About
    the Authors
    Why and How We Conducted
    This Evaluation
    Acknowledgements
    Summary of Findings
    The Grade: Indicators and Scores
    Verbatim
    Quotes from Guidebooks
    How to Contact the Publishers of the
    Guidebooks
A Content ANALYSIS of Popular Washington, D.C., Tourist Guidebooks
    — from a D.C. Point of View
Evaluation of 26 Tourist Guidebooks
About Visiting
Washington, D.C.

How Well Do Tourist Guidebooks Tell the Story of the District of
    Columbia?
January 2000
by
Mark David Richards
    and
    Cherith Anne Richards
About the Authors
Mark Richards is a sociologist who has lived in a variety of District
    neighborhoods (Mt. Pleasant, Columbia Heights, Kalorama, Georgetown, Dupont Circle) for 15
    years.  He currently lives in Dupont East near
    the “17th Street Strip,” and works as senior associate at Bisconti
    Research, Inc., an opinion research firm, in Woodley Park. 
    Richards was born in Pennsylvania, and has lived in North Carolina; Kentucky; Paris
    and Strasbourg, France; Bouaké, Ivory Coast; and Tombouctou and Diré, Mali.   He speaks French.  Richards authored “Making Up Our Mind in a Democratic Age:  A Review of the Social Science Literature on Land
    Use Decision Making,” (June 1994);
    “Searching for Environmental Justice in a Democratic Age:  Review of the Discourse on Environmental
    Inequality,” (July 1996); “Case Study
    of Neighborhood Identity: Washington, D.C.’s Dupont East Neighborhood” (April
    1997); “How a Modern Electricity Company Went
    to the Roots of Democracy to Build Public Trust” (September 1997); and “Struggle for Democracy: A Local Sociopolitical History
    of Washington, D.C.” (1998).  He also developed a series of fact sheets on
    DC, and is writing “Hope and Delusion in the Nation’s Capital: Struggle for
    Democracy in the District of Columbia,” his doctoral thesis for The Union
    Institute, which he is doing for fun.  He
    doesn’t want to read another guidebook about DC for a long time.
Cherith Richards is a student of sociology at The University of
    Maryland in College Park, where she resides.  She
    works as Research Assistant for Bisconti Research, Inc. 
    She was born in North Carolina, and lived in Greensboro where she researched
    discontinued patterns while working at Replacements Ltd., the “world’s largest
    china, crystal, and flatware company.”  She
    also lived in Paris, France, Bouaké, Ivory Coast, and grew up in Tombouctou and Diré,
    Mali.  She is one of a few Americans who
    speaks Songhai like a native Malian.  She also
    speaks French.  She has traveled throughout
    the Caribbean where she worked on a cruise ship for a couple years.
Why and How We Conducted This
    Evaluation
DC residents host over 20 million visitors
    annually.  Visitors come to the nation’s
    symbolic center to see the federal institutions and to learn about the nation’s
    history and heroes.  Washington, DC—known
    worldwide as the capital of Democracy—is packed with museums documenting the story of
    the ongoing American experiment in self-government.  Most
    federal museums and monuments are located within the National Capital Service Area (NCSA).  
Outside the monumental core there are over one
    hundred neighborhoods that are not located in any state. 
    These neighborhoods are animated by half-a-million residents who call the District
    home.  The story of local DC parallels the
    story of the nation—but it is not the same story. 
    It is a unique story that is both important and interesting.  The objective of this study was to evaluate how
    well tourist guidebooks cover this story.
To evaluate the guidebooks for benchmarking, a list of important
    historic and current sociopolitical facts about the District of Columbia was developed by
    Mark Richards and circulated among Stand Up for Democracy in DC Coalition members,
    grassroots and civic leaders, and individuals knowledgeable about DC.  They reviewed the list of facts for
    comprehensiveness and accuracy.  The facts
    (“factors”) clustered into the following six categories
    (“indicators”):  
- Local self-government and home rule
 - Population and economy
 - National representation
 - Congressional authority
 - DC citizens’ historic struggle for equal citizenship rights
 - DC’s contribution to the nation
 
We visited bookstores with extensive tourist guidebook
    selections—Borders Books, B. Dalton Bookseller, Crown Books, and Kramerbooks &
    Afterwords, Lambda Rising—and purchased the latest editions of guidebooks to
    Washington, DC.  We included “newcomers
    guides” and three guides published (available via Internet) by the Washington
    DC Convention and Visitors Association.  We
    excluded single issue guidebooks (children, concierge, dining, mystery, etc.).  
Altogether, we evaluated 26 guidebooks.  We read each one and identified statements of fact
    similar to those on our list and typed the quote and page number where the information can
    be found (see “Verbatim quotes from tourist guidebooks”).  
There are 40 statements of fact (factors).  We calculated the percentage of tourist guidebooks
    that mentioned each factor.  The total number
    of guidebooks (26) equals 100%.  If a factor
    was mentioned in 10 of 26 guidebooks, that is 38% of the total.  
The 40 factors were clustered into six main indicators.  The score for an indicator is the average
    of all the scores for each factor in that indicator. 
    Numbers were rounded.
Guidebooks Evaluated (For complete information, see end of
    report):
- Access — Washington DC (1998)
 - African American Heritage and Multicultural Guide by the Washington DC Convention and
Visitors Association (1999) - Backstreet Guides — Moving to Washington, DC: The Practical Companion to Your New
City, From Settling in to Stepping Out (1996) - Berlitz Washington, DC Pocket Guide (1999)
 - Econoguide: Washington, DC, Williamsburg (2000)
 - Fodor’s City Guide Washington, District of Columbia: The Ultimate Sourcebook for
City Dwellers (1999) - Frommer’s Irreverent Guide to Washington, DC (1999)
 - Frommer’s Washington, DC From $60 a Day: The Ultimate Guide to Comfortable Low-Cost
Travel (1998) - Gay and Lesbian Traveler’s Guide by the Washington DC Convention and Visitors
Association (1999) - The Guide to Black Washington—Places and Events of Historical and Cultural
Significance in the Nation’s Capital (1999) - Idiot’s Travel Guide to Washington, DC (1999)
 - Insight Guides: Washington, DC (1997)
 - Let’s Go Washington, DC (1998)
 - Lonely Planet Travel Survival Kit: Washington, DC & the Capital Region (1997)
 - Mastering DC: A Newcomer’s Guide to Living in the Washington, DC Area (1998)
 - Michelin–Washington, DC (1997)
 - National Geographic’s Driving Guides to America — Washington, DC, and
Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland, and Delaware (1996) - Newcomer’s Handbook for Washington (1997)
 - The Rough Guide to Washington, DC (1997)
 - The Smithsonian Guides to Historic America: Virginia
and the Capital Region — Washington, DC, Virginia, Maryland, Delaware (1998) - Travel & Leisure — Washington, DC: The Complete Guide for the Discriminating
Traveler (1997) - Ulysses Travel Guide: Washington, DC (1998)
 - The Unofficial Guide to Washington, DC (1998)
 - Washington, DC: The American Experience—Visitor’s Guide to Washington, DC by
the Washington DC Convention and Visitors Association (1999) - The Washington Historical Atlas: Who Did What When and Where in the Nation’s
Capital (1992) - Washington On Foot (1992)
 
Acknowledgements
Francine Cary, Editor of Urban Odyssey: A Multicultural
    History of Washington, D.C. and former Executive Director of the DC Humanities
    Council, encouraged me to pursue this project.
Members of the Stand Up for Democracy in DC Coalition provided
    helpful review and comment, and provided needed encouragement to bring the project to
    fruition.
George LaRoche, Attorney for the Adams v. Clinton
    lawsuit, spent a great deal of time reviewing the statements for detail, precision, and
    accuracy.  His critique was tremendously
    helpful.
My sister and colleague, Cherith Richards, a student of
    sociology at the University of Maryland, volunteered to help conduct the analysis.  She spent hours doing the hard work of tabulating
    and transcribing quotes from the books.
A host of
    individuals knowledgeable about DC history and civic life provided encouragement, review,
    and/or helpful comments.  They include:  Bob Arnebeck, Author, Through A Fiery
    Trial: Building Washington 1790-1800; Kenneth R. Bowling, Co-Editor, First
    Federal Congress Project and Author, The Creation of Washington, D.C.; Timothy
    Cooper, President, Democracy First, The
    Statehood Solidarity Committee; Winnie Gallant, Community Activist;
    Matthew Gilmore, Librarian, Washingtoniana
    Division, District of Columbia Public Library; Bette Hoover, Director of American Friends Service Committee/DC Peace
    & Economic Justice Program; Anise Jenkins, Community Activist and
    Secretary of Stand Up for Democracy in DC Coalition; Eugene D. Kinlow, Jr.,  Secretary and Trustee of the Committee
    of 100 and Community Activist; Florence Pendleton, Shadow Senator, District of
    Columbia; Jamin Raskin, Professor of Law, Washington College of Law, American
    University; Counsel for the Alexander v. Daley lawsuit; Peter Schott,
    Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner; Tom Sherwood, Author, Dream City: Race,
    Power, and the Decline of Washington, D.C.; NBC TV4 reporter; Kathryn Schneider
    Smith, Executive Director, DC Heritage Tourism Coalition; Editor, Washington At Home and
    Author, Port Town To Urban Neighborhood: The Georgetown Waterfront of Washington,D.C.
    1880-1920; Sam Smith, Author, Captive Capital: Colonial Life in
    Modern Washington; The Statehood Papers:
    Articles On D.C. Statehood 1970-1991, and Editor, Free DC News Service, Paul
    Strauss, Shadow Senator, District of Columbia, and Karen Szulgit, Community
    Activist.
In the end, inaccuracies are my responsibility and I welcome critique
    — learning is lifelong.
Mark David Richards
George Washington, 1732-1799
Summary of Findings
Introduction
The story of the District of Columbia is unique, important, and
    interesting.  It is a story that a good writer
    can tell fairly well in a few pages.  It is a
    story that few have heard, but many would be interested to know.  Where would one expect visitors to Washington, DC
    to hear about this important story?  One would
    expect tourist guidebooks to tell it—but do they?
An article in The Washington Post (“Misguided,”
    April 19, 1998) pointed out that travel guidebooks in general are frequently unreliable
    and of a quality that is “widely uneven, ranging from highly detailed and insightful
    to disorganized compilations of public relations handouts.”  Our question was specific to DC—how well do
    guidebooks to Washington, DC cover the local angle—DC’s story?  And what do they tell?  With this project, we set out to answer that
    question.
The Invisible District
L’Enfant’s “City of Magnificent Distances” has
    been called many things.  Most guidebooks
    mention that Charles Dickens called Washington City the “City of Magnificent
    Intentions.”  From our study, local DC
    appears to be mostly invisible, hidden amorphously in the shadows of the spotlights
    focused on the federal institutions it hosts.  Although
    not realistic to expect to find all we searched for, some information would seem to be
    important in understanding DC.  DC’s
    story can be told with a few pages and in a timeline. 
    Yet half of the facts that we searched for were not mentioned in even one of the 26
    guidebooks, including:
- That DC is responsible for most state, county, and city functions was omitted by all
guides; - That the local economy is larger than the economies of 14 states, that DC pays more
federal taxes than 6 states, and more per person than all but one state was omitted by all
guides; - Over 80 percent failed to mention that Congress has exclusive legislative authority over
DC and what that means; - Over 75 percent failed to mention that DC does not control its own local $4.6 billion
budget and what that means; - Over 70 percent failed to mention that DC citizens do not have voting representatives in
Congress and what that means; - Not one guidebook mentioned that DC’s local court judges are appointed by the
President; - Not one guidebook mentioned that the federal government is the largest land owner, uses
local services, exempts non-profits at will, and pays no taxes or compensation; - Not one guidebook mentioned that DC citizens have struggled for 200 years to gain equal
citizenship rights—not one guide mentioned DC’s attempt to pass a Constitutional
Amendment, and over 75% failed to mention DC’s attempt to become the state of New
Columbia; - And maybe not so surprising since they are so current, not one guidebook mentioned the
two pending DC lawsuits against the federal government; - And, not one mentioned the Statehood Solidarity Committee’s petition against the
federal government before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. 
Perhaps most astonishing is that no guidebook recognizes
    DC citizens as having made any contributions to the Capital District.  Their role as host to the nation’s federal
    institutions over 200 years has been completely omitted, despite that they sacrificed
    their most important right, equal citizenship, because when the federal Constitution was
    written the states felt exclusive legislative authority by Congress was needed for
    security reasons.  Overall, guidebooks scored
    a 1.5 of a possible 100—that’s almost as low as they can go.
Despite this grim assessment of coverage of DC’s
    story, some guidebooks were much better than others (see Table 1).  Guidebooks from England and France, countries that
    have had a historic interest in the United States… scored highest in telling
    DC’s story.  Also high on the list are
    guides from former British colonies—Canadian and Australian rooted guidebooks.  Two guidebooks with regional roots scored quite
    high also.  On the other hand, “newcomers
    guides,” Smithsonian guides, and DC’s own “official” guides chose to
    largely omit DC’s story and focus on the federal story or commercial interests. 
Here is a brief description of the guides from top to
    bottom:
The Winners—Michelin and The Rough
Guide—covered 30 percent of the information. Both
guides have European roots (Michelin in France and Rough in England). Michelin, in good Cartesian form, offers an
excellent US history, maps, charts and diagrams, a timeline, cross references, and further
sources of reading. It’s slim, so
won’t weigh down the shoulder bag. Rough,
true to its name when it comes to graphic design, provides a nice city history and a
section on “The Planning of a Capital City,” and “Governing DC.” The commentary is rich, and may warm DC
activists’ hearts and give Congress heartburn (“shunned by the white political
aristocracy, the city is run as a virtual colony of Congress…”).2nd tier—Ulysses (25%),
Frommer’s Washington, DC From $60 a Day (23%), and Lonely Planet (23%) score
high on telling DC’s story; Ulysses, Canadian,
is a compact reading pleasure; while not so interesting graphically, it offers a nice
history of the US, and weaves local DC into the story with “Democracy in the Capital
of the Democracy,” and “Citizens Who Don’t Vote.” Ulysses even
reminds that the War of 1812 in which the US capital was torched by the English was
related to US expansionism into Canada. Frommer’s offers a wealth of information for the budget conscious
traveler, including a full city map and discount coupons (look out Source Theatre, here I
come!). Lonely Planet, head office in Australia, is like the other
Anglo-rooted books in that it is graphically challenged, but packed with
information—like the Canadian guide, starting with prehistory of the Americas, native
peoples, and a step-by-step tour through US history.
It offers maps as well as information about the whole Capital region. The Berlitz pocket guide is the most compact of touring guides,
with glossy photographs and nice text. It has
a brief history of the capital city.
3rd tier—Frommer’s Irreverent
    Guide, Guide to Black Washington, and Washington Historical Atlas—covered
    20 percent. 
    These guides were produced by regional authors. 
    Irreverent is a bit funny and annoying at the same time (it takes
    potshots at locals).  It is the only guide
    that tells “how to find out what’s really going on with the D.C.
    government”—by tuning in to WAMU’s FM 88.5  
    DC Politics Hour with Mark Plotkin Friday’s at noon, and it packs a lot
    of practical information into few pages.  Guide to Black Washington tells some of the most in-depth and accurate
    sociopolitical information and shouldn’t be limited to an African-American audience.  Graphically simple, it is organized by
    neighborhood, provides excellent information about places and people, and links these to
    African-American history.  The Washington Atlas, like the Guide to Black Washington, should be
    on every local’s bookshelf.  It is also
    organized by area, then by building or historic site. 
    It provides a wealth of historic information, linked to specific buildings and
    neighborhoods, and provides a timeline.  The
    Washington Atlas mentioned more DC neighborhoods than any other guide (40 of 114
    neighborhoods mentioned).
4th  tier—Let’s
    Go (18%), Econoguide (15%), National Geographic’s Driving Guide (15%,) and
    Travel and Leisure (15%).  Let’s
    Go is written by 200 Harvard students and
    provides lots of good info and deals for the budget conscious traveler.  Although printed on low-quality paper, it contains
    a wealth of information and maps.  Like most
    of the guides, it has factual errors (this one jumped out: “In May 1870, Congress
    gave Washington the right to choose a mayor.  Deputy
    Mayor Alexander “Boss” Shepherd took charge de facto in 1871.”  Congress, in fact, picked a Governor FOR DC.)  But, Let’s Go does discuss statehood—under the heading
    “State of Confusion.”  Econoguide provides a nice little history of “the Capital
    City, the story of Washington, DC, “ but like others leaves most of the local DC
    story out.  It provides discount coupons and
    good information, but is weak on maps.  National Geographic is a high-gloss, well-designed publication that covers
    not only DC but also Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland and Delaware.  Travel
    and Leisure, written by a former Washington
    Post staff writer, is a slim and trim, nicely written, hardback guide that is mostly
    upbeat about DC’s future.  It offers a
    brief history, a timeline, and nice maps.
5th tier—Access and Insight
    Guides—covered 13 percent.  Access
    is organized by neighborhood, offers maps, and has a 3-page timeline history.  Insight is a high-gloss beautifully
    designed guide with excellent photographs and a pleasing narrative that weaves the local
    into the national.  However, it is a bit
    select in what facts it chooses to tell and has a point-of-view that sounds a bit suburban
    DC—here’s how it describes “Washington’s four faces:”  “There is the Washington that is most
    generally conjured up the name—the administrative city that governs the vast military
    and bureaucratic machine… Then there is social Washington, hovering not so discreetly
    behind the closed doors … of the exclusive salons of Georgetown, Kalorama and Embassy
    Row… The third Washington is referred to by both its white and its African American
    residents as ‘Chocolate City’ –- the 70 percent black Washington known as
    the crack and murder capital of the world.  …But
    there is a fourth Washington, and it is this Washington that is finally forcing the
    capital into becoming a coherent, normal place to live, functioning beyond the shadow of
    the Capitol.  It is the Washington that lies
    outside the District of Columbia line.”
6th tier—Smithsonian Guides to
    Historic America (5%), The Unofficial Guide (5%), Backstreet Guide (3%),
    Fodor’s City Guide (3%), and African-American Heritage and Multicultural Guide (3%)
    all have one thing in common—they don’t tell much about local DC. The
    Smithsonian Guide, titled “Virginia & the National Capital Region”(shouldn’t
    that be Washington, DC and the Capital Region?) is a high-gloss publication with
    beautiful photographs.  The African-American
    Heritage and Multicultural Guide is a nice publication of the Washington DC
    Convention and Visitors Association, but it omits local sociopolitical history so
    important to African Americans in DC and so well articulated in the Guide to Black
    Washington.
The Losers—The following guides excluded
    DC’s story altogether: Gay and Lesbian Traveler’s Guide (an otherwise excellent publication of the Washington DC
    Convention and Visitors Association), Mastering
    DC Newcomers Guide, Newcomer’s Handbook, Washington, DC: The American
    Experience, (also by the
    Washington DC Convention and Visitors Association), Washington on Foot (an otherwise wonderful book by the National Capital
    Area Chapter American Planning Association and Smithsonian Institution Press), and the Idiots Guide.   The Idiots Guide informs readers that “This book isn’t for
    idiots.  It just shows you how to visit a town
    full of them.  Despite the crazy mentality
    here, I still get a thrill every time I’m in the city, and so will you.”
Guidebooks one might expect to score high on telling
    DC’s local history, such as newcomer guides, Smithsonian guides, and those produced
    by DC’s own Convention and Visitors Association, scored in the bottom tiers.  DC’s three guides, available over the
    Internet (www.washington.org), are attractive and
    free publications packed with useful information.  The
    American Experience is mainly a resource book with listings.  It does have a one page listing of 13
    neighborhoods, which it uses as a legend throughout the guide.  The Gay and Lesbian and Multicultural
    Guides demonstrate that DC is making an effort to be inclusive.  Each one offers an interesting history of the
    respective identity group and their link to DC.  The
    sociopolitical history is perhaps more important to these two groups than to others, yet
    there is little mention of it.  The Multicultural
    Guide mentions home rule and ANCs in passing.  Perhaps
    the abysmal scores by DC’s own can be attributed to fear of being perceived as
    “political,” or fear that if they mentioned the local story, important to
    residents, Congress might use its power to harm them in some way.  It is well know that local officials and political
    elites factor in the Congressional presence into their local actions. 
Table 1
    Best to Worst
    Ranking of 26 Guides on Coverage of Local DC Historical and Political Information
Total Factors
    (Out of 40) Mentioned in Guidebook
| Number Mentioned (40) | Percent Mentioned (100) | ||
| 1. | Michelin | 12 | 30 | 
| Rough Guide | 12 | 30 | |
| 2. | Ulysses | 10 | 25 | 
| Lonely Planet | 9 | 23 | |
| Berlitz | 9 | 23 | |
| Frommer’s Washington, DC from $60 a Day | 9 | 23 | |
| 3. | Guide to Black Washington | 8 | 20 | 
| Washington Historical Atlas | 8 | 20 | |
| Frommer’s Irreverent Guide | 8 | 20 | |
| 4. | Let’s Go | 7 | 18 | 
| Econoguide | 6 | 15 | |
| National Geographic’s Driving Guide | 6 | 15 | |
| Travel Leisure | 6 | 15 | |
| 5. | Access | 5 | 13 | 
| Insight Guides | 5 | 13 | |
| 6. | Smithsonian Guides to Historic America | 2 | 5 | 
| Unofficial Guide | 2 | 5 | |
| Backstreet Guide | 1 | 3 | |
| Fodor’s City Guide | 1 | 3 | |
| Multicultural Guide | 1 | 3 | |
| 7. | Gay and Lesbian Traveler’s Guide | 0 | 0 | 
| Mastering DC Newcomer’s Guide | 0 | 0 | |
| Newcomer’s Handbook | 0 | 0 | |
| Washington on Foot | 0 | 0 | |
| Washington, DC: The American Experience | 0 | 0 | |
| Idiots Guide | 0 | 0 | 
Newcomers Guides
The Backstreet Guide,
    ranking next to last on sociopolitical issues, claims to give an “insider
    perspective,” because “[o]ur writers grew up in these cities, lived in them, and
    have loved them for years.  The listings in
    this book come from the ‘insider’s perspective—from the native’s body
    of knowledge about the city—not from what other guides, magazines, newspapers, and
    ratings sources say,” and asks readers to think of them as your “all-knowing
    friends.”  Backstreet provides
    useful information for newcomers, including information about some neighborhoods (Adams
    Morgan, Capitol Hill, Cathedral Heights, Cleveland Park, Dupont Circle, Foggy Bottom,
    Georgetown, Glover Park, Mount Pleasant, Tenleytown, Woodley Park) and the suburbs.  About Mount Pleasant, the guide notes that
    “Property crime is more or less guaranteed.” 
    About Foggy Bottom, it notes that “The odd name… dates to when the
    nation’s capital was little more than a swamp.  …It
    is made up of students and well-heeled bureaucrats.”
Mastering DC, ranking last on informing newcomers about
    sociopolitical issues, points out that when it comes to neighborhoods, “there is
    something for everyone,” from urban neighborhoods to suburban cities and towns.  Mastering DC provides information on a many
    of DC’s neighborhoods (it scores second highest on this measure, having mentioned 37
    neighborhoods).  It offers general maps
    showing neighborhood locations, as well as a good overview of the metro region.  There is a chapter on “Dealing with the Local
    Bureaucracy.”
Newcomer’s Handbook
    also ranked last in our evaluation.  It did,
    however, note that DC “isn’t just a government town anymore.”  It reassures newcomers with “Don’t worry
    about being a newcomer—in Washington almost everybody is or was.  There are native Washingtonians, of course, but
    they are greatly outnumbered…  Few
    Washingtonians have old family or neighborhood ties in the area.”  It says that “Washington isn’t one city.  The Washington metropolitan area… is actually
    a city and two states…  although they are
    very close geographically, they are oceans apart philosophically.”  It notes that “DC is also more political.  Residents only attained limited self government a
    few decades ago and they take their local politics seriously.”  Newcomer says that “Washington’s
    crime is concentrated.  …drive-by
    shootings and gang slayings … usually occur in the Northeast and Southeast
    quadrants… Most Washingtonians who live and work outside these areas of the city do
    not witness the daily violence firsthand.  …And
    fewer people are willing to take a chance on moving into fringe communities like Mount
    Pleasant, Southwest…”  It says that
    “Congress created [Rock Creek] park more than 100 years ago when the area was rapidly
    becoming the unofficial dump.”  It
    provides information on Georgetown, Foggy Bottom, Dupont Circle, Adams Morgan, New U,
    Kalorama, Connecticut Avenue Corridor, Cleveland Park, American University Park, and
    Capital Hill, as well as the suburbs.
Frequently Mentioned Topics
North/South Compromise,
    Virginia & Maryland Land—Most guides note that the location was born of a
    compromise between the north and the south, and land was ceded by Virginia and Maryland;
    many note that Virginia’s portion retroceded.  Treatment
    of retrocession is quite different from guide to guide—Access says Virginians
    changed their minds and asked for it back, Fodor’s says the quarters of DC are
    very uneven because the southern quarters lost all their area to Virginia in the
    retrocession, Michelin says Alexandrians became disillusioned and felt they had
    suffered economically and politically as part of the District, Rough Guide says
    slave-owning Alexandrians were opposed to being in the District to begin with and few were
    sorry when Virginia demanded its land back, while The Unofficial Guide declares
    that Virginia “snatched its lands back.”
Home Rule—Although
    most guides didn’t explain “home rule” or what it means, over half
    mentioned that DC gained home rule in 1973.
The “Boss”—Forty-eight
    percent mentioned the Territorial government, the wonderful municipal improvements made by
    “Boss” Shepherd, and many attributed his work to making the city a real city.  Quite a few mention the debt he created, but only
    10 percent mentioned that he was appointed by the President, not elected, and only The
    Guide to Black Washington explained how the “Boss’s” mismanagement was
    used by Congress to blame the city and snatch away the vote, mainly to cut out newly
    enfranchised blacks.  The different ways in
    which guidebooks treat “The Boss” is interesting (see detailed quotes for the
    flavor).
Table 2
    Most Frequently Mentioned Items
| Percent Guidebooks Mentioned Subject | |
| The land for DC was ceded by Virginia and Maryland | 62 | 
| DC gained home rule in 1973 | 58 | 
| The Virginia portion of DC retroceded in 1846 | 54 | 
| DC Citizens were given the right to vote for President in 1961 | 50 | 
| Congress granted DC right to non-voting Delegate in 1970 | 46 | 
| Congress ruled DC from 1874-1974 | 27 | 
| DC citizens have no voting representatives in Congress | 27 | 
| Congress installed a Control Board in 1995 | 27 | 
| In 1993 Congress voted on and rejected statehood for DC | 27 | 
| DC does not control its local budget | 23 | 
| Congress has exclusive legislative authority | 15 | 
The Blur
One common problem in the
    guidebooks is that local DC is frequently blurred with the federal government.  Very often, DC history is merged into text about
    federal history, with no distinction made—as if the authors couldn’t quite sort
    out the differences.  Often DC is presented
    as Uncle Sam’s “company town,” subsidized by the American public, and the
    federal image—politicians, bureaucrats, lawyers, and deal makers—is superimposed
    onto local DC.
Frommer’s Irreverent
    Guide, which claims to be written by “insiders,” with “nothing to sell
    but the truth” quotes the 1951 Washington Confidential, informing visitors
    that Washington is “’a made-to-order architectural paradise with the political
    status of an Indian reservation, inhabited by 800,000 economic parasites; no industries
    but one, government, and the tradesmen and servants and loafers and scum that feed on the
    highest average per capita income in the world, where exist the soundest security, the
    mightiest power, and the most superlative rates of crime, vice, and juvenile delinquency
    anywhere.’ (Things are different now; there are only about 600,000 parasites.)
    …Washington is also a city of paper pushers (okay, computer inputters now).  It produces hardly anything except laws, policy,
    and opinions.”
Topical Indicators
Of the six indicators to
    measure coverage of DC’s sociopolitical history, not one scored over 25 out of a possible 100, indicating little depth of coverage on the issues.
Figure 1
    Depth of Coverage
    Average Score on Six Topical Areas
    26 Tourist Guidebooks

Coverage of DC’s Neighborhoods
We incorporated a simple measure to evaluate the scope of neighborhood coverage.  We identified which guides mentioned the most
    neighborhoods (Table 3) and which neighborhoods were mentioned most frequently overall
    (Table 4).  Neighborhoods mentioned most were
    usually given most extensive coverage, while others were mentioned in passing or in
    reference to a building or historic event.  We
    did not evaluate quality of neighborhood coverage.
Table 3
    Scope of Neighborhood Coverage: Best to Worst
    Ranking of 26 Guidebooks
Number of Neighborhoods Mentioned in Each Guide (Out of 114 Checked)
| 1. | Washington Historical Atlas | 40 | 35 | 
| 2. | Mastering DC Newcomers Guide | 37 | 32 | 
| 3. | Let’s Go | 28 | 24 | 
| 4. | Insight Guides | 25 | 22 | 
| 5. | Rough Guide | 23 | 19 | 
| 6. | Access | 22 | 17 | 
| 7. | Fodor’s City Guide | 20 | 16 | 
| 8. | Guide to Black Washington | 19 | 15 | 
| 9. | Newcomer’s Handbook | 18 | 14 | 
| 10. | Backstreet Guides | 17 | 14 | 
| 11. | Lonely Planet | 16 | 14 | 
| 12. | Frommer’s Washington, DC, from $60 a Day | 16 | 14 | 
| 13. | On Foot | 16 | 14 | 
| 14. | Michelin | 13 | 11 | 
| 15. | Econoguide | 13 | 11 | 
| 16. | Washington, DC: The American Experience | 12 | 10 | 
| 17. | Unofficial Guide | 11 | 9 | 
| 18. | Travel & Leisure | 11 | 9 | 
| 19. | Frommer’s Irrelevant Guide | 11 | 9 | 
| 20. | Ulysses | 9 | 8 | 
| 21. | Gay and Lesbian Traveler’s Guide | 9 | 8 | 
| 22. | Multicultural Guide | 9 | 8 | 
| 23. | Idiot’s Guide | 9 | 8 | 
| 24. | Berlitz | 6 | 5 | 
| 25. | Smithsonian Guides to Historic America | 5 | 4 | 
| 26 | National Geographic’s Driving Guides | 2 | 1 | 
Table 4
    Most Frequently Mentioned Neighborhoods — Top to Bottom
    No. of Neighborhoods Mentioned (Out of 114 Checked) in 26 Guidebooks
| Number Guidebooks Mentioned This Neighborhood (26)  | 
% Guidebooks Mentioned This Neighborhood (100) | ||
| 1. | Capitol Hill | 26 | 100 | 
| 2. | Georgetown | 26 | 100 | 
| 3. | Dupont Circle | 26 | 100 | 
| 4. | Adams Morgan | 23 | 88 | 
| 5. | Foggy Bottom (Funkstown, Hamburg) | 22 | 85 | 
| 6. | Downtown, Penn Quarter | 21 | 81 | 
| 7. | Chinatown | 19 | 73 | 
| 8. | Anacostia | 16 | 62 | 
| 9. | Southwest/Southwest Washington | 16 | 62 | 
| 10. | Woodley Park | 14 | 54 | 
| 11. | Union Station | 13 | 50 | 
| 12. | Shaw/U Street/Cardoza | 11 | 42 | 
| 13. | Kalorama/Kalorama Heights | 11 | 42 | 
| 14. | Southeast | 10 | 38 | 
| 15. | Glover Park | 8 | 31 | 
| 16. | Lincoln Park | 8 | 31 | 
| 17. | Mount Pleasant | 8 | 31 | 
| 18. | Brookland | 8 | 31 | 
| 19. | Cleveland Park | 8 | 31 | 
| 20. | LeDroit Park | 8 | 31 | 
| 21. | Logan Circle | 7 | 27 | 
| 22. | Northwest Triangle/Northwest | 7 | 27 | 
| 23. | Scott Circle | 7 | 27 | 
| 24. | Northeast | 6 | 23 | 
| 25. | Columbia Heights | 5 | 19 | 
| 26. | Friendship Heights | 5 | 19 | 
| 27. | Mt. Vernon Square | 4 | 15 | 
| 28. | Thomas Circle | 4 | 15 | 
| 29. | Washington Circle | 4 | 15 | 
| 30. | West End | 4 | 15 | 
| 31. | Fort Dupont Park | 3 | 12 | 
| 32. | Judiciary Square | 3 | 12 | 
| 33. | Lanier Heights | 3 | 12 | 
| 34. | McLean Gardens | 3 | 12 | 
| 35. | Shepherd Park | 3 | 12 | 
| 36. | Tenleytown | 3 | 12 | 
| 37. | American University Park | 2 | 8 | 
| 38. | Brightwood | 2 | 8 | 
| 39. | Cathedral Heights | 2 | 8 | 
| 40. | Fort Davis Park | 2 | 8 | 
| 41. | Franklin and McPherson Square | 2 | 8 | 
| 42. | Potomac Palisades | 2 | 8 | 
| 43. | Spring Valley | 2 | 8 | 
| 44. | Stanton Park | 2 | 8 | 
| 45. | Barry Farms | 1 | 4 | 
| 46. | Capitol View | 1 | 4 | 
| 47. | Chevy Chase | 1 | 4 | 
| 48. | Congress Heights | 1 | 4 | 
| 49. | Farragut Square | 1 | 4 | 
| 50. | Foxhall/Georgetown Reservoir | 1 | 4 | 
| 51. | Good Hope | 1 | 4 | 
| 52. | Kenilworth | 1 | 4 | 
| 53. | Kingman Park | 1 | 4 | 
| 54. | Lincoln Heights | 1 | 4 | 
| 55. | Michigan Park | 1 | 4 | 
| 56. | Takoma | 1 | 4 | 
| 57. | Van Ness | 1 | 4 | 
| 58. | Wesley Heights | 1 | 4 | 
| 59. | Barnaby Woods | 0 | 0 | 
| 60. | Barney Circle | 0 | 0 | 
| 61. | Bellview | 0 | 0 | 
| 62. | Benning | 0 | 0 | 
| 63. | Benning Heights | 0 | 0 | 
| 64. | Brentwood Village | 0 | 0 | 
| 65. | Brightwood Park | 0 | 0 | 
| 66. | Burleith | 0 | 0 | 
| 67. | Buena Vista | 0 | 0 | 
| 68. | Burrville | 0 | 0 | 
| 69. | Carrollsburg | 0 | 0 | 
| 70. | Children’s Hospital | 0 | 0 | 
| 71. | Chillum | 0 | 0 | 
| 72. | Colonial Village | 0 | 0 | 
| 73. | Crestwood | 0 | 0 | 
| 74. | Deanwood | 0 | 0 | 
| 75. | Douglass | 0 | 0 | 
| 76. | East End | 0 | 0 | 
| 77. | Eastland Gardens | 0 | 0 | 
| 78. | Eckington | 0 | 0 | 
| 79. | Edgewood | 0 | 0 | 
| 80. | Fairmont Heights | 0 | 0 | 
| 81. | Fairfax Village | 0 | 0 | 
| 82. | Floral Hills | 0 | 0 | 
| 83. | Forest Hills | 0 | 0 | 
| 84. | Garfield Heights | 0 | 0 | 
| 85. | Grant Park | 0 | 0 | 
| 86. | Greenway | 0 | 0 | 
| 87. | Hawtorne | 0 | 0 | 
| 88. | Hillbrook | 0 | 0 | 
| 89. | Hillcrest | 0 | 0 | 
| 90. | Ivy City | 0 | 0 | 
| 91. | Knox Hill | 0 | 0 | 
| 92. | Lamond | 0 | 0 | 
| 93. | Langdon | 0 | 0 | 
| 94. | Mahaning Heights | 0 | 0 | 
| 95. | Manor Park | 0 | 0 | 
| 96. | Marshall Heights | 0 | 0 | 
| 97. | Massachusetts Heights | 0 | 0 | 
| 98. | Naylor Gardens | 0 | 0 | 
| 99. | North Cleveland Park | 0 | 0 | 
| 100. | Park View | 0 | 0 | 
| 101. | Petworth | 0 | 0 | 
| 102. | Pinehurst Circle | 0 | 0 | 
| 103. | Randle Highlands | 0 | 0 | 
| 104. | Rock Creek Gardens | 0 | 0 | 
| 105. | Shipley Terrace | 0 | 0 | 
| 106. | Summit Park | 0 | 0 | 
| 107. | Trinidad | 0 | 0 | 
| 108. | Truxton Circle | 0 | 0 | 
| 109. | Twining | 0 | 0 | 
| 110. | University Heights | 0 | 0 | 
| 111. | Washington Highlands | 0 | 0 | 
| 112. | Westminster | 0 | 0 | 
| 113. | Woodridge | 0 | 0 | 
| 114. | Woodland | 0 | 0 | 
