The Mamas, The Papas and The Doors

Former George Washington High School alums became rock music legends

Fashionista and blogger Christina Baucom from Sharp & Sound Style strikes a pose between Jim Morrisson and John Phillips and Mama Cass outside St. Elmo's.

Alexandria has been home to a variety of famous people due to its proximity to Washington, D.C. In the case of Del Ray, a few famous musicians grew up in our area, which has become a bit of local lore.
 
The most famous is arguably Jim Morrison of The Doors. Morrison was the son of a Navy admiral who lived just outside of Del Ray on Woodland Terrace in the Jefferson Park neighborhood. Morrison spent his high school years from 1959-1961 going to George Washington High School (now the middle school). The mural on the side of St. Elmo's Coffee Pub pays tribute to him.
 
One of Morrison's classmates at George Washington High School was Cass Elliott of The Mamas & The Papas. Her family lived at Lacy Court on Commonwealth Ave until she was 15. Her father moved to Baltimore at that point, and she graduated from high school there. Prior to their move, she began attending George Washington High School in the same class with Jim Morrison.
 
Elliott's bandmate John Phillips was also a former Del Ray resident. Phillips grew up on E. Oxford Avenue and also attended George Washington High School, graduating in 1953. The mural at St. Elmo's also includes him. He formed his first successful band, The Journeymen, with his friend Scott McKenzie. McKenzie also attended high school in Del Ray, graduating from St. Stephens in 1957.
 
Other famous musicians who called Del Ray home include Mary Chapin Carpenter, who spent part of her early life on E. Bellefonte Ave, and the Celtic band Scythian, which was formed in the basement of a house on Russell Road.