Asbury Dwellings/Old Shaw Junior High, 1616 Marion Street, NW
Built in 1902 as McKinley Technical High School, a white vocational school, the building was transferred to the Colored Division and renamed Shaw Junior High School in 1928. It was named for Col. Robert Gould Shaw (1837-1863), the white commander of the 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, an African-American regiment in the Civil War (and the surrounding neighborhood was subsequently named for the school). One of its most distinguished teachers was Alma Thomas, who ran the art department (and would later become the first African-American woman to have a solo exhibit at the Whitney Museum of Art). Since 1982, this building has served as senior adult housing, administered by Asbury United Methodist Church.
- Stevens Elementary School, 1050 21st Street, NW
- Emma V. Brown House, 3044 P Street, NW
- Billings School Site, 3100-08 Dumbarton Street, NW (now two private houses)
- James G. Berret School, 1408 Q Street, NW
- Sumner School Museum and Archives, 1201 17th Street NW
- 15th Street Presbyterian Church, 1705 15th St. NW
- Asbury Dwellings/Old Shaw Junior High, 1616 Marion Street, NW
- John Wesley A.M.E. Church, 1615 14th Street, NW
- Carter G. Woodson House, 1538 9th Street, NW
- Lucy Diggs Slowe House, 1758 T Street, NW (private)
- Site of Snow Riot, northwest corner of 6th Street, NW and Pennsylvania Avenue, NW