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Five Blocks From Lafayette Square: GW Locks Down Foggy Bottom as Bowser's Curfew Takes Effect

DCcivil unrestemergency notificationmedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

GW's Foggy Bottom campus sits roughly five blocks west of Lafayette Square and the White House -- the focal point of Washington DC's George Floyd protests. When Mayor Muriel Bowser ordered an 11pm citywide curfew on May 31, 2020, GW issued back-to-back GW Alerts restricting both campuses to essential personnel, then escalated the next day to a 7pm curfew that ran for two consecutive nights.

Alerts
3
Response
min
Killed
Injured
Institution
The George Washington University
Private R1 · DC
~27,000 studentsGW Alert
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

3 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTEmail
Approximate reconstructionReconstructed from GW Campus Advisories archive page573 chars
GW ALERT: Mayor Bowser has ordered a citywide curfew for the District of Columbia from 11:00 p.m. tonight, Sunday, May 31, until 6:00 a.m. on Monday, June 1. Only essential personnel will be allowed to operate on the Foggy Bottom and Mount Vernon campuses during the curfew. While there have been no direct threats to the university community, protest activity is expected to continue. Students living in residence halls should remain in their buildings during the curfew. Faculty and staff should not report to campus during the curfew unless they are essential personnel.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

GW Alert language largely tracks the city curfew language verbatim -- a common pattern for university-government coordination
'No direct threats to the university community' was a deliberate hedge to acknowledge the curfew without alarming students
Foggy Bottom campus sits about five blocks west of Lafayette Square, the focal point of DC's protests
Most students were already off campus due to COVID-19 -- limiting compliance complexity
UPDATEEmail+23 h
Approximate reconstructionReconstructed from GW Campus Advisories archive page527 chars
GW ALERT: Mayor Bowser has ordered a curfew for the District of Columbia from 7:00 p.m. tonight, Monday, June 1, until 6:00 a.m. on Tuesday, June 2, and from 7:00 p.m. on Tuesday, June 2 until 6:00 a.m. on Wednesday, June 3. Only essential personnel will be allowed to operate on the Foggy Bottom and Mount Vernon campuses during the curfew hours. Students in residence halls should remain in their buildings. Avoid travel through downtown DC. The Metropolitan Police Department and National Guard will be enforcing the curfew.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Curfew start moved up 4 hours -- from 11pm to 7pm -- in response to escalating unrest
Sent the same day federal officers cleared Lafayette Square of peaceful protesters ahead of President Trump's St. John's Church photo op
Two-night announcement was unusual for GW Alerts, which typically address single events
National Guard deployment was the largest in DC since the 1968 unrest
ALL CLEAREmail+2d
Approximate reconstructionReconstructed from GW Campus Advisories334 chars
GW ALERT: The DC citywide curfew has been lifted. Normal university operations may resume, though most academic activities continue remotely due to COVID-19. Continue to avoid downtown DC during planned protest activity. The university stands with our community in mourning the loss of George Floyd and condemning racism in all forms.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

All-clear paired Clery operational language with an institutional values statement -- a hybrid increasingly common in 2020 protest-era communications
Curfew was lifted June 3 after Mayor Bowser determined the situation had stabilized
Mention of 'continue to avoid downtown DC' acknowledged that lifting the curfew did not end demonstrations
Context

Background

The George Washington University sits in Foggy Bottom, roughly five blocks west of Lafayette Square and the White House. When George Floyd protests in Washington, D.C. escalated over the last weekend of May 2020, GW found itself geographically at the center of one of the most-photographed federal protest responses in modern American history. Mayor Muriel Bowser ordered an 11pm citywide curfew on Sunday, May 31, then escalated to a 7pm curfew on Monday, June 1, after federal officers used tear gas and rubber bullets to clear peaceful protesters from Lafayette Square ahead of President Trump's St. John's Church photo op. GW Alert messages issued for each curfew restricted both Foggy Bottom and Mount Vernon campuses to essential personnel, mirroring the city directive. Spring semester was already over and most students were off campus due to COVID-19, limiting the operational complexity of the response. The university's GW Today coverage and later messaging from the Office of the President treated the protests both as a public-safety event and an institutional moment of moral reckoning.
Analysis

Key Findings

GW Alerts mirrored Mayor Bowser's curfew language closely -- demonstrating how city government action drives campus communications when no campus-specific threat exists
Foggy Bottom's proximity to the White House made GW one of the few US universities directly affected by the federal protest response
Two consecutive curfew alerts (May 31 11pm and June 1 7pm) showed escalation as conditions worsened
Pairing operational language with values statements (the all-clear's reference to mourning Floyd) was a 2020 innovation in campus emergency communications
Outcome
Foggy Bottom and Mount Vernon campuses restricted to essential personnel during three nights of curfews (May 31 11pm-6am, June 1 7pm-6am, June 2 7pm-6am). National Guard deployed across DC. Lafayette Square cleared of peaceful protesters by federal officers on June 1 ahead of President Trump's church visit. Most GW students were not on campus due to COVID-19 closures.
Provenance

Sources

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Tags
civil-unrestgeorge-floydblmprotestcurfewwashington-dclafayette-squarenational-guardshelter-in-placecity-government-order
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion