History

Minutes from Washington, DC and Mount Vernon on the scenic GW Parkway

Colonial

The history of Alexandria reads likes a Who's Who of American History. George Washington, George Mason, and Robert E. Lee are just a few famous Americans who had a hand in the heritage of a city that owes its founding to hardworking Scottish merchants.

In 1669, Scotsman John Alexander purchased the land of present-day Alexandria from an English ship captain for "six thousand pounds of Tobacco and Cask." By the 18th century, this area had become a prominent center for the export of the profitable crop tobacco. To facilitate shipping, a number of prominent landholders and businessmen, led by Scotsmen William Ramsay and John Carlyle, successfully petitioned the Virginia General Assembly to establish a town in the fall of 1748. By the spring, Alexandria, named in honor of John Alexander, was established.

Incorporated in 1749, Alexandria became a bustling seaport teeming with brigs, schooners, and ships of the line that traversed the high seas en route to England and the Caribbean. The streets were lined with substantial brick houses, and the "sound of the hammer and trowel were at work everywhere." In 1796, a visitor, the Duc de La Rochfoucauld Liancourt, commented that "Alexandria is beyond all comparison the handsomest town in Virginia - indeed is among the finest in the United States."

Sparking a Revolution

In the years prior to the American Revolution, Alexandria was one of the principal Colonial trading centers and ports. On April 14, 1755, an event occurred in the city beginning a twenty-year period of civil unrest in the Colonies that culminated in war. On that date, five Royal Governors of the Colonies met with British General Edward Braddock at his headquarters, the Carlyle House, to discuss ways to fund British military campaigns in the French and Indian War. A tax on "all his Majesty's dominions in America" was recommended to the British Parliament and became the first Colonial tax. The succession of taxes that followed fanned the flames of Colonial resentment against England and cries of "taxation without representation" began to sound, rallying the Colonists against the crown.

In response, local leaders such as George Washington and George Mason met at the Court House in Alexandria on July 18, 1774. Here, Mason's Fairfax Resolves were adopted which called for an end to trade with England. In 1775, tensions in the Colonies reached a boiling point, igniting a six year war for independence from England.

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