
At the Ford Orientation Center
Pick up an audio guide to learn about the estate's history as you walk the grounds.
Look for the self-guided tour map about the Enslaved People of Mount Vernon at the Guest Services Desk.
Washington depended on their labor to build and maintain his household and plantation. They, in turn, found ways to survive in a world that denied their freedom.
Pick up an audio guide to learn about the estate's history as you walk the grounds.
Look for the self-guided tour map about the Enslaved People of Mount Vernon at the Guest Services Desk.
During this 60-minute guided walking tour, learn about the daily lives of the enslaved community who built and operated Mount Vernon.
Offered daily from February – December.
Explore the interior of George Washington’s 18th-century Mansion and kitchen. A staff of enslaved butlers, housemaids, waiters, and cooks made the Washingtons’ lifestyle possible.
Entry to the Mansion is by guided tour only and requires a Mansion tour ticket.
Commemorate the enslaved community at Mount Vernon during our special wreath-laying presentations.
Offered daily from February - October.
Visit the Story of an American Icon exhibit in the Museum and learn about the different people who shaped Mount Vernon, including the formerly enslaved individuals who helped preserve and interpret George Washington’s home.
Open daily in the Museum and Education Center.
Tour the Distillery and Gristmill and learn about how enslaved distillers Hanson, Peter, Nat, Daniel, James, and Timothy performed the hot and tiring work of making whiskey.
Offered Saturdays & Sundays, April – October.
The locations below were all central to daily operations on the estate. Visit each to learn more.
Lives Bound Together: Savery at George Washington's Mount Vernon was an exhibit on display from the fall of 2016 to the summer of 2021.
You can tour the exhibit virtually below.
This exhibit was on display from the fall of 2016 to the summer of 2021. Tour the exhibit virtually below.