Colonial Williamsburg is a living-history museum and private foundation presenting a part of the historic district in the city of Williamsburg, Virginia. Its 301-acre historic area includes several hundred restored or recreated buildings from the 18th century, when the city was the capital of the Colony of Virginia. In the late 1920s, the restoration of colonial Williamsburg began under the Reverend Dr. W. A. R. Goodwin and John D. Rockefeller Jr. and his wife Abby Aldrich Rockefeller.
SITE FEATURES
Gift Shop, Surviving Structures, Reconstructions, Programs, Gardens, Tours, Restaurant, Exhibits, Living History, Livestock, Artisans
On this site...
The Jamestown statehouse housed Virginia's government in the 1600s, but it burned on October 20, 1698. The legislators consequently moved their meetings to the College of William & Mary in Virginia at Middle Plantation. Middle Plantation was renamed Williamsburg by Governor Francis Nicholson in honor of William III of England. For 81 years of the 18th century, Williamsburg was the center of government, education, and culture in the Colony of Virginia. The government moved to Richmond on the James River in 1780, under the leadership of Governor Thomas Jefferson, to be more central and accessible from western counties and less susceptible to British attack. There it remains today.
TOWN
EST. 1699
ENCAMPMENT
1780 - 1781
As the capital city and seat of government, Williamsburg featured prominently in the Virginia colony’s road to revolution. In 1765 the House of Burgesses adopted Patrick Henry’s condemnation of the Stamp Act, and the city saw its own Stamp Act protest on Duke of Gloucester Street. In 1769 residents attended a ball in honor of then-governor Norborne Berkeley, clad in homespun clothing to protest taxes on imported goods.
Patriots clashed with colonial governor John Murray, earl of Dunmore. In 1774 Dunmore dissolved the General Assembly after they passed a resolution in support of the city and residents of Boston after that city’s Tea Party protest resulted in Parliament levying the Coercive Acts as punishment. In April 1775, Dunmore ordered the removal of the city’s stores of gunpowder from the powder magazine. Colonists saw this as an outright affront to their protection and liberties and immediately demanded its return. Later that summer Dunmore abandoned the city. With the royal-appointed governor out of the capital, Williamsburg set its sights on supporting the Revolutionary War.
As the main theater of war moved to the south, Williamsburg became vulnerable to enemy attack.Prior to the Siege of Yorktown in October 1781, important but lesser-known skirmishes took place on the outskirts of Williamsburg as allied patriot troops met loyalists and Cornwallis’ army. At the Battle of Spencer’s Ordinary on June 26, 1781, John Graves Simcoe engaged patriots under Colonel Richard Butler with an inconclusive result. In July 1781 the Battle of Green Springs saw a victory for General Charles Cornwallis and Banastre Tarleton over patriot troops commanded by General Anthony Wayneand the Marquis de Lafayette.
HISTORIC PEOPLE
George Washington
Commander-in-Chief
Martha Washington
Thomas Jefferson
Governor VA
Patrick Henry
Governor VA
James Madison
Delegate
Dolley Madison
Peyton Randolph
President
Comte de Rochambeau
Major General
Charles Lee
Major General
Horatio Gates
Major General
Benedict Arnold
Major General
Benjamin Lincoln
Major General
Marquis de Lafayette
Major General
Friedrich von Steuben
Major General
William Washington
Major
Henry Knox
Major General
Hugh Mercer
Brigadier General
Daniel Morgan
Brigadier General
Anthony Wayne
Brigadier General
Alexander Hamilton
Lt Colonel
John Laurens
Lt Colonel
Light Horse Harry Lee
Lt Colonel
James Monroe
Lt Colonel
Nicholas Fish
Joseph Plumb Martin
Private
James Craik
Surgeon
Grasse, Francois Joseph Paul
Admiral
Lauzun, Armand Louis de Gontaut
Major General
Viomenil, Charles du Houx
Colonel
Noaillies, Louis Marie
Colonel
George Mason
Delegate
Thomas Nelson Sr
Delegate
Edmund Pendleton
Delegate
George Wythe
Delegate
Francis Lightfoot Lee
Delegate
Benjamin Harrison V
Delegate
Thomas Nelson Jr
Governor VA
Carter Braxton
Delegate
Richard Henry Lee
Delegate
Carter Burwell
Delegate
John Marshall
Delegate
Richard Bland
Delegate
William Nelson
Mary Ball Washington
First Mother
John "Jacky" Parke Custis
Delegate
Betty Washington Lewis
Charles Washington
Samuel Washington
Lawrence Washington
Colonel
William Byrd III
Burgess
Charles Cornwallis
Major General
William Phillips
Major General
Lord Dunmore
Major General
Charles O'Hara
Brigadier General
Banastre Tarleton
Lieutenant Colonel
John Graves Simcoe
Captain
Narborne Berkeley (Baron Botetourt)
William Gooch
Robert Dinwiddie
Francis Fauquier
Sally Cary Fairfax
N/A
George William Fairfax
William Fairfax
Bryan Fairfax
Thomas Lord Fairfax