

Our only interaction with a police officer was early at Union Station. I was expecting metal detectors and bag inspections, and ready to be cordial and accommodating, smiling just like I do at airport checkpoints. After learning we shared common views about Bush’s war in Iraq, the officer wished us well and suggested the best place to wait for friends joining the march after their 20-hour overnight bus ride from Wisconsin. Their bus made few stops and had an emergency-only, bring-your-own-air-freshener restroom.


Accounts vary, but if there were 100,000 marchers, a good three quarters probably carried a camera. From the ubiquitous digital cell phone to at least one large format analog 8X10 Deardorf, lenses were aimed to record a moment, preserve a memory, make a statement. What was the fate of all those photographs? Published in a magazine, a newspaper? Hung at the local art gallery, the Museum of Modern Art? Uploaded to the family blog, to Move-On.org’s website? Stuffed in a folder on the desktop, never to see the light of day?


There were no fire hoses spraying, no lines of police, no dogs straining on a leash, no demonstrators burning the flag, much less using its pole as a weapon. The march began at Third Street, a stone’s throw from the reflecting pool, and traveled clockwise around the Capitol, passing The Library of Congress, The Supreme Court, and sundry federal office buildings. Except for the roped-off Supreme Court, there were plenty of spots to sit and rest, but not much to further fuel the wrath of marchers. It was no accident that the route didn’t pass by the White House.
Over-dressed for the 40 degree respite from the single digit temperatures earlier in the week, I trudged from morning ‘til dusk, steadily rubbing off a layer of skin with my nose pressed against the camera back. By mid-afternoon the soft and gentle foam straps of my camera and camera bag had all but called it quits. A masseuse’s kiosk on the side of the road would have made a killing. My neck, shoulder blades, and grinding hip sockets were in solidarity with the marchers. I pledged to my body parts to buy that new all-in-one 20mm to 200mm Nikon lens, so next time I’d leave the bag with the other fat lenses at home and just stuff a bottle of water and a bag of nuts in my pockets.
The pictures you see here and on the link are a record of my day in DC. It was mostly new to me, and there were a few minor wow moments. I’ll be very curious to see the moments captured by Judith Joy Ross and her 8X10 Deardorf, or anyone else’s. Next time, I’ll take the bus and be looking for something new all over again.