FOLP

About

A neighborhood looking after its park, since 1999.

We are a 501(c)(3) volunteer-led nonprofit, run by neighbors, partnered with DC Parks and Recreation. Our work is the slow, steady kind: plantings, repairs, gatherings, and advocacy.

Mission

Friends of Lafayette-Pointer Park exists to preserve and improve the park: to maintain the gardens, to keep play spaces and gathering places in good repair, and to draw the neighborhood into the work of stewardship. We do what city budgets alone cannot — the small, steady investments that make a public space feel cared for.

The land's history

The District purchased the land in 1928. Part of it was a farm owned by Horace Jones; part was owned by African-American families descended from George Pointer (1773–1862), who was born enslaved, gained his freedom, and worked as an engineer on the Chesapeake & Ohio Canal. His descendants lived on this land through the 19th and early 20th centuries.

For decades, the park was called Lafayette Park. In 2020, after extensive advocacy and conversations with descendants, the District renamed it Lafayette-Pointer Park — restoring the Pointer family's name to the place where their lives unfolded.

What we do

Twice a year — once in the spring, once in the fall — neighbors show up with rakes and gloves to clean and prepare the park for the next season. Throughout the year, smaller crews tend the perennial beds, plant bulbs, mulch trees, and keep an eye on the things that need fixing. We raise money to replace benches, resurface the tennis courts, plant new trees, and put on community concerts at the amphitheater.

Board of directors

FOLP is governed by a small volunteer board that meets several times a year and steers the organization's priorities. We actively recruit new board members from the neighborhood.

Currently recruiting. We are recruiting new board members. If you love the park and want to help shape its next chapter, please reach out.

Get in touch