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Governor Alexander Robey Shepherd

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Shepherd served as the Territorial Governor of the District of Columbia from 1873 to 1874.  Today, many of the infrastructure improvements we take for granted are the result of his efforts to improve the city through public works improvements.

Alexander R. Shepherd remains a man of contradiction 107 years after his death.  Born in Washington in 1835, the descendant of Charles County, Md. slave-holding tobacco planters, Shepherd left school early to support his family after his father’s premature death.  He demonstrated business acumen when he joined as an apprentice, became a partner, and soon owner of the J.W. Thompson plumbing establishment, Washington’s largest.

After volunteer service in a Washington militia unit at the outbreak of the Civil War, Shepherd found a second calling in politics and was elected President of the Washington Common Council at the start of his second term in 1862.  Shepherd realized the impossibility of creating a modern city in Washington because of its fragmented governing system of three separate jurisdictions and because it had scant financial support from Congress for public works.

Following creation of the Territory of the District of Columbia in 1871, Shepherd took control of the Board of Public Works, through which he gained virtually sole control over public works projects and financing.  After a hectic two-year campaign fighting nature and political opponents, Shepherd put the “flesh” on the “bones” of the Pierre L’Enfant plan for the District by level-grading and paving the streets, covering the fetid Washington Canal (now Constitution Avenue), planting 64,000 trees, and providing street lighting.  In the process Shepherd’s own business affairs deteriorated.  The 1873 Panic followed the collapse of the Jay Cooke financial empire and resulted in Shepherd’s personal bankruptcy in 1876.  But before then, Shepherd served a tumultuous nine months as Governor of the Territory that included a second congressional investigation that turned up mismanagement, massive overspending, and cronyism that damaged his credibility even though no evidence of personal corruption was established.  In the wake of the uproar, Congress cancelled the territorial government and so began 100 years of direct rule over the District.

Determined to recoup his lost fortune and return to Washington in triumph, Shepherd organized an ambitious silver-mining operation in Mexico with large-scale financing from New York businessmen.  He moved his family to remote Batopilas, Chihuahua State in 1880.  Despite early promise, Shepherd’s hopes for the mining venture never met expectations.  A combination of exaggerated ore estimates; over-investment in aqueducts, tunnels, and equipment; and the United States’ decision to remain on the gold standard doomed the project.  Years later, Shepherd’s estate was still unable to make good on promissory notes so confidently given at the time of his 1876 bankruptcy.

Shepherd’s public legacy is one of great personal achievement as the builder of modern Washington, but his obsession with the infrastructure relegated social justice to second place.  Once one of Washington’s richest men, his fortune evaporated while in public office, and the lure of Mexican silver wealth proved unattainable.  Paradoxically Shepherd was a man of great accomplishment and great failure, far-sighted yet obtuse, and ultimately proven wrong in his stubborn conviction that he could overcome all obstacles. [From DC Live! (Historical Society of Washington) Fall 2009 issue.]

John Richardson is writing the first full-length biography of Alexander Shepherd.  Mr. Richardson made a presentation at the November 2009 D.C. Historical Studies Conference on the multiple attempts to move the capital out of Washington in the 19th century.  For a more detailed glimpse into the life of Alexander Robey Shepherd, click here to read John Richardson's article in the 2010 issue of Washington History, the publication of the Historical Society of Washington, D.C.:

Alexander R. Shepherd and the Race Issue in Washington 

Click Here for the Alexander Shepherd Web Site

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A portrait of Governor Alexander Robey Shepherd which hangs in the office D.C. Council Member Jim Graham.


Listen to WAMU-FM's Metro Connection interview by Rebecca Shier with "Washington Walks" Carolyn Crouch on Alexander Shepherd and the Shepherd statue.
(click on text)



The Return of the Governor Shepherd Statue:  The Protest

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After an exile of nearly a quarter century, the statue of the District's native son, Union Army Veteran, Vice-president of Public Works and Territorial Governor Alexander Robey Shepherd finally returns to his home in front of the District Building.  On January 1, 2005, 35 AOI members assembled in front of the John A. Wilson (District) Building to seek the return of the statue to a place of prominence.

The Move...

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On Saturday, January 29, 2005 -- three days before Shepherd's 140th birthday -- the Dunbar scupture of Governor Shepherd was removed from the District's Department of Transportation facility on Shepherd Parkway, SW and transported back to a place of prominence in downtown D.C. With the support of City Council-members Jim Graham and Jack Evans, Council Secretary Phyllis Jones, DDOT Director Dan Tangherlini and through the generosity of the Gilford Corporation, Miller & Long Concrete Construction, Hutchison International (United Rigging) and the Associated Builders & Contractors, the Association of the Oldest Inhabitants of D.C. has finally realized its long-fought effort to have the Governor Shepherd statue returned to the area from which it was removed in 1979 during the reconstruction of Pennsylvania Avenue and Freedom Plaza. Today, rather than staring out over the city's impound lot, the Governor casts his gaze across the avenue near the very location where the statue was originally dedicated on May 3, 1909.  AOI Historian Nelson Rimensnyder has never missed an opportunity for over a decade to champion the statue's return.  Our hats are off to Nelson and everyone who helped make this happen.

The Lighting...

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Just in time for the January 20, 2009 inauguration of President Barack Obama, the M.C. Dean Company stepped in and installed lighting to properly illuminate the statue.

The Biographical Plaque...

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On November 16, 2010, students from the Shepherd Elementary School, their parents, principal, members of the D.C. City Council and AOI members unveiled the commemorative plaque that AOI commissioned to interpret Shepherd's life and accomplishments.

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The Cleaning & Restoration...

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The only thing that remained to 'finalize' the Governor Shepherd Statue's return to downtown D.C. was its cleaning and conservation.  In April 2012, the D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities provided the funds to properly clean, restore and conserve the sculpture designed by USG Dunbar more than a century earlier.  The conservation was performed by Artex Fine Arts Services of Landover, Maryland.  The AOI of DC plans to use the designated donations that it receives for "The Shepherd Statue" to fund future maintenance of the work.

Est. 1865, Inc. 1903, (c) 2012