Ambler Mansion Ruins
Commanding 18th-century homestead ruins known for its Georgian-style facade & picturesque locale.
Commanding 18th-century homestead ruins known for its Georgian-style facade & picturesque locale.
This historical landmark honors a 1622 Native American assault on English settlers, offering picturesque vistas.
Bruton Parish Church is located in the restored area of Colonial Williamsburg. It was established in 1674 by the consolidation of two previous parishes in the Virginia Colony and remains an active Episcopal parish.
The home of Dudley Digges was built around 1760. It was damaged enough during the fighting at Yorktown that Digges moved to Williamsburg after the war, where he died in 1790.
The George Wythe House in Williamsburg, Virginia, is a prime example of colonial architecture and a significant landmark in American history.
Jamestown Rediscovery is an archaeological project of Preservation Virginia investigating the remains of the original English settlement at Jamestown, established in the Virginia Colony in North America beginning on May 14, 1607.
The Peyton Randolph House, also known as the Randolph-Peachy House, is a historic house museum in Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia. Its oldest portion dating to about 1715, it is one of the museum's oldest surviving buildings.
Thieves, enslaved runaways, debtors, and political prisoners once paced the cells of the Public Gaol as they waited to be tried—or hanged.
The Wren Building is a building on the campus of the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia, considered the oldest academic building still standing and in use in the United States.