"07 Original Birthsite" by U.S. National Park Service , public domain
George Washington BirthplaceNational Monument - Virginia |
The George Washington Birthplace National Monument is located in Westmoreland County, Virginia, United States. This site was developed in the mid-17th century as a colonial tobacco plantation by Englishman John Washington. A member of the assembly, he was a great-grandfather of George Washington, general and the first United States president. George Washington was born in this house on February 22, 1732. He lived here until age three, returning later to live here as a teenager.
The monument (referring to the house, property and memorial complex) and its preceding plantation, which eventually would be called Wakefield, are located at the confluence of Popes Creek and the larger Potomac River, and is representative of 18th-century Virginia tobacco plantations. The area has been restored, planted and maintained with farm buildings, groves of trees, livestock, gardens, and crops of tobacco and wheat, to represent the environment Washington knew here as a boy.
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Map of the U.S. National Park System. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
Map of the U.S. National Park System with DOI's Unified Regions. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
Map of the U.S. National Heritage Areas. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
Bicycle Map of Virginia. Published by the Virginia Department of Transportation.
https://www.nps.gov/gewa/index.htm
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Washington_Birthplace_National_Monument
The George Washington Birthplace National Monument is located in Westmoreland County, Virginia, United States. This site was developed in the mid-17th century as a colonial tobacco plantation by Englishman John Washington. A member of the assembly, he was a great-grandfather of George Washington, general and the first United States president. George Washington was born in this house on February 22, 1732. He lived here until age three, returning later to live here as a teenager.
The monument (referring to the house, property and memorial complex) and its preceding plantation, which eventually would be called Wakefield, are located at the confluence of Popes Creek and the larger Potomac River, and is representative of 18th-century Virginia tobacco plantations. The area has been restored, planted and maintained with farm buildings, groves of trees, livestock, gardens, and crops of tobacco and wheat, to represent the environment Washington knew here as a boy.
George Washington Birthplace National Monument is located in the Northern Neck of Virginia. It encompasses 551 acres of land where seven generations of the Washington family lived and where George Washington was born in 1732. The park was also central to one of the earliest efforts to memorialize George Washington during the celebration of his bicentennial birth anniversary in 1932.
George Washington Birthplace is located two miles from Virginia State Highway 3 on Virginia State Route 204. The park is located 38 miles east of Fredericksburg, 11 miles west of Montross, and 10 miles west of Colonial Beach.
Visitor Center open Wednesday through Sunday
The Visitor Center is open Wednesday - Sunday from 9:30 - 5:00. On Mondays and Tuesdays, there are no park staff to assist visitors.
Located along the Potomac River, George Washington Birthplace National Monument is 38 miles east of Fredericksburg, Virginia and is accessible by travel over Virginia routes 3 and 204.
George Washington Birthplace National Monument in Winter
A large monument sits in the middle of a roundabout with snow on the ground
George Washington Birthplace National Monument during the winter season.
Memorial House Museum and Colonial Kitchen
Brick Memorial House Museum and Wooden Colonial Kitchen
Historic Area landscape of the Memorial House and Colonial Kitchen
Overlook of Popes Creek
View of Popes Creek
View of Popes Creek
Popes Creek Bridge
A wooden bridge stretching from shore to shore over a large body of water
Popes Creek Bridge leading to the Nature Trail
Memorial House Museum
A red brick building surrounded by trees and a dirt path leading to the building
Memorial House Museum
NPS Geodiversity Atlas—George Washington Birthplace National Monument, Virginia
Each park-specific page in the NPS Geodiversity Atlas provides basic information on the significant geologic features and processes occurring in the park. Links to products from Baseline Geologic and Soil Resources Inventories provide access to maps and reports.
shoreline bluff
Archeology of George Washington’s Birthplace
The rudimentary start of modern historical archeology had its start at George Washington Birthplace National Monument 130 years ago. Archeology there has made significant contributions to both the prehistoric and historical archeology of the Chesapeake region.
A man in a trench.
Designing the Parks: Learning in Action
The Designing the Parks program is not your typical internship. Each year since 2013, this program at the Olmsted Center for Landscape Preservation has introduced a cohort of college students and recent graduates to NPS design and planning professions through projects related to cultural landscape stewardship. In the internships, made possible by partner organizations, participants focus on an in-depth project that directly engages with a national park unit.
A group of young people stand on forest trail and listen to two maintenance employees
Melting the Amber: Northeast Region Launches Innovative Historic House Pilot
A historic house can be like an ant trapped in amber. What was once alive and growing is sealed in a single sepia-tinted moment. What if we could melt the amber?
Park employees stand on the porch of Thomas Edison's home, Glenmont
Fossil Discovery in the Shadow of Washington’s Birthplace
An active paleontological resource monitoring program in place at George Washington Birthplace National Monument has led to the discovery and recovery of two important fossil dolphin skulls. An emergency response team supported the field collection of the fossils which were “at risk” to rapid weathering and erosion. The specimens have been transported to the Calvert Marine Museum for preparation, curation and study.
two people carrying a fossil through shallow water to a small boat
Herbert Hoover's National Parks
Herbert Hoover is not thought of as one of our better presidents, but he made lasting contributions in the national parks he established. During Herbert Hoover's presidency from 1929 to 1933, the land designated for new national parks and monuments increased by 40 percent.
Sepia photo of Herbert Hoover standing at the rim of the Grand Canyon.
Coopers: The Backbone of Virginia's Tobacco Economy
In colonial Virginia, the world of gentlemen relied on working-class craftsman to make goods that contributed to success. Barrel makers (coopers) in particular played an important role in the economy because of the goods they made.
Coopers shop drawing
The Colonial Revival Movement at George Washington Birthplace
The women of the Wakefield National Memorial Association began to develop Washington's Birthplace during the Colonial Revival movement.
Construction of the Colonial Kitchen and the Memorial House Museum
Spot the Difference!
Discover how the Birthplace Monument has changed over time.
1930s image of family in front of the Birthplace Monument
Find and Color Chesapeake Bay
Discover the waterways that were used as highways during George Washington's life.
Chesapeake Bay Illustration
Johnny Cakes or Hoe Cakes
Whether you know them as Johnny Cakes or Hoe Cakes, it seems as if everyone had a favorite recipe for these pan-fried corn cakes – General Washington even served them at Mount Vernon. Where do the curious names come from?
Round, stiff, pancake-looking patties with irregular edges.
Monumental Changes
Chosen as a symbol to remember the birthplace of George Washington, the obelisk was transformed based on changing memorial architectural design.
Pre-1930 photo of the 1896 obelisk design
George Washington Spy Code
General George Washington used spy codes to send important messages to his officers. Use a spy code from Washington's papers to decipher important words in a letter from him to the Marquis De Lafayette concerning trapping Lord Cornwallis at Yorktown.
Spy Glass Illustration
Reducing Erosion with Native Plants
One of the major goals of George Washington Birthplace National Monument is to protect the unspoiled landscape of the park so as to enhance the historical context of the stories told here. Maintaining the landscape, however, often means working against natural forces such as erosion. Erosion is an especially difficult challenge, as it is constantly reshaping the land.
Native plants in sand near water
George Washington's Birthday
Learn about the date of George Washington's birthday and how it has been celebrated and honored throughout the centuries.
Popes Creek and the Potomac River
Colonial Gardens
Plants used for eating, dyeing cloth, seasoning food, as well as for curing various ailments were cultivated at plantations like the Pope's Creek Plantation that George Washington was born on.
Colonial Revival Garden
Series: Festive Foods of the Fort
Special holiday foods made life at Fort Stanwix/Schuyler a little more tolerable during the cold winters of the American Revolution. Learn more about the ones that might've been seen and tasted here.
A table spread of food, including a cheese wedge, a large meat pie, pasties, and apples.
Series: Park Paleontology News - Vol. 12, No. 1, Spring 2020
All across the park system, scientists, rangers, and interpreters are engaged in the important work of studying, protecting, and sharing our rich fossil heritage. <a href="https://www.nps.gov/subjects/fossils/newsletters.htm">Park Paleontology news</a> provides a close up look at the important work of caring for these irreplaceable resources. <ul><li>Contribute to Park Paleontology News by contacting the <a href="https://www.nps.gov/common/utilities/sendmail/sendemail.cfm?o=5D8CD5B898DDBB8387BA1DBBFD02A8AE4FBD489F4FF88B9049&r=/subjects/geoscientistsinparks/photo-galleries.htm">newsletter editor</a></li><li>Learn more about <a href="https://www.nps.gov/subjects/fossils/">Fossils & Paleontology</a> </li><li>Celebrate <a href="https://www.nps.gov/subjects/fossilday/">National Fossil Day</a> with events across the nation</li></ul>
two people standing outdoors near a fossil tree base
Arno Cammerer at George Washington's Birthplace
Arno Cammerer played an important role in the development of George Washington Birthplace. He served as the Director of the National Park Service from 1933 to 1940.
Arno Cammerer sitting at a desk with a paper in his hand looking at the camera
The Birthplace History: Becoming a Park
The land that the park tells stories about is complex and has many layers. The years following the dedication of the park, many have grappled with a landscape that was imprinted with Colonial Revival architecture and modern understanding of the land that Washington was born on. Read about the intricate details of the development of this area.
Volunteer Story: The Robinsons
Rhonda, Tabitha, and Abigail Robinson have served at George Washington Birthplace for the past 10 years. They interact with visitors by sharing a variety of colonial tasks and crafts as living history interpreters.
Rhonda, Tabitha, Abigail Robinson
Volunteer Story: The Northern Neck Master Gardeners
The Northern Neck Master Gardeners have volunteered at George Washington Birthplace National Monument for more than 20 years. They maintain and refurbish the Colonial Revival Garden.
group of people working in colonial garden
Commemoration at the Birthplace
View then and now images of the memorial to George Washington at his birthplace. In the late 1920s, a group of women formed the Wakefield National Memorial Association to commemorate the landscape.
man with back to us looking at the construction of a builiding
Veteran Story: William Ethridge
William Ethridge served for 21.5 years in active service and reserve for the U.S. Army. He now works at George Washington Birthplace National Monument.
portrait of soldier in US army uniform
Veteran Story: Andrew Therrien
Andrew Therrien served with the United States Marine Corps as a radio operator in Operation Iraqi Freedom. He now works as the Agricultural and Livestock Coordinator at George Washington Birthplace National Monument.
ranger wearing NPS uniform standing on grass in front of a calm river
Veteran Story: Max Farrington
Max Farrington served in the U.S. Army from 1955 to 1958. He now works at George Washington Birthplace National Monument a the Park Custodian.
soldier in Army unifrom
1930s Virtual Tour of the Birthplace
View images of the park from the 1930s.
visitors walking in
Colgate Morgan Horse Farm
In 1969, George Washington Birthplace National Monument dedicated the Colgate Morgan Horse Farm. This was an endeavor to help provide horses for mounted rangers.
black and white image of four Morgan horses in a fenced in area
George Washington Birthplace Online Scavenger Hunt
Explore George Washington Birthplace National Monument through a virtual scavenger hunt. Use the website pages to learn more about the park and the history found here.
Fossilization Challenge
Take a journey to become fossil. Can you survive the fossilization challenge and be discovered by a paleontologist?
fossil being extracted by Dr. Stephen Godfrey, Curator of Paleontology at the Calvert Marine Museum
The Westmoreland Slave Plot of 1687
Bacon's Rebellion of 1676 led to stricter laws against enslaved African Americans in Virginia. Several enslaved attempted to escape their bondage and a few attempted to kill their enslavers. The Westmoreland Slave Plot was the first conspiracy that did not involve white participants or supporters.
A Revolutionary Life: Washington's Birthday Through the Years
Nine short videos chronicle American history through the lens of George Washington's birthday and how it was (or wasn't) celebrated during critical points during his life.
graphic, illustration, bust of washington wearing a birthday hat
I&M Networks Support Resilient Forest Management
NPS Inventory and Monitoring Networks have been tracking forest health in eastern national parks since 2006. This monitoring information can guide resilient forest management and support parks in adapting to changing conditions through the actions described below.
Forest health monitoring
Managing Resilient Forests. A Regional Initiative
Forests cover tens of thousands of acres in eastern national parks and these critical resources face a range of interacting stressors: over-abundant white-tailed deer populations, invasive plant dominance, novel pests and pathogens, among other threats. The Resilient Forests Initiative will help parks address these issue collectively.
Forest health monitoring
Alexander Hamilton and George Washington
This article explores the relationship between Alexander Hamilton and George Washington.
Two painted portraits, one of George Washington, and the other of Alexander Hamilton.
Series: Managing Resilient Forests Initiative for Eastern National Parks
Forests in the northeastern U.S. are in peril. Over-abundant deer, invasive plants, and insect pests are negatively impacting park forests, threatening to degrade the scenic vistas and forested landscapes that parks are renowned for. With regional collaboration, parks can manage these impacts and help forests be resilient. This article series explores tools available to park managers to achieve their goals.
Healthy forests have many native seedlings and saplings.
Resilient Forests Initiative - Managing Invasive Plants & Pests
Park forests are threatened by invasive plants and pests. Strategically tackling invasive plants to protect park’s highest priority natural resources and planning around forest pests and pathogens are important actions in managing resilient forests.
Forest Regeneration
Pollinators in peril? A multipark approach to evaluating bee communities in habitats vulnerable to effects from climate change
Can you name five bees in your park? Ten? Twenty? Will they all be there 50 years from now? We know that pollinators are key to maintaining healthy ecosystems—from managed almond orchards to wild mountain meadows. We have heard about dramatic population declines of the agricultural workhorse, the honey bee. Yet what do we really know about the remarkable diversity and resilience of native bees in our national parks?
Southeastern polyester bee, Colletes titusensis.
50 Nifty Finds #19: A Lens on History
Ezra B. Thompson was a well-respected commercial photographer, lecturer, government employee, and contractor. He was also the first employee to make motion pictures for the US government. His films and other media were shown everywhere from international expositions to local libraries with equal amazement. For more than 40 years he used his cameras to capture the spectacular and the ordinary. How is it then that his negatives ended up in an estate sale in the 1970s?
Old-fashioned van for E.B. Thompson's business
Segregation in Virginia's National Parks, 1916 - 1965
A look at National Park Service (NPS) segregation policy and how it was applied at six national parks in Virginia before the 1964 Civil Rights Act, at Prince William Forest Park, Shenandoah National Park, Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park, Blue Ridge Parkway, Colonial National Historical Park, and George Washington Birthplace National Monument.
A group of Black boys sit around a campfire in front of a large wooden cabin.
Guide to the E.B. Thompson Negative Collection
This finding aid describes the E.B. Thompson Negative Collection, part of the NPS History Collection.
2022 Freeman Tilden Award Recipients
View recipients of the National Park Service Freeman Tilden Awards, which recognize outstanding contributions to the practice of interpretation and education by NPS employees.
Two women work with a tree while a young man records audio.
Success at the 2023 Girl Scout Convention and Boy Scout National Jamboree
Read about the two major Scouting events that took place in July 2023 - the Girl Scout Convention held in Orlando, Florida and the Boy Scouts Jamboree held in Beckley, West Virginia.
Phenom by Girl Scouts and Boy Scouts Jamboree
Updated Species Database Will Help Boost Amphibian Conservation Across the National Park Service
To steward amphibians effectively, managers need basic information about which species live in parks. But species lists need constant maintenance to remain accurate. Due to recent efforts, the National Park Service now has an up-to-date amphibian species checklist for almost 300 parks. This information can serve as the basis for innumerable conservation efforts across the nation.
A toad sits on red sand, looking into the camera.
Project Profile: Restore Eastern Grasslands
The National Park Service will restore up to 4,000 acres of agricultural fields and degraded lands across 37 parks in 15 states. This landscape-scale restoration project will expand the range and connectivity of native grasslands across the eastern US, restore biodiversity and critical ecosystem functions, reduce pesticide use, benefit people and wildlife, and create employment opportunities for diverse early career youth.
A park manager and others standing amidst a grassy landscape.
Pope's Creek Raid - June 11-21, 1864
In June of 1864, 475 men of the Thirty-sixth United States Colored Troops crossed the Potomac River and landed at Pope's Creek in Virginia. They conducted a ten-day raid throughout the Northern Neck and managed to free about 600 enslaved people. Read or listen to the report of the commanding officer of the raid, Colonel Alonzo G. Draper.
A yellowing print of a peninsula surrounded by water on the point of the peninsula.
Project Profile: Managing Resilient Eastern Forests
The National Park Service will improve the ecological health of eastern forests in 38 parks using an array of management techniques. The NPS has selected forest ecosystems of high ecological and cultural value across multiple parks from Virginia to Maine that are at greatest risk of forest loss due to chronic and interacting stressors.
Person gazes up at a tall tree
Project Profile: Conserve and Restore Coastal Marsh Systems In Northeast Parks Accounting for Future Sea Level Rise
The National Park Service will improve resiliency of coastal marsh ecosystems in Northeast parks through marsh restoration, facilitated marsh migration, and planning for inevitable changes from increases in sea level and storm surge.
A view of a salt marsh from an overlook area.
Inventory & Monitoring Partnerships Aim to Improve Park Forest Health from Coast to Coast
From coast to coast, the NPS Inventory and Monitoring Division is helping park managers improve the health and function of forest ecosystems. From promoting resilient forests in the Northeast, to conserving whitebark pine in the West, to protecting Hawaiian forest birds from avian malaria, scientific partnerships are helping parks to share information, leverage funding sources, and work together for outcomes that extend beyond what any park could accomplish on its own.
Four people, one in NPS uniform, stand in a forest. Three look upward through binoculars.
Hidden in Plain Sight: Old Growth Remnant Grasslands
During 2024 scouting for a large eastern grassland restoration project funded by IRA and BIL, several old growth remnant grasslands were identified in National Capital and Northeast Region parks that were previously unknown. These remnants preserve the genetic integrity of the original grassland flora of the eastern US and are true unexpected treasures that in some cases, were hidden in plain sight.
a grassland landscape with distant trees
2021 Estuarine Nutrient Enrichment Status Report: George Washington Birthplace NM
George Washington Birthplace National Monument (GEWA) is located along the tidal reaches of the Potomac River in Westmoreland County, Virginia. The Potomac shoreline delineates the northern boundary of the monument, where three small sub-basins drain into the Potomac. The largest and most significant estuarine resource is Popes Creek, which has restricted flushing with the Potomac and is closely linked to GEWA resources. The monitoring area covers all tidal portions...
Series: NCBN Yearly Status Reports | Estuaries
What do oxygen, chlorophyll-a, and light all have in common? They are important indicators of water quality. Our network monitors estuaries along the coast for these and other water quality indicators. Take a quick dive into the data behind park management decisions.
Underwater image of seagrass with text that reads, estuarine nutrient enrichment.
Saving Precious Salt Marsh
The Inflation Reduction Act and Bipartisan Infrastructure Law bolster climate resilience at nine East Coast parks through funding of salt marsh restoration.
An aerial view of a green, tan and brown marsh along a coastline.
Hike with your Pets!
Discover our nature trails, where your furry companions can explore alongside you!
A person walking their dog through a dense forest on a nature trail.
Coloring Pages from George Washington Birthplace
Unleash your creativity and dive into a world of imagination with these coloring pages, perfect for all ages to relax, express yourself, and bring cheerful scenes to life!
a black and white drawing of a bat standing next to a sign that reads
Postcards from George Washington Birthplace
Postcards are a perfect way for sharing adventures or crafting a colorful gallery. These charming cards spark joy and connection no matter how you use them!