Randle Highlands
Randle Highlands is a neighborhood in Southeast Washington, D.C., east of the Anacostia River.
Born in 1859, Colonel Arthur E. Randle was a late nineteenth and early twentieth-century real estate developer, who earned some recognition for building Congress Heights, before developing Hillcrest and other neighborhoods, east of the Anacostia River. Moving his family into a large, Greek Revival house - later nicknamed 'The Southeast White House' - in what is, now, the Randle Highlands, Randle encouraged more Washingtonians to follow and build grand homes, along Pennsylvania Avenue.[1]
Randle Highlands is bounded by Pennsylvania Avenue SE to the north; Naylor Road, 27th Street, and Texas Avenue to the south; Fort Stanton Park to the southeast; and Minnesota Avenue to the west.
Coordinates: 38°52′12″N 76°57′59″W / 38.87°N 76.9664°W
References
- ↑ "Reminiscences by Ulmo E. Randle". History - Southeast White House. Retrieved March 14, 2015.