| Mount Vernon Place Historic District is comprised of four rectangular          parks– East and West Mount Vernon Place and North and South Washington          Place. These garden parks, and the houses that line them, form the setting          for the Washington Monument, the first major monument in the country to          honor the first President, designed by Robert Mills in 1829. A National          Historic Landmark, Mount Vernon Place is one of the first examples in          the United States of deliberate city planning to create a dramatic setting          for an existing monument. Notable buildings include the Thomas–Jencks          House built in 1851 by Niernsee and Nielson (1 West Mt. Vernon Place);          the Jacobs House built in 1884 by Stanford White and enlarged by John          Russell Pope in 1902 (9-11 West Mt. Vernon Place); the Peabody Institute          built from 1859 to 1866 by E. G. Lind (1 East Mt. Vernon Place); and the          Walters Art Gallery built from 1905 to 1909 by Delano and Aldrich (Washington          Place and Centre Street).Mount            Vernon Place Historic District is located at Mount Vernon Pl. and            Washington Pl. Open to the public: Washington Monument (open Wednesday-Sunday            10:00am to 4:00pm, call 410-396-0929), Walters            Art Gallery (Tuesday-Sunday 10:00am to 5:00pm, admission charged,            call 410-547-9000), and the Thomas–Jenks House. 
 | Photos by Jeff Joeckel, Shannon Bell & Theresa Page, National Register of Historic Places | 
