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Visit Museums and Historic Sites

Alexandria is a desirable location to live, work and play. The City owns many of the premier historic sites in Alexandria and it is charged with the conservation, interpretation and promotion of these links to the past. Plan your visit to Historic Alexandria with the resources below.
Page updated on April 3, 2025 at 11:02 AM

Historic Alexandria

  • Historic Alexandria (Home)
  • City Museums
    • Alexandria Archaeology Museum
    • Alexandria Black History Museum
    • Alexandria History Museum at The Lyceum
    • Fort Ward Museum & Historic Site
    • Freedom House Museum
    • Friendship Firehouse Museum
    • Gadsby's Tavern Museum
    • Stabler-Leadbeater Apothecary Museum
  • Visit Other Historic Sites
    • African American Heritage Park
    • Alexandria Union Station
    • Contrabands and Freedmen Cemetery Memorial
    • Lloyd House
    • Murray-Dick-Fawcett House
    • More Historic Attractions in Alexandria
  • African American History Division
  • Alexandria Archaeology
  • Alexandria Community Remembrance Project
  • Alexandria Oral History Center
  • Archives & Records Center
  • Commissions Supporting Historic Alexandria
  • Educational Resources
  • Historic Alexandria Administration
  • History of Alexandria
    • Conducting Your Own Historic Research
    • African American History
    • Women's History
    • Discovering the Decades
    • Historic Alexandria Quarterly
    • Out of the Attic
  • Historic Preservation
  • Museum Store
  • News Releases
  • Plan your Visit
  • Rentals and Private Events
  • Self-Guided Tours
  • Stay Connected
  • Support Historic Alexandria
    • Make a Gift
    • Become a Member
    • Join a Commission
    • Volunteer and Career Opportunities

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About Historic Alexandria

Many of the City's premier historic sites are owned and operated by the City of Alexandria and fall under the administration of the Office of Historic Alexandria, the department of City government charged with the conservation, interpretation and promotion of these links to the past. The Office of Historic Alexandria has received accreditation by the American Alliance of Museums and is a member of the International Coalition of Sites of Conscience. 

Birds Eye View of Alexandria, Charles Magnus1863 (Library of Congress)

Historic Alexandria

Find out what's new in Historic Alexandria, and learn about who we are and what we do. See upcoming events and News and Information. Learn about Alexandria's history, museum exhibits and collections, educational programs and more.

View of Alexandria, VA, by J.T. Palmatary, 1853

This Week in Historic Alexandria

This week in Historic Alexandria, enjoy the many exhibits, public programs and special events offered by our city's great museums and historic sites! This e-newsletter is updated each week on this website, or sign up for an eNews account to have it delivered to your in-box.

Plan Your Visit

Below is all the information you need to plan a visit to the Historic Alexandria museums - address and phone numbers, hours, admission fees, special programs and more. The Historic Alexandria museums are free for City of Alexandria residents.

 

The public is invited to observe archaeologists at work at the Shuter's Hill site

Alexandria Archaeology Museum

Open Tuesday-Sunday

Alexandria Archaeology Museum visitors learn how the City's archaeologists, volunteers and students work with residents and developers to study and manage archaeological resources important to the community's past.

Alexandria Black History Museum

Alexandria Black History Museum

Open Thursday-Sunday

Alexandria Black History Museum enriches the lives of Alexandria's residents and visitors, fosters tolerance and understanding among all cultures, and

Alexandria's History Museum at The Lyceum (exterior)

Alexandria History Museum at The Lyceum

Open Thursday-Sunday

The Lyceum, itself a witness to nearly two centuries of local history, today serves as a gateway for Alexandria's visitors.

Fort Ward's restored north bastion, with canons

Fort Ward Museum & Historic Site

Open Thursday-Sunday

Fort Ward Museum & Historic Site is the best preserved of the system of Union forts and batteries built to protect Washington, DC during the American Civil War (1861-1865).

Freedom House Museum with historic marker (credit, R. Kennedy for Visit Alexandria)

Freedom House Museum

Open Saturday and Sunday. Closed weekdays during renovation of façade.

The Freedom House Museum offers three new exhibitions. The keystone exhibition centers the narrative on the stories of those who were brought from the Chesapeake Bay area, moved through 1315 Duke Street, and forced to slave market

Newly restored pumper in museum, painted yellow and blue

Friendship Firehouse Museum

Open Saturdays March 29, April 19, May 17, June 14, and July 19.

Friendship Firehouse Museum, the oldest standing firehouse open as a museum in Alexandria, was originally home to the first volunteer fire company in town. 

Gadsby's Tavern Museum exterior

Gadsby's Tavern Museum

Open Thursday-Tuesday (Spring-Summer)

Gadsby's Tavern Museum consists of the ca. 1785 tavern and 1792 City Hotel. Named for John Gadsby who operated them from 1796 to 1808, explore these buildings where Washington, Jefferson and ordinary travelers came to eat, drink, sleep and influence history.

Glass Bottles on display a the Stabler-Leadbeater Apothecary Museum

Stabler-Leadbeater Apothecary Museum

Open Wednesday-Monday (Spring-Summer)

Stabler-Leadbeater Apothecary Museum, one of the oldest pharmacies in the nation, sold everything from medicines to household goods from 1792 to 1933. Visitors can tour the historic shop and manufacturing room and view original products.

More City of Alexandria Sites

Visit the African American Heritage Park, Contrabands and Freedmen Cemetery Memorial, Alexandria Union Station, and the garden spaces at the Murray-Dick-Fawcett House and Lloyd House.

The Lloyd House administrative office and the Archives and Records Center are open by appointment.

TourTuesday: sculptures at the African American Heritage Park

African American Heritage Park

Open dawn to dusk

The focal point of the park is a sculpture group of bronze trees called "Truths That Rise From the Roots Remembered." The park also includes a 19th century African American cemetery and was designed to co-exist with the original landscape of the cemetery.

Interpretive panel "All Aboard at Alexandria Union Station"

Alexandria Union Station

Amtrak Station, open daily

Generations of passengers have embarked on journeys and were welcomed home at the Alexandria Union Station. Built in 1905, the station is on the National Register of Historic Places. Stop by the station to see interpretive exhibits, or to take the train.

Contrabands and Freedmen Cemetery Memorial with sculpture and wall of names

Contraband and Freedmen's Cemetery Memorial

Open dawn to dusk

The cemetery served as the burial place for about 1,800 African Americans who fled to Alexandria to escape from bondage during the Civil War. A Memorial honors the memory of the Freedmen, the hardships they faced, and their contributions to the City.

The Lloyd House exterior

Lloyd House

Garden open; house is not open to the public.

Constructed around 1796-1797, Lloyd House is one of the best examples of Alexandria's late eighteenth-century Georgian style. The Lloyd House now houses the administrative offices of the Office of Historic Alexandria.

The Murray Dick Fawcett House, viewed from the garden

Murray-Dick-Fawcett House

Garden open; house is not open to the public

This is one of the earliest homes in the city, and possibly the least altered 18th Century home in Northern Virginia.

Compactor shelving at the Archives and Records Center

Archives & Records Center

Open by appointment only

The Center identifies, preserves, and makes available to the public records of the City of Alexandria government that have been appraised and selected for historic value. It also provides records management, off-site storage, and reference services to City agencies.

Visiting Alexandria

Historic post card: Greetings from Alexandria VA.

Explore centuries of human history. Visit the museums to see a 13,000-year-old Clovis point, an 18th-century apothecary, a restored Civil War fort, a 1940s segregated library, and more.

As you walk along Alexandria’s historic streets, look for Wayfinding and Heritage Trail signs to learn about Alexandria’s past, or use our self-guided tours.

Alexandria was named a Top 3 Best Small City in the U.S. 2019 by the Condé Nast Traveler Readers’ Choice Awards, the #1 Best Value U.S. Travel Destination 2018 by Money magazine, and one of the South’s Prettiest Cities 2018 by Southern Living. The National Trust for Historic Preservation selected Alexandria as one of the 2011 Dozen Distinctive Destinations. Alexandria was chosen for its urban charm that blends an extraordinary early American past with modern flair and its citizens’ strong commitment to protecting and celebrating their history.

The Alexandria Convention and Visitor Association provides information on historic sites, hotels, restaurants, shops, parking and more. When in Alexandria, stop by the Alexandria Visitors Center at Ramsay House at 221 King Street, or call 703.746.3313 for information. Purchase a Key to the City Pass ($20 for a $60 value, including access to all of the museums).

The Historic Alexandria Museum Store, at the Alexandria History Museum at The Lyceum, offers great gift ideas a wide variety of Alexandria-related merchandise and the very best selections from all the Historic Alexandria museum stores. Your purchases support programming at Historic Alexandria's museums. Purchase event tickets, donate to your favorite museum, become a member, and buy selected merchandise online at The Alexandria Shop.

Key to the City Pass

Key to the City Museum Pass (logo)

The best way to unlock Alexandria's rich culture and history is with the Alexandria Visitor Center's Key to the City museum pass. From Alexandria's co-founders to the nation's first president and from the Civil War to civil rights, learn about our remarkable history and walk amongst original 18th-and 19th-century architecture preserved by a city dedicated to honoring its past.

For only $20 — a $60 value — the Key to the City museum pass includes:

Access to 9 historic sites

40% off for the following:

  • George Washington’s Mount Vernon admission
  • City Cruises anchored by Hornblower roundtrip water taxi pass

10% off coupon for museum store purchases valid at 11 sites

Suggestions of 3 additional free historic sites

Walk Alexandria’s Historic Streets

Wayfinding Signs

Look for Wayfinding signs on and around King Street, for pedestrian-oriented maps and interpretive panels conveying the city’s rich history. Signs start near the King Street Metro and continue down to the Alexandria waterfront. 

Alexandria Heritage Trail

Historic markers, located in many locations around town, inform residents and visitors alike about many facets of Alexandria’s history. More than 50 Heritage Trail signs have been placed in different parts of the city, on the 23-mile Alexandria Heritage Trail and beyond. 

Self-Guided Tours

Explore Historic Alexandria with self-guided tours. Walk or bike with the guidance of brochures, maps and cue-sheets, podcasts and apps.

More Historic Attractions in Alexandria

Alexandria also has many fine museums and historic sites that are not City-owned. Information on these historic attractions, including address, hours and admission fees can be found at the links below, at the Alexandria Visitors Center at Ramsay House, and online at VisitAlexandriaVa.com.

Alexandria National Cemetery

Alexandria National Cemetery 

Alexandria National Cemetery is one of the original 14 national cemeteries established in 1862. The first burials made in the cemetery were soldiers who died during training or from disease in the numerous hospitals around Alexandria.

There are 3,533 Civil War veterans buried here, including 123 unknown soldiers and 229 African Americans who were members of the United States Colored Troops (U.S.C.T.) moved here from the Contrabands and Freedmen Cemetery.

Alexandria Seaport Center

Alexandria Seaport Center 

The Alexandria Seaport Foundation serves 17-23 year-olds who need a new start. Centered on developing the academic and hand-crafting skills required to build traditional wooden boats, the Apprentices’ time in the Seaport Center is also punctuated by lessons in history, community, and seamanship. The Seaport Foundation’s work takes place at the McIlhenny Seaport Center, a floating building on Old Town Alexandria’s waterfront.

The Athenaeum

The Athenaeum

The Athenaeum, the columned building at 201 Prince Street, was constructed between 1851 and 1852 as the Bank of the Old Dominion, which claimed Robert E. Lee as a customer. During the Civil War, it was Chief Commissary Office of the U.S. Commissary Quartermaster and later a triage hospital for wounded soldiers. The Northern Virginia Fine Arts Association bought the building in 1964, restored it to its current condition, and renamed it the Athenaeum. It is now an art gallery and performance space.

Carlyle House Historic Park

Carlyle House Historic Park 

The Georgian mansion was built for John Carlyle in 1752. NOVA Parks fully restored the house and opened it to the public in 1976 as part of the nationwide Bicentennial celebration. Accredited by the American Alliance of Museums, Carlyle House is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Christ Church

Christ Church

Christ Church was designed by James Wren and opened in 1773. Prominent worshippers included George Washington. The church, located at 118 N. Washington Street, is open for worship and public tours. 

George Washington Masonic National Memorial

George Washington Masonic National Memorial 

Construction of the George Washington Masonic National Memorial began in 1922, and the official dedication took place a decade later. The building is now open for public tours, and the view from the Memorial’s observatory deck is one of the best in the Washington, D.C. area.

Lee-Fendall House

Lee-Fendall House 

The Lee-Fendall House, built by Light Horse Harry Lee’s cousin Philip Richard Fendall, was home to 37 members of the Lee family from 1785 until 1903. Labor leader John L. Lewis, President of the United Mine Workers lived here from 1937 until his death in 1969. The restored Lee-Fendall House and Garden is a period house museum that is open to the public. 

National Inventors Hall of Fame

National Inventors Hall of Fame

The National Inventors Hall of Fame, located on the United States Patent and Trademark Office campus, showcases the more than 600 inventors who have been inducted into NIHF and their great technological achievements that helped stimulate growth for our nation and beyond.

The Old Presbyterian Meeting House

The Old Presbyterian Meeting House 

Built in 1774, the Old Meeting House was the site of memorial services for George Washington, and the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier of the American Revolution can be visited in the churchyard.

Torpedo Factory Art Center

Torpedo Factory Art Center 

The United States Naval Torpedo Station was built during World War I, but it was barely completed when that war ended in November 1919. It was ready for service when World War II began, and greatly expanded during the war. The Torpedo Factory Art Center was created in 1974 as a Bicentennial project. It stands as one of the nation’s earliest examples of the adaptive reuse of a historic building. 

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Alexandria City Hall
301 King Street
Alexandria, VA 22314

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