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The city was governed by commissioners
who chose Andrew Ellicott to survey the city and
to complete the plan left by Pierre Charles L'Enfant.
Benjamin Banneker, an African American from Maryland
well known for his contributions as a scientist,
astronomer, and skilled mathematician, assisted
Ellicott in laying out the Capital city.
As the new city took shape, Washington
became the official home of the federal capital
in 1800. The city continued to develop, and in
1802 the city of Washington was incorporated and
a local government was established. The President
of the United States appointed a mayor and a twelve-member
city council, but as time progressed, the government
structure changed as often as did Congress. In
1804 Congress authorized the election of two houses
of the city council, and in 1812 the city elected
their first mayor.
In 1917 a Constitutional amendment
was introduced in Congress granting District residents
voting representation in Congress. While this
amendment did not pass at that time, District
residents were eventually given the right to vote
in time for the presidential election of 1961.
In 1967 President Lyndon Johnson
established a presidentially-appointed Commissioner-Council
government. Many municipal functions were transferred
from federal agencies to the Commissioner. Walter
Washington was the first Commissioner elected
by District residents, and a school board and
local court system were elected in 1968. Residents
gained tremendous representation in Congress in
1970 with the election of a non-voting delegate,
Walter Fauntroy, in the House of Representatives.
The first measure of self-government
in almost 100 years came in 1973 with the signing
of the District of Columbia Self-Government and
Governmental Reorganization Act of 1973 , "the
Charter," by President Nixon. The Charter
was approved by the electorate on May 7, 1974
along with the election of the Advisory Neighborhood
Commissioners.
The Home Rule Act established
for the first time an Office of the Mayor which
is a unique institution in American government.
Although the title is "Mayor," the executive
responsibilities include those of a combined city
mayor, a county executive, and a state governor
who deals directly with the chief executives and
other officials of the fifty states and territories.
The District electorate approved
a statehood initiative in 1980 with 60% of residents
voting. The delegates were elected in 1981 and
convened a statehood Constitutional convention
to draft a constitution for the State of New Columbia.
A bill was introduced in 1983 into Congress for
the admission of the State of New Columbia, but
did not pass. Today, the District of Columbia
is a unique governmental unit in the federal system
as, under the Constitution, Congress has exclusive
legislative power over the District.
DC Statistics:
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| 2000 Census population: |
572,059 |
| Male: |
269,366 (47.1%) |
| Female: |
302,693 (52.9%) |
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| Black: |
343,312 (60.0%) |
| White: |
176,101 (30.8%) |
| Asian: |
15,189 (2.7%) |
| American Indian and Alaska Native: |
1,713 (0.3%) |
| Other race: |
21,950 (3.8%) |
| Two or more races: |
13,446 (2.4%) |
| Hispanic/Latino: |
44,953 (7.9%) |
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| Percentage of population 18 and over: |
79.9% |
| 65 and over: |
12.3% |
| Median age: |
34.6 |
| Median household income in 2000: |
$41,000 |
(Source: Government of the District
of Columbia)
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