Carlyle House
GPS Coordinates: 38.8052273, -77.0419166
Closest Address: 121 North Fairfax Street, Alexandria, VA 22314
Here follows an excerpt from the Atlas Obscura website:
Carlyle House Historic Park
Alexandria, Virginia
A superbly preserved example of Georgian residential architecture that was once home to one of the founders of Alexandria, Virginia.
John Carlyle was born in 1720 in England, the second son of an apothecary surgeon. Earliest evidence of Carlyle in Virginia dates to 1739, working as an agent of merchant William Hicks. He built his own career as a merchant in Belhaven, a settlement that would later become Alexandria, Virginia in 1749. Carlyle was one of the founders of the burgeoning city.
That year, Carlyle purchased two, half-acre lots strategically located between the Potomac River and Market Square. He began construction of his Georgian stone mansion in 1751 and moved into the completed house with his wife Sarah Fairfax on August 1, 1753. Coincidentally, Sarah gave birth to their first son that same night.
Carlyle went on to become very wealthy with land and business interests across Virginia, along with trading operations in England and the West Indies. He was well connected politically and was tapped by Lieutenant Governor Robert Dinwiddie to be major and commissary of Virginia’s forces during the French and Indian War. Carlyle House was the initial headquarters for Major General Edward Braddock during that war.
Carlyle died in 1780 and was buried at the Old Presbyterian Meeting House in Alexandria.
Today, Carlyle House operates as a historic house museum where guides open the doors to Alexandria’s origins. There is a beautiful garden behind the house that is often overlooked by visitors, but is one of Alexandria’s hidden gems.
Know Before You Go
There is a small fee for tours of the house but there is no charge for strolling the grounds and garden.
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Here follows an excerpt from the Clio Foundation website about the Carlyle House as written by Marina Coma:
Introduction:
This beautiful Georgian mansion stands proud in downtown Alexandria, dominating the area’s landscape since the very beginnings of this city. Shortly after its construction was finished, the Carlyle House was already a center of the Alexandrian social, economic, and political life and has remained an important element of the city ever since.
Backstory and Context:
In 1749, Alexandria was a brand-new city that needed inhabitants, an auction was held to sell lots of land. Scottish merchant and Alexandria founder John Carlyle bought two of the most expensive lots, which were located between the Potomac River and Market Square. This location was ideal for his business activities, as it granted easy access to both customers and trade routes. Construction began in 1751, and Carlyle and his wife moved into the finished house in 1753.
Shortly afterwards, General Edward Braddock chose the Carlyle House to become his headquarters during the French and Indian War. General Braddock held multiple meetings in the Carlyle House, and the most famous one, known as the Congress of Alexandria, took place in 15 April 1755. In this meeting, the governors of five colonies met to design a military strategy and request funding from the British Parliament in order to fight the ongoing war. The Congress of Alexandria holds a special place in American history, as it is considered the beginning of the tensions between the colonies and Britain over taxation issues.
By the mid-19th century the estate had changed hands, and the new owner, James Green, thoroughly renovated the Carlyle House. One of the main changes was the construction of a hotel in front of the house, which became one of the best hotels in the East Coast. The exclusive Manson House Hotel was turned into a hospital for Union soldiers during the Civil War, after the Union occupied Alexandria.
After Green’s death in 1880, the site changed hands often and was given multiples uses: an apartment building in the early 1900s, a museum during World War I, etc. It wasn’t until 1970 when the Northern Virginia Regional Park Authority took over the estate, torn down the hotel, thoroughly restored the Carlyle House, and opened it to the public in 1976.
Nowadays, numerous public activities are held in the Carlyle House, such as daily tours, exhibits, programs for schoolchildren, as well as an annual reenactment of the Congress of Alexandria.
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Here follows an excerpt from the Nova Parks website about the Carlyle house:
A Fine Beginning
When half-acre lots for the new city of Alexandria were auctioned in 1749, British merchant John Carlyle purchased lots 41 and 42, two of the most expensive lots because they were centrally-located between the Potomac River and Market Square. This location provided easy access to customer and to trade routes for Carlyle's merchant business. Carlyle, also a founder of Alexandria, began construction of his Georgian stone mansion in 1751. He and his wife Sarah Fairfax Carlyle moved into their completed house on August 1, 1753. That same night, she gave birth to their first son, prompting John to write to his brother George in England that it was “a fine beginning.”
The Georgian-style mansion provided public spaces for entertaining and private areas for family and servant use. The house quickly became a center of social and political life in early Alexandria. Carlyle's magnificent stone house dominated Alexandria’s 18th-century landscape and confirmed Carlyle’s status as a gentleman and entrepreneur. Today, Carlyle House is one of the nation’s finest examples of Georgian residential architecture.
About John Carlyle
John Carlyle was born in 1720, the second son of a landed British family with strong Scottish ties. As a young man, he apprenticed with an English merchant firm and by 1741 arrived in Virginia as a factor, or representative, for William Hicks. John Carlyle came to Virginia hopeful of making “a fortune sufficient...to live independent.” Carlyle’s ensuing financial success was matched by his good fortune in his 1747 marriage to Sarah Fairfax, a young lady from one of the most influential families in colonial Virginia. Carlyle’s extensive business activities included import and export trade to England and the West Indies, retail trade in Alexandria, an iron foundry in the Shenandoah, and a blacksmithing operation.
Through his growing business and social ties, Carlyle emerged as a leading political figure in northern Virginia and counted such luminaries as George Washington among his friends. Carlyle owned thousands of acres of land throughout Virginia, including three working plantations. He served as one of the original Trustees of Alexandria, the commissary for the Virginia militia during the French and Indian War and the Revolutionary War, and a justice of the peace for Fairfax County. His wealth, social and business activities, and political service established him as a member of the colonial Virginia gentry. As a town founder and civic leader, John Carlyle’s story captures the entrepreneurial spirit of early America.
Fairfaxes and Belvoir
John Carlyle married Sarah Fairfax of Belvoir on December 31, 1747. Sarah’s father, William Fairfax, was the cousin and land agent to Thomas, sixth Lord Fairfax, Baron of Cameron. Lord Fairfax owned the Northern Neck Grant, which encompassed all of the land between the Rappahannock and Potomac Rivers, approximately 5,000,000 acres. The Fairfaxes were therefore one of the wealthiest families in Virginia.
After William Fairfax’s death in 1757, his son and Sarah’s brother, George William Fairfax, inherited Belvoir. George William and his wife Sally Cary Fairfax continued to furnish and entertain in the grand manner inaugurated by his father. John Carlyle, his family, and close neighbors and relatives like George Washington visited Belvoir often. In 1773 George William and Sally Fairfax left Virginia for England. The house was rented and the elegant furnishings sold at auction, facilitated by John Carlyle.
In 1783 the house at Belvoir burned to the ground. George Washington wrote to George William Fairfax that “Belvoir is no more!...ruins indeed they are...When I viewed them, when I considered that the happiest moments of my life had been spent there...I was obliged to fly from them.”
Braddock
On August 15, 1755, John Carlyle wrote to his brother George that “there was the Grandest Congress held at my home ever known on the Continent.” This legendary conference of five colonial governors was called together by General Edward Braddock, the Commander-in-Chief of His Majesty’s Forces in North America, who had been sent to the colonies to oversee the escalating French and Indian War.
Upon his arrival in Alexandria with 1200 British troops, Braddock selected Carlyle House as his headquarters. Together with his aides, he moved into the home for three weeks. John Carlyle did not seem to enjoy the experience. He wrote to his brother that General Braddock was a man “too fond of his passions, women and wine...” and that while in his house the general had “abused his house and furnishings...”
Throughout this period, Great Britain and France fought over land claims in the trans-Allegheny region. Braddock convened the colonial governors to discuss the financing of an upcoming campaign against the French. The ensuing debate at this conference over the financing of the campaign was one of the earliest examples of the friction between Britain and her American colonies which would eventually result in the American Revolution. General Braddock left Alexandria, never to return. He died in battle in Pennsylvania, but Alexandrians never forgot his visit. For many years after both Braddock and Carlyle had died, the house was known as the Braddock House.
Family Life
Sarah Carlyle gave birth to seven children. Unfortunately, five of these children died young. Sarah Fairfax Carlyle, their fifth child, was the first child to survive early childhood. The family Bible lists a progression of births and quick deaths. John wrote to his brother George of his beloved wife’s depression and physical ailments and his own disappointment. He wrote “The Loss hangs Very heavy On My Wife & makes her Illness much worse...”
Sadly, Sarah died on January 22, 1761 after giving birth to their seventh child, a daughter named Ann.
Nine months later, on October 22, John married Sybil West, the daughter of fellow town Trustee, Hugh West. In the ten years of their marriage, Sybil and John had four children. Only one of these children, George William, survived. John Carlyle did not remarry after Sybil’s death in 1769. In 1775, Carlyle’s daughter Ann married Henry Whiting, and died in childbirth in 1778. John Carlyle died in 1780, leaving Carlyle House to his fourteen-year-old son, George William. However, George William died in battle one year after his father. Of the eleven Carlyle children, only Sarah lived to old age. She married William Herbert in 1777 and their son, John Carlyle Herbert, inherited Carlyle House after Sarah’s half-brother’s death in 1781. Carlyle House remained in the family until Sarah Herbert’s 1827 death.
The Carlyle “Famely” and Slavery at Carlyle House
Did John Carlyle consider the African Americans that he owned to be a part of his “family?” Carlyle recorded in December of 1769 that he “lost Ten slaves Young and Old and have had a Very Sickley famely. I thank God myself & my Little folks have been as Well as I could Expect, for which I am thankfull, for Six month together to have Six or eight at a Time Influxes, the hoopin Cough & is very disagreeable & I had one valuable slave drowned.” Carlyle’s writings indicate a paternalistic attitude towards his slaves which was typical for the time. There are no clear-cut records today of how John Carlyle felt about African Americans and slavery, although he was active in importing, buying, selling and owning slaves.
Despite a lack of personal information, it is critical to understand the role of the slaves in the household. If you had visited the Carlyle House in 1770, most of the faces you saw were black, not white. The two story stone house was not only John Carlyle’s dwelling, it was the center of an entire complex of buildings. Inside and outside the buildings, enslaved African Americans moved about their daily activities, keeping the Carlyles fed and living in comfort and ensuring that John Carlyle’s businesses ran smoothly. Skilled in domestic work and crafts, these individuals were owned by one of the largest slaveholders in northern Virginia.
John Carlyle employed slave labor in all of his landholding and business ventures. Slaves toiled in the fields of his three plantations. Skilled craftsmen worked in the blacksmith shop. Enslaved carpenters, masons, and joiners labored in his undertaking (construction) enterprises, including building Carlyle House itself. In Carlyle’s merchant business, slaves served in numerous capacities.
Moses, Nanny, Jerry, Joe, Cate, Sibreia, Cook, Charles, Penny...John Carlyle’s probate inventory names these nine slaves on the site in 1780. This inventory lists all personal property of the deceased, including furniture, livestock, domestic items, and slaves. Carlyle’s papers, as well as letters, diaries, and account books of other Virginians, plus runaway slave advertisements and sale notices shed some light on slaves in Virginia. Although written from slaveholders’ points of view and therefore biased, these sources help humanize the Carlyle inventory.
The Civil War
Following John Carlyle’s death, his heirs sold off bits and pieces of his property over time. Beginning in 1847, local furniture manufacturer James Green began reassembling the original Carlyle acre of land. He managed to acquire the three-quarters of an acre that remains today. He bought Carlyle House itself, then known as Mansion House, in 1848. On the property at that time was an 1806 building that had been a bank. Green converted this building into the Mansion House Hotel, one of the finest hotels on the East Coast. He expanded the hotel in the mid-1850s, completely hiding the west façade of Carlyle House from the street.
Union troops occupied the city of Alexandria in May of 1861 and billeted in Green’s hotel. In November, the Union Army evicted Green and his family from both the hotel and their home, Carlyle House. The Union converted the hotel into a hospital for Union soldiers, and used the mansion as quarters for doctors and high-ranking officers. One Alexandria citizen described Green’s situation in the following way: “one of the greatest sufferers by the present occupation of Alexandria by the Hessians is Mr. James Green...Just after the Battle of Bull Run they occupied his Hotel (the largest and finest in the City) and after abusing it most shamefully left the premises in such disorder, as to require great repairs and months of cleansing, and he had scarcely reopened it when they demanded its evacuation to which he was compelled to accede, and voluntarily offered him a large rent, but was told, upon the first months rent coming due, that his rent money was ready whenever he would take the oath of allegiance to the US. Of course, the rent remains unpaid.” (1862 diary of Henry Wittington, Alexandria).
Twentieth Century Restoration
After Carlyle’s death in 1780, the site went through many changes. Green’s hotel became a hospital during the Civil War and an apartment building in the early twentieth century. The mansion itself became a museum during World War I. By the mid-twentieth century, the Carlyle House and grounds were in a state of great disrepair. NOVA Parks acquired the house and apartments in 1970, thus beginning a six year project of research and restoration. NOVA Parks fully restored the house and opened it to the public in 1976 as part of the nationwide Bicentennial celebration. Operated according to the highest professional standards, Carlyle House is accredited by the American Alliance of Museums, a singular distinction. Carlyle House is also listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Daily tours of the house, programs for schoolchildren, special events, exhibits, and lectures explore the life and times of John Carlyle in pre-Revolutionary Alexandria.
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Here follows an article on the house from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:
Carlyle House is a historic mansion in Alexandria, Virginia, United States, built by Scottish merchant John Carlyle from 1751 to 1752 in the Georgian style.
It is situated in the city's Old Town at 121 North Fairfax Street between Cameron and King Street. To the west, the Gadsby's Tavern is found one block away and Christ Church is three blocks away. To the south, the Stabler-Leadbeater Apothecary Shop is located three blocks away. To the east, Torpedo Factory Art Center and the Alexandria Archaeology Museum are located two blocks away.
The house, which is architecturally unique as the only stone 18th-century Palladian Revival-style residence in Alexandria, was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1969 and was restored in 1976.
Construction
Carlyle began the construction of his house in 1751, using indentured and slave labor. Carlyle house has two sets of stairs: The main stairs (wider) are located in the center of the house, they communicate the first floor with the second floor. The servant stairs (narrow) are located in the right side of the house and connect from the ground floor with the first and second floors.
The house has two chimneys made of stone, they are the lungs of the house. The heat was obtained from the burning of charcoal and wood in the fireplaces; the heat ascended from the ground fireplaces to the fireplaces in the first and second floor, releasing the smoke to the exterior of the house and exchanging it with fresh air in the top of the chimney.
The doors were 6 foot 2 inches to keep in more heat during winter time when the door were open. The nails used to construct the house were handmade by a blacksmith.
The house had space for entertaining, private, family, and servant use. The house has 3 closets, two in the main chamber, possibly to keep dishes locked up, and were used by servants after asking the lady of the house the menu for the day and the correct dishes to use for serving. A third closet is located in the music room. John Carlyle also built several outbuildings for both household and business needs.
Carlyle or someone associated with the house's construction is believed to have sealed the body of a cat within the house's foundation for good luck, a custom that was prevalent in the British Isles and northern Europe.
Style
The home was built in stone in a mid-Georgian style, therefore has the following characteristics:
It is symmetrical and balanced with halls in the center of each story, while the left and right side are copies of the other one from top to bottom; The right and the left side has two windows, and two chimneys, one on each side of the house.
It has simple and bold details around the building and doors.
The front door has an arched shape with bold molding and a bold keystone.
It has quoins at the corner of the building.
The house has a hipped roof, specifically a bonnet roof, also called reversed gambrel.
Stories
The house is composed of a ground floor and two main floors. The halls are located in first and second floor, at the center of the house.
Ground floor
The kitchen, the servant stairs, and the cellars are located on the right side[ambiguous] of the ground floor or basement. The spinning room is located on the left side[ambiguous] of the ground floor. It has a back door that connects to the gardens.
First story
The first floor contains dates added the main or front door that separates the yard from the main hall, which is located in the center of the house. The main stairs are located at the back area of the hall, which also has a back door that communicates with the magnolia terrace, the back yard and the garden of the house. The left side of the floor is the more public side of the floor, in which the music room and the dining room are located. The right side of the floor (when seen from the front of the house) is the more private side of the house, in it is located the main chamber (John Carlyle's bedroom), and in front of it, John Carlyle's studio and the servants' stairs.
The visitors that came through the front door were received by a servant (Moses) at the main hall. During celebrations the hall was used as a dance hall, currently, it displays a copy of the Fry-Jefferson map, painted by Peter Jefferson (Thomas Jefferson's father) and Joshua Fry on its wall.
The music room is located beside the main entrance, in this room Sarah Carlyle Fairfax (Sally) practiced the spinet songs that she and her mother learned when they received music lessons at Mount Vernon (George Washington's house and plantation).
Plan of second floor and attic
The portrait of John's brother, George Carlyle, is located in this room. The color of the wallpaper is green. It has a fireplace.
The dining room is located next to the music room. It is preserved in its original form and looks as it would have appeared in the 1750s, as there were not many modifications in this area. The color of the wallpaper is blue, the details of the wood were handmade and the color of the walls and room were used to welcome and impress their guests. It also has a fireplace to warm up the room in winter. The portrait of William Carlyle (John Carlyle's father) is located in this room.
The main chamber was located on the right side of the house, beside the main door. It belonged at the time to John Carlyle and his wife Sarah Fairfax. The two windows in the bedroom faced the front of the street. It has a portrait of his mother, Rachel Murray Carlyle (painted when she was in her twenties), which was located in front of their bed and above the fireplace. A replica of Sarah Carlyle's wedding dress is exhibited in the room, a close-bodied gown with a petticoat (it used a mechanism to fold it when passing through narrow doors). The wooden floor in front of the fireplace of the bedroom has visible burn marks resulting from the explosions of the air trapped in the charcoal and wood resins: at the time the fire screen had not yet been invented. It is possible that the two lockers in the bedroom were used to lock up their cloth and or their dishes.
In front of the main chamber are John Carlyle's studio and the servant stairs that communicate with the ground and second floors.
John Carlyle's studio is located in front of his room. It contains his desk, a divan and a copy of the John Carlyle portrait that was sent to his brother. In the portrait his hand is painted inside his waistcoat, this represents a painting technique that started in 1750 called hand-in-waistcoat. The style was used to indicate leadership in a calm and firm manner, and at the same time, it was easier to paint. The room was also used as a dinner table for the family to spare the main dining room. The floor was made of silk and it had rhomboid patterns. At the time, ships arriving to the dock could be seen through the studio windows. The room also contains a fireplace.
Second story
John Carlyle's children's bedrooms were located on the second floor. The second-floor hall is located at the center of the house and above the main floor hall and is accessible to the first floor both through the main stairs and through the servant stairs.
In the hall many books are displayed, among them an 8th edition of The Gardeners Dictionary by Philip Miller (1768), the 16th edition of The Gardeners Kalendar, also by Philip Miller, aRivernd Volumes II and III of The Poets of Great Britain by John Bell that collect the works of Alexander Pope.
George William Carlyle's room was located on the left side of the floor.
Sarah Carlyle Fairfax and Anne Carlyle's room was located in front of their brother's. In this bedroom, there is a copy of Sarah Carlyle Fairfax's wedding dress on display. It is probable that Penelope (Penny) took care of Sally and Anne and slept with them during wintertime to share body heat, or slept in front of their bed or in the aisle between the bedrooms.
On the right side of the second floor is located a room showing the way the house was originally constructed, which also has a fireplace. In front of it are located the servant stairs and another room.
Front yard
At the time a regulation stipulated that no house would use a front yard to maximize the use of space. To solve the obstacle Carlyle bought 2 lots, lot 41 and lot 42, and it became the only house with a wide front yard in the area. At the time, Carlyle was a member of the board of trustees that regulated the use of the land in the city.
Back yard
In the 1700s the backyard was located in front of the river, but during the following decades the land was expanded filling the area with old boats and other materials, today is located in front of N. Lee Street and at two blocks of distance from the Potomac river.
History
George Washington, a native Virginian who studied mathematics, trigonometry, and land surveying in Lower Church, prepared two maps of what later became the city of Alexandria. The first map was the "Plat of the Land" drawn in 1748: it was a copy of a prior map.
When the lots for the new town of Alexandria were auctioned in July 1749, John Carlyle purchased the lots 41 and 42, situated between the Potomac River and the town's market square, ideal for his merchant business.
Congress of Alexandria
King George II sent Edward Braddock with two regiments of British regulars (2500 troops) to America to fight in the French and Indian War that started in 1754, they arrived on 20 February 1755 in Hampton, in the colony of Virginia. In April 1755 they came to Carlyle house, and it became the initial headquarters for Major-General Edward Braddock in the Colony of Virginia. On April 15, 1755, was held the Congress of Alexandria in which Braddock met with five colonial governors, Horatio Sharpe (Maryland's governor ), Robert Dinwiddie (Virginia's governor), James De Lancey (New York's governor), William Shirley (Massachusetts' governor), and Robert Hunter Morris (Pennsylvania's governor).
They convened in the dining room of the house and here Braddock first suggested the idea of levying additional new taxes on the colonists to help with the cost of the war, and also decided to make an expedition to Fort Duquesne during the French and Indian War. George Washington, who was appointed as major in the provincial militia in February 1753 by Robert Dinwiddie (Virginia's Royal Governor), urged Braddock not to undertake the expedition and became a volunteer aide-de-camp to Braddock. Nevertheless, Braddock decided to undertake the expedition, resulting in the death or injury of two-thirds of Braddock's troops and also in Braddock's own death.
Slavery
Carlyle was a slaveholder for much of his life, and derived much of his personal fortune from both slavery and the Atlantic slave trade. He utilised them as forced labour in both his household and his multiple business ventures. As with many other slave owners of the period, Carlyle held a paternalistic approach towards his slaves, and considered them primarily as parts of his assets. He was also "active in importing, buying, selling and owning slaves", which was a common activity at that time.
Many of Carlyle's slaves lived and worked in his properties; in the Carlyle House, in a foundry located on the same lot as the house and on his three slave plantations. When Carlyle died in 1780, there were nine slaves living at the Carlyle House: Moses, Nanny, Jerry, Joe, Cate, Sibreia, Cook, Charles and Penny. In the colonial era, as many as twenty-five slaves might have lived and worked within its walls and in the various outbuildings, and the jobs they could have done included being a blacksmith, chef, nanny or domestic worker. Slaves in Alexandria were able to learn new skills and jobs and live a community with free African Americans, this allowed them to run away from slavery and got freedom and live with their friends in nearby towns.
American Revolution
The ideological and political revolution in British America that started in 1765 originated with tax imposition by the British Parliament, a body in which American colonists had no direct representation, which was seen as a violation of their rights as Englishmen. This led to the signing of the United States Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776, during the American Revolutionary War that started on April 19, 1775, and ended on September 3, 1783.
John Carlyle died in 1780, during the time of the Revolutionary War. His son, George William Carlyle, inherited the house in 1780, but died in combat at the Battle of Eutaw Springs in South Carolina one year later.
John Carlyle Herbert inherited the Carlyle House in 1781. The house passed from the family's possession by 1827 when Sarah Carlyle died. John Carlyle Herbert sold it to pay off an uncle's gambling debt, while he had moved to Maryland in the first decade of the 19th century.
A wealthy Alexandria merchant, John Lloyd, owned extensive tracts of real estate both in and outside of town, and ended up acquiring possession of the Carlyle House. Not successful in selling the property, Lloyd offered the structure as a possible site for the new city and county courthouse to be constructed in Alexandria in 1838. This proposal was rejected and Lloyd continued to lease the premises to a number of renters until it was sold in 1848 to James Green, the owner of Green and Brother Furniture Factory, a noted Alexandria furniture manufacturer.
Civil War
By 1860 Carlyle House owner James Green completed many major renovations to the Carlyle House. He also created a hotel in front of the house known as the Mansion House Hotel, which was known as one of the best hotels on the East Coast. With the building of the hotel fronting Fairfax Street, the Carlyle House was no longer visible from the street.
At the onset of the Civil War, Union troops occupied the city of Alexandria, including the Mansion House Hotel, in November 1860 Green received notice to vacate in December since the Mansion Hotel was going to be confiscated. The troops converted it to a hospital for Union soldiers, after the Battle of Bull Run. It could treat more than 700 wound soldiers, and nurses were mostly female, but at the time there were not many female medical doctors in the country.
During the Civil War, this house and the city of Alexandria itself, that once used slave force, became one of the principal centers that supported the fight against slavery and hold a key role in the abolition of slavery in the United States in the 19th century.
World War I and World War II
During World War I the house became a museum, and was located two blocks from the U.S. Naval Torpedo Station in Alexandria. By the mid-twentieth century the building was in a state of great disrepair due to a lack of proper maintenance.
House owners
In 1749 half-acre (lots 41 and 42) were auctioned in Alexandria, Virginia, John Carlyle bought them and completed the house in 1753, he was the owner until 1780, when he was killed during American Revolution.
John Carlyle's son, George William Carlyle, became the owner of the house in 1780 after his father's death, but he died the following year in the Battle of Eutaw Springs during the American Revolutionary War.
In 1781 John Carlyle Herbert (John Carlyle's grandson) inherited Carlyle House in 1781, since his mother Sarah Carlyle Fairfax (John Carlyle's daughter) was a woman, and women were not allowed to own land in the United States at the time (until it was allowed by law in 1839). She died in 1827, and the house was sold to John Lloyd in 1827 by John Carlyle Herbert to pay off one of his uncle's gambling debt.
John Lloyd rented the area until it was sold in 1848 to James Green and part of the area became the Green Hotel for a decade until it was confiscated for a year by the Union and was converted into a Hospital during the Civil War in the United States, in 1965 it was returned to James Green, it became an apartment building in the early 20th century.
In 1865 the hotel was returned to the Green family. After Green's death in 1880, the hotel and the Carlyle House along with it, changed hands frequently and was acquired by new proprietors and renamed as Braddock House. It was not until 1906, when the buildings were bought by Earnest Wagar, that a major restoration of the house as a historic site was commenced.
NOVA Parks acquired the house and apartments in 1970 and fully restored the house in 1976 as part of United States Bicentennial celebration.
Carlyle House Historic Park
Carlyle House was renamed to Carlyle House Historic Park and is owned, protected, and operated by the NOVA Parks Agency of Northern Virginia.
The park was created by the demolition of two-thirds of the dilapidated Mansion House Hospital (1840, expanded 1855) that was located in front of the house, leaving behind the original Bank of Alexandria building (1807), still extant at 133 North Fairfax Street.
Carlyle House restoration
In 1969, the decision was made by the Northern Virginia Regional Park Authority to acquire and restore the property as a public national historic site. A survey of the site and existing buildings was initiated in October, 1970. On July 17, 1970, the Authority acquired the Carlyle Apartments for $305,000. The house itself was purchased for $193,000 in 1971 and the remaining portion of the land for $210,000 the following year. Significant restoration work to the house was undertaken in the early and mid 1970s.
The house was planned to be turn down and reconstruct, but a technique to support the building was chosen instead to preserve all the details. The cat's remains were discovered during restoration work in the 1970s and the remains were put back in their original place in the basement of the house.
The restoration of the house and gardens was then directed by Beth R. Sundquist, project director, under the supervision of the Authority's executive director, William M. Lightsey.
The project involved tearing down the apartments (also known as the Braddock Hotel), once again exposing Carlyle House to North Fairfax Street, and then turning the mansion itself into an 18th-century museum. This meant not only rehabilitating the structure as authentically as possible, but also tracking down and purchasing original fixtures and furniture, where possible, or acquiring equivalent examples from the period. About a dozen pieces believed to have been in the house during the Carlyle family's occupancy were recovered by the time the house was opened to the public on January 23, 1976.
The park, which opened in January 1976, includes the 18th-century Carlyle House mansion and its gardens, listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Events
The "Grandest Congress" is a reenactment celebrating General Braddock's time at the house that takes place on April 15 of every year at the Carlyle House.
"Yoga on the Magnolia Terrace" are Yoga Classes hold at the Magnolia Terrace every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at 6 P.M. starting in April and ending in October of each year.
In popular culture
James Phinney Munroe edited and published in 1904 the book Adventures of an Army Nurse in Two Wars based on the diaries and correspondence of Mary Phinney von Olnhausen. The first part of the book talks about the lives of the people that worked in the Mansion House Hospital in Alexandria during the Civil War. The second part about her work also as a nurse in 1870 in the Franco-Prussian War.
Mercy Street (TV series) was a fictional medical drama based in the book Adventures of an Army Nurse in Two Wars and produced by PBS in 2016 and 2017, it had 2 seasons with 6 episodes in each one.
Paper & Stone: The hidden history of John Carlyle, is a 30-minute DVD-Documentary about the life, history and recent discoveries of the John Carlyle family. It was produced in 2005 by Robert Cole Films & The Carlyle House Historic Park. The DVD has also a 10 minutes video called "Don't get weary" that talks and is about the life of the slaves that worked in the house and in the area.