the Capitol when they think of the Hill. This tour takes you to the heart of a neighborhood with a fascinating history that still speaks to us today. Learn about these famous locations from a former Capitol Hill resident.

Duration
2 hours 30 minutes
Group Size
1 to 6

Embassy Row: Divinity & Diplomats

Most Embassy Row tours don’t venture far beyond Dupont Circle. But ours does. We see it all from top to bottom. This stretch of Massachusetts Avenue used to be called Millionaires Row where Gilded Age robber-barons built grand mansions. Today those mansions house most of Washington’s embassies, along with private clubs and statues of world heroes such as Mandela, Gandhi, and Churchill – and we will be right in the heart of it.