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Alexandria Loses a Quiet Visual Poet: Photographer Lee Moody Dies at 72

Lee Moody smiles while holding a bright red comb above her short white hair during cancer treatment, wearing blue glasses and a white top against a simple light background.
Lee Moody shared this smiling selfie earlier this year during her cancer treatment, joking, “I need a haircut, I can’t do a thing with this hair.” Friends say her warmth, humor, and grace never left her, even during her difficult battle with pancreatic cancer. Photo courtesy of @OldTownBlackDog.

ALEXANDRIA, VA – Katharine “Lee” Moody, whose evocative photography captured the quiet beauty, atmosphere, and emotional texture of Alexandria for years, has died following a courageous battle with pancreatic cancer. She was 72.

For years, Lee quietly became part of the fabric of Old Town Alexandria itself — often spotted walking before dawn with her beloved black lab, Taylor, camera in hand, waiting patiently for those fleeting moments when the city transformed into something extraordinary.

Her photographs were more than scenic images. They captured a feeling.

A colorful sunrise over the Potomac River in Alexandria reflects shades of pink, purple, and orange across calm water, with waterfront grasses and trees in the foreground.
One of Lee Moody’s signature Alexandria waterfront photographs captures a brilliant sunrise reflecting across the Potomac River in Old Town. Her images became beloved for their ability to transform familiar local scenes into moments of quiet beauty. Photo by @OldTownBlackDog.

Through fiery waterfront dawns, mist rolling across the Potomac, quiet cobblestone streets, church steeples glowing in early light, flooded streets reflecting historic buildings like watercolor paintings, snowstorms, rain-soaked sidewalks, and changing seasons along King Street, Lee showed Alexandria not simply as a historic city, but as a place of gentleness, reflection, and wonder.

Her work appeared on the covers of both The Zebra Press and The Old Town Crier and became beloved throughout the community she loved so deeply.

Yet despite the admiration her work received, Lee herself remained intensely humble and private.

Friends searching through her social media pages in recent days found only a handful of photographs of Lee herself amid thousands of images of Old Town sunrises, waterfront reflections, neighborhood street scenes in every season and weather condition, and, of course, Taylor.

In many ways, Lee seemed far more interested in shining light on the beauty around her than drawing attention to herself.

Sunlight shines through bright red autumn leaves in an Old Town Alexandria courtyard, illuminating fallen leaves on the ground beside historic brick buildings.
Autumn sunlight bursts through brilliant red leaves in this striking Old Town Alexandria scene photographed by Lee Moody. Her images often transformed familiar neighborhood corners into vivid works of art filled with light, color, and atmosphere. Photo by @OldTownBlackDog.

When The Zebra Press asked how she wished to be credited for the many photographs shared in print and across social media over the years, Lee preferred they simply be attributed to “@OldTownBlackDog.”

It felt fitting for someone who rarely sought attention for herself despite creating images that so many Alexandrians came to love.

Taylor herself became familiar to many Alexandrians through Lee’s social media presence under that same name, where waterfront walks, sunrise photographs, and tender everyday moments created a devoted following among dog lovers and admirers of Alexandria alike.

“This is such heartbreaking news,” Zebra publisher Mary Wadland wrote following Lee’s passing. “A major light has gone out in Alexandria today.”

Wadland recalled that The Zebra had been honored to feature Lee’s photography on multiple covers over the years.

“She had a gift for capturing Old Town not just as a place, but as a feeling — those quiet sunrise moments that made people stop and see our city differently,” Wadland wrote. “Alexandria was better, kinder, and more beautiful because Lee Moody walked its streets with a camera in hand and a dog by her side.”

Lee’s best friend, Heidi Burkhardt, who announced her passing publicly, described Lee as someone admired widely for both her artistic talent and her gentle spirit.

“Many of you were aware of Lee’s cancer diagnosis in 2024 and followed her nearly two-year journey with love, support, thoughtful cards, calls, texts, visits, and endless kindness,” Burkhardt wrote. “She had a vast network of friends near and far, and that support helped carry her through each day.”

Burkhardt described Lee spending “countless early mornings walking the streets of Old Town in search of the perfect sunrise,” almost always accompanied by Taylor.

A black Labrador retriever named Taylor rests on a carpet holding a plush toy in her mouth while looking gently toward the camera indoors.
Taylor, Lee Moody’s beloved black lab and constant companion, became familiar to many Alexandrians through Lee’s social media account, @OldTownBlackDog. This photograph of Taylor was used as Lee’s Facebook profile image. Photo courtesy of @OldTownBlackDog.

Born in Jacksonville, Florida, on February 24, 1954, Lee moved with her family to the Alexandria area in 1965 just before the historic Blizzard of ’66 — an experience friends say became one of her treasured childhood memories.

She graduated from Thomas A. Edison High School in 1972 and James Madison University in 1976. Lee later worked for more than 40 years with the Department of Defense in Foreign Military Sales and Export Control before retiring in 2019.

In July 2024, Lee revealed publicly that she had been diagnosed with Stage 4 pancreatic cancer.

Facing chemotherapy, hair loss, and the painful realities of terminal illness, she continued to communicate with remarkable honesty, humor, and grace.

A vivid sunrise over the Potomac River in Alexandria fills the sky with orange, pink, and purple clouds reflected across calm water near docks and a rocky shoreline.
Lee Moody changed the cover image on her Facebook page to this striking Alexandria waterfront sunrise on March 28, just weeks before her death. The photograph reflected the quiet beauty, light, and calm that defined so much of her beloved work. Photo by @OldTownBlackDog.

In one social media post shared shortly after her diagnosis, Lee spoke candidly about the heartbreaking decision to allow Taylor to temporarily live with close friends Ann and Steve in Baltimore during treatment.

“She is still my love bug,” Lee wrote of Taylor, “only now she has more people in her circle to love.”

Even amid the harsh realities of cancer, her warmth and self-deprecating humor never disappeared. Earlier this year, alongside a smiling photograph showing her short white hair growing back, she joked: “I need a haircut, I can’t do a thing with this hair.”

And throughout much of the past year, Lee quietly returned to doing what she loved most: photographing Alexandria once again at dawn and in every changing season.

On March 28, she changed the cover image on her Facebook page to one of her signature Alexandria photographs — a breathtaking explosion of crimson, gold, lavender, and reflected light stretching across the Potomac River while Taylor remained her profile photograph.

It felt fitting for someone who spent years helping others notice the beauty waiting quietly at the start of each new day.

Her final social media post, shared May 11, featured a photograph of Taylor with four simple words:

“My beautiful love bug. ❤️”

Friends across Alexandria have spent recent days sharing stories not only of Lee’s artistic gifts, but of her warmth, kindness, and gentle presence.

“So sad to hear of her passing,” wrote former colleague Julie Maclean. “I will miss her and her beautiful photography she shared over the years.”

Lee requested no formal service. Her ashes will be scattered at sunrise in Flagler Beach, Florida, and also in the Potomac River near the Old Town waterfront she photographed and loved so dearly.

Her passing leaves a profound emptiness in a city that had grown accustomed to seeing Alexandria through her eyes.

  • A decorated brick sidewalk in Old Town Alexandria is lined with glowing lights, holiday greenery, flowers, and storefronts at dusk.
    Holiday lights glow along a brick sidewalk in Old Town Alexandria in this photograph by Lee Moody, whose images often captured the warmth, charm, and quiet magic of the city’s streets in every season. Photo by @OldTownBlackDog.

But her photographs remain — quiet reminders to pause, look up, and notice the beauty waiting in ordinary moments.

And perhaps that is Lee Moody’s lasting gift to Alexandria:

She taught a city to slow down long enough to see itself.

Mary Wadland

Mary Wadland is the Publisher and Editor in Chief of The Zebra Press, the award-winning Alexandria news publication she founded in 2010 with a mission of celebrating community, culture, and all the good news happening across the city. A longtime community advocate and storyteller, Mary was selected for the Alexandria Chamber of Commerce inaugural 40 Under 40 class and has served as President of Living Legends of Alexandria since 2022. Known for her deep local roots, sharp editorial instincts, and passion for connecting people through journalism, she has spent decades chronicling the personalities, businesses, events, and civic life that make Alexandria unique. Originally from Delray Beach, Florida, Mary is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Hollins College in Roanoke, Virginia, and has been part of Alexandria’s publishing and media community since 1987.

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