The Washington Monument in America's capital will reopen to the public on Thursday, September 19, the National Park Service has announced.
According to the Washington Post, "Between 2014, when [the monument] reopened after the earthquake, and 2016, the elevator broke down 24 times, often stranding visitors who rode it to the top." The last straw was a snapped elevator cable in August 2016.
The National Park Service modernized the elevator system and added a new glass-and-steel security screening facility.
Everything was supposed to be finished by spring 2019, but the discovery of "possibly contaminated soil" near the site pushed things back to September.
History buffs shouldn't be surprised. The effort to honor the first U.S. president with something big and stony in the nation's capital was curiously problem-plagued from the start.
Fundraising didn't really get going until the 1830s. Construction begun in 1848 was interrupted by money woes and, later, the Civil War.
The monument finally opened to the public in 1888—at which time it was the world's tallest building—but, as Smithsonian magazine points out, major restoration projects had to be undertaken in 1901, 1934, 1964, and 1998–2001.
Basically, the Washington Monument has been about as lucky as the old Washington Senators baseball team back in the days when the city was described as "first in war, first in peace, and last in the American League."