Alexandria

Safety Camera - Alexandria 2

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0:03 minutes (23.81 KB)

Safety Camera - Alexandria

Safety Camera - Alexandria

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0:03 minutes (23.81 KB)

Safety Camera - Alexandria

Dr. James Craik House


0:24 minutes (269.74 KB)

209 Prince Street, Alexandria, Virginia

E-93 Lee Fendall House by History Buff


0:39 minutes (610.66 KB)

E-93 Lee Fendall House

E-106 Washington-Rochambeau Route-Alexandria Encampment by History Buff


0:54 minutes (850.66 KB)

E-106 Washington-Rochambeau Route-Alexandria Encampment

Most of the American and French armies set sail from three ports in Maryland--Annapolis, Baltimore, and Head of Elk--in mid-Sept. 1781 to besiege the British army in Yorktown. The allied supply-wagon train proceeded overland to Yorktown, its itinerary divided into segments called "Marches." Its "Fourth March" was from Georgetown to Alexandria; the wagons took two days, 24-25 Sept., to cross the Potomac and reunite in Virginia. The Alexandria camp was roughly a half-mile in area, located north of Oronoco Street and bisected by Washington Street. The train left Alexandria on 26 Sept.

E-91 Lee's Boyhood Home by History Buff


0:31 minutes (485.35 KB)

E-91 Lee's Boyhood Home

E-92 Site of First Synagogue of Beth El Hebrew Congregation by History Buff


0:39 minutes (610.66 KB)

E-92 Site of First Synagogue of Beth El Hebrew Congregation
On this site stood Beth El Hebrew Congregation's synagogue, the first structure built as a Jewish house of worship in the Washington metropolitan area. Founded in 1859, Beth El, the first reform Jewish congregation in the Washington area, is northern Virginia's oldest Jewish congregation. Beth El built the synagogue here in 1871 and worshipped in it until 1954. A new synagogue on Seminary Road, Alexandria, was dedicated in 1957.

E-89 Alexandria Academy by History Buff


1:05 minutes (1013.1 KB)

E-89 Alexandria Academy
On 17 Dec. 1785, George Washington endowed a school here in the recently established Alexandria Academy “for the purpose of educating orphan children.” In 1812, an association of free African Americans founded its own school here in space vacated by white students. Young Robert E. Lee attended another school in the Academy from 1818 to 1823, when it closed and the building was sold. During the Civil War the Academy served as a freedman’s hospital. Returned to the Alexandria School Board in 1884, the Alexandria Academy was used as a school and administrative facility until 1982. The Historic Alexandria Foundation restored it in 1999.

E-86 Historic Alexandria by History Buff


0:59 minutes (920.45 KB)

E-86 Historic Alexandria
Alexandria was named for the family of John Alexander, a Virginia planter who in 1669 acquired the tract on which the town began. By 1732, the site was known as Hunting Creek Warehouse and in 1749 became Alexandria, thereafter a major 18th-century port. George Washington frequented the town; Robert E. Lee claimed it as his boyhood home. From 1801 to 1847 Alexandria was part of the District of Columbia, and was later occupied by Federal troops during the Civil War. By the 20th century it had become a major railroad center. In 1946, Alexandria created the third historic district in the United States to protect its 18th - and - 19th century buildings