Wilton House Museum

Wilton House Museum

About

For more than 100 years, members of the Randolph family called Wilton home. Built c. 1753 for William Randolph III, Wilton was the centerpiece of a 2,000 acre tobacco plantation and at one point was home to the largest enslaved population in Henrico. It was here that the Randolph family entertained some of colonial Virginia's most elite social and political figures. Wilton hosted George Washington shortly after Patrick Henry delivered his famous ultimatum, "Give me Liberty, or Give me Death!" during the Second Virginia Convention in 1775. In 1781, then governor Thomas Jefferson visited Lafayette who was headquartered at Wilton, while 2,000 Continental and Virginia militia troops made camp around Wilton.

Today, Wilton continues to serve as an example of Georgian architecture, headquarters to the Virginia Dames, and host to public programs and educational exhibits.

Details

City of Richmond
Historic Site
215 S. Wilton Rd.
Richmond, VA 23226

 

In the Area

Library of Virginia
800 E. Broad St.
Richmond
Virginia Museum of History and Culture
428 N Arthur Ashe Blvd.
Richmond