In 1867, the Freedmen's Bureau (officially the U.S. Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands) bought a 375-acre farm from Julia Barry, a white landowner and recent owner of enslaved people, enabling the transformation of Barry's Farm into a thriving, independent community of formerly enslaved and free-born African Americans. The Commissioner of the Freedmen's Bureau, General
Oliver O. Howard, had asked Black migrants squatting in temporary structures at Meridian Hill, what might help them to become self-supporting. They said, "Land! Give us land!" Howard promised to acquire land near the city. He then transferred $52,000 from the refugees' and freedmen's fund to be held in trust by himself, Senator
Samuel C. Pomeroy, and John R. Elvans for the use of three institutions:
Howard University, Richmond Normal School, and
St. Augustine Normal School in Raleigh. They used some of these funds to purchase Barry's Farm. The Bureau sub-divided the farm into one-acre plots, which the freedmen could purchase over a period of seven years. For an additional $76, they could buy lumber to begin constructing a house. By 1869, money from the sale of the land, reportedly $31,178.12 (~$ in ), had been returned to the fund and distributed to the three institutions listed above. Barry Farm was initially a large homestead, stretching all the way to 13th Street on the east,
Poplar Point on the West, and the present-day Morris Road SE on the north. In 1871, the area between 13th Street, Sheridan Road, and
Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue SE (then known as Nichols Avenue), residents renamed the area Hillsdale. Railroad tracks laid around 1913 cut off Barry Farm from Poplar Point. The 1940s construction of a
Suitland Parkway, originally a military highway from Bolling Field to Camp Springs, MD, further isolated the neighborhood between busy traffic arteries, required the demolition of nearly 100 houses, and displaced more than 600 residents. Beginning in the late 1950s,
I-295, or the Anacostia Freeway, further restricted access to and visibility of the Anacostia River. Only a few old frame houses, mostly along Wade Road just at the edge of the thicket that separates Barry Farm from St. Elizabeth's Hospital, resemble those of the original Freedman's community. The National Capital Housing Authority built the 442-unit Barry Farm Dwellings public housing project in 1943. Barry Farm was built with two- to four-bedroom town houses, with some later combined to create six-bedroom units, and a recreation center.
Demolition and redevelopment In the 1940s, government agencies sought to destroy and completely redevelop the Barry Farm-Hillsdale community. Two reasons have been suggested: 1) the community's "inability "to pay for municipal services" through the collection of real estate taxes" and 2) these government agencies' desire to clear downtown Washington, DC, of African Americans and move them to Barry Farm-Hillsdale and Marshall Heights. They formed the Barry Farm Tenants and Allies Association to stop the city from evicting them from their homes before new housing was built, to demand that the redeveloped site match the intentions of the site's original design in providing sufficient green space, and to guarantee their right to return. From April 2018 until January 2019, hundreds of families were relocated from Barry Farm, and early 2019, demolition began. The Barry Farm Tenants and Allies Association successfully won a historic landmark designation for five public housing buildings that were home to well-known activists. Other than a recreation center, these were the only buildings that remained on the site as of 2022. Redevelopment of the neighborhood is scheduled to be completed in 2030. File:Barry Farm, May 2019 during demolition.jpg|Barry Farm, May 2019, during the demolition phase, on Eaton Rd. File:Barry Farm, May 2019 prior to demolition.jpg|Barry Farm, May 2019 prior to demolition on Stevens Rd. File:Barry Farm, May 2019 prior to demolition alley way.jpg|Barry Farm, May 2019 prior to demolition in an alley way off of Stevens Rd. File:Barry Farm, May 2019 prior to demolition in an alley way off of Stevens Rd.jpg|Barry Farm, May 2019 prior to demolition in an alley way off of Stevens Rd. File:Barry Farm, May 2019 during demolition phase across from the Barry Farm Recreation Center.jpg|Barry Farm, May 2019 during demolition across from the Barry Farm Recreation Center File:Barry Farm, May 2019 prior to demolition looking east on Eaton Rd.jpg|Barry Farm, May 2019 prior to demolition looking east on Eaton Rd. File:Barry Farm, June 2019 during demolition.jpg|Barry Farm, June 2019 during demolition looking east on Sumner Rd. File:Barry Farm, June 2019 during demolition looking north on Eaton Rd.jpg|Barry Farm, June 2019 during demolition looking north on East Rd. ==Tenant activism and community life==