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You
may find "Colonial shopkeepers"
taking a break outside their
stores. Stop and talk with them
about the goods they carry, or
ask about pre-Revolution prices
and the "news" of the day. It
doesn’t work trying to get them
to step out of character. For
example, if you ask what they
did during World War II, they
may say, “Are you referring to
the current unpleasantness with
the British?”
The smells, sounds
and sights of Colonial
Williamsburg can best be sensed
in the private homes and shops.
The pungent hot gingerbread
cookies at the Raleigh Tavern
Bakery, the fragrance of leather
permeating the harness maker’s
shop on Duke of Gloucester
Street, the delicate floral
scents emanating from the many
small gardens half hidden behind
the fences and walls of the
private yards are all part of
the total experience. So are
the sounds that fill the air:
the giggle of visitors trying on
hairpieces at the wigmakers, the
strident clatter of the
blacksmith at work and the
rattle and tinkle of the
percussive instruments shown on
"The Other Half" tour.
The sights of Williamsburg
include more than 88 original
buildings and an additional 400
reconstructions . You can get a
real feel of what it was like to
live in this town by visiting
just three private homes: the
Peyton Randolph
House, George Wythe's House and
the Brush-Everard House.
The original owner of the
Peyton Randolph House
was Sir John Randolph, the only
colonial Virginian to be
knighted. He was First Clerk of
the House of Burgesses, then the
member representing the College
of William and Mary and finally
Speaker of the House of
Burgesses. When Sir John died
in 1737 his wife inherited his
Williamsburg home. On her death
it passed to his son, Peyton,
for whom it is named.
Peyton Randolph's career
paralleled his father's. He,
too, studied law in London after
attending William and Mary. He,
too, was sent to England on
behalf of the colony. He was
elected to the House of
Burgesses in 1748, and in 1766
he, too, was chosen speaker. It
was up to him to guide the
Assembly through the tumultuous
debates that led to the
Revolution.
The Randolph's home is
sectional. The western-most
section of the house, built in
1715, was Sir John's home. He
also purchased the house on the
adjoining lot. Later the two
homes were connected to make one
large residence. The
furnishings are stylish yet
comfortable; it is definitely a
home, not a museum. The paneled
rooms exude a warmth that was
enjoyed by two French guests.
Count de Rochambeau used this
house as his headquarters during
the siege of Yorktown. When
Lafayette returned to America 50
years after the Revolution he,
too, stayed here.
After Peyton Randolph's death,
Thomas Jefferson purchased his
library. When the federal
collection in Washington, D.C.
was burned by the British during
the War of 1812, Jefferson
donated his extensive collection
of books to the Library of
Congress. Thus the combined
libraries of Jefferson and
Randolph became the nucleus of
the national collection.
If Sir John was the most
distinguished lawyer in Virginia
in the first third of the 18th
century, then another
Williamsburg resident, George
Wythe, may well lay claim to
this distinction in the last
third. While his neighbor,
Peyton Randolph, was serving the
colony in England, Wythe acted
as attorney general. Wythe, a
member of the House of
Burgesses, was a good friend of
Governors Fauquier and Botetourt.
However, when the time came to
choose sides, without
hesitating, he joined the
patriots and signed the
Declaration of Independence for
Virginia.
The document's author, Thomas
Jefferson, was at one time a law
student in Wythe's Williamsburg
home. And in 1776 the Jefferson
family stayed at the Wythe house
for several weeks. A popular
teacher, Wythe became America's
first professor of law at
William and Mary in 1779.
The
George Wythe House
was used by George Washington as
his headquarters during the
Yorktown siege. After the
hostilities ended Rochambeau
moved here from the Randolph
House. Centuries later this
Georgian mansion became the home
of the Reverend W.A.R. Goodwin.
Perhaps living here made him
more attuned to the urgency of
restoring Williamsburg to its
former glory. In any event it
was he who had the idea for
Rockefeller's restoration.
George Wythe established a
mini-plantation in the heart of
Williamsburg. You can see his
outbuildings and gardens.
Like the books at the Randolph
house, those at the
Brush-Everard House
also have a Jeffersonian
connection, though not direct.
This library was compiled from a
list of 300 basic books
Jefferson had recommended to a
Virginia planter. The Brush-Everard
House represents the
18th-century middle class life
style. A modest frame house, it
was built in 1717 by John Brush,
gunsmith, armorer and the first
keeper of the colony's Magazine
(see Public Buildings
selection). After passing
through the hands of several
owners, the house was purchased
by Thomas Everard who was mayor
of Williamsburg in 1766 and
again in 1771. Everard enlarged
the house, embellished the
interior and added a small pond.
To see how John Brush would have
practiced his craft visit the
gunsmith shop near the Capitol.
It is just one of many colonial
crafts you can see
demonstrated. There is a
milliner, printer, bookbinder,
blacksmith, cooper, bootmaker,
wheelwright, harnessmaker,
cabinetmaker, wigmaker and
musical instrument maker.
For a look at Williamsburg from
a different perspective sign up
for "The Other Half" tour. Half
of the city's population were
African Americans and this
two-hour walking tour tells you
about them. The tour, which
begins at the Greenhow Ticket
Office, focuses on slave
culture, racial interaction,
African American music and the
differences between plantation
and town life.
Admission to all the homes and
shops mentioned here is included
in the basic ticket sold at the
visitor center. All are
generally open from 9:00 A.M. to
5:00 P.M. The days and times do
change depending on the season.
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Visit the
FREEDOM GALLERY
to see scenes of Williamsburg,
Jamestown and Yorktown as
magnificent works of photographic
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