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George Mason Memorial
12017-05-31T15:40:30-07:00Idil Tanriseverba50f203721fda9a4fe3d4eb651465a69f1773fc189351George Mason (1725-1792), author of Virginia's Declaration of Rights, was a delegate to the Constitutional Convention. He refused to sign the Constitution because of the absence of a Bill of Rights and a disagreement over the issue of standing armies. The memorial was funded through an effort by the Board of Regents of Gunston Hall, Mason's home in Fairfax, Virginia, which now operates as a museum. The site of the memorial was home to a garden called the Pansy Garden in the 1920s. The memorial was approved in 1990, but groundbreaking did not take place until 2000.plain2017-05-31T15:40:30-07:00mallhistory.orgNational Park Service. View original.2012-08-16T15:42:52+00:004/09/2002 (Dedicated)MasonMem-NPS.jpgdesign & monumentsFaye B. Harwell38.879494357071,-77.0391798019412000-presentIdil Tanriseverba50f203721fda9a4fe3d4eb651465a69f1773fc
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12017-05-31T18:34:10-07:00Idil Tanriseverba50f203721fda9a4fe3d4eb651465a69f1773fcYou can use maps!Idil Tanrisever5maps maps mapsgoogle_maps2017-05-31T18:45:45-07:00Idil Tanriseverba50f203721fda9a4fe3d4eb651465a69f1773fc
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12017-05-31T16:16:28-07:00What about the history of the national mall?3some other thingsgallery2017-05-31T16:18:49-07:00The area now known as the Mall has been a place of human activity for thousands of years. Remnants of 10,000-year old Paleo-Indian tools and weapons were discovered on the White House grounds in the 1970s. Before the American Revolution, the area was home to Native American tribes and then a growing population of European settlers. After the federal government moved to Washington, the Mall became the home of the President and his household. In the 1800s, it was also home to the first Secretary of the Smithsonian and a working-class neighborhood near the Capitol.