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Prince Street
Early-19th-century brick building used as the Bank of Potomac’s executive office and as a Virginia governor’s residence. NRHP-listed 2025.
- Extant
- National Register of Historic Places
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Nearby in time

Bruce Andersen from Washington, DC · via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 2.0 King Street
Fourth of the original DC southwestern boundary stones; the marker straddles the Alexandria-Arlington line. NRHP-listed 1991.

APK · via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 4.0 523 Queen Street
Two-story brick "spite house" 7 feet 6 inches wide, infilling the alley between 521 and 525 Queen Street. Built in 1830 by to block alley …

Market Square at sunrise, July 2017 — the city's eighteenth-century public square in its weekday-morning calm, framed by City Hall and the Fourth-of-July flags hung along the lamp posts. © KingSt.com, July 2017 301 King Street
Public square at 301 King Street fronting Alexandria City Hall — site of an open-air farmers market continuously operated since 1753, the …

Ken Lund from Reno, Nevada, USA · via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 2.0 3200 Mount Vernon Memorial Highway
Five-farm plantation on the Potomac owned by George Washington from 1761 until his death in 1799; home to Washington, his family, and more …
Nearby in space

Farragutful · via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 4.0 228 South Pitt Street
Federal-Greek Revival 1817 sanctuary, the second oldest Episcopal congregation in Alexandria after Christ Church. NRHP-listed 1985.

Farragutful · via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 4.0 310 South Royal Street
Founded in 1795 as the first Catholic parish in Virginia. Present Greek Revival church on South Royal Street completed 1827; congregation …
614 Wolfe Street 614 Wolfe Street
Two-story brick schoolhouse built 1786 on Wolfe Street. was a founding trustee and bequeathed funds for free education of poor children. …

Beyond My Ken · via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 4.0 134 North Royal Street
An 18th-century tavern complex at 134 North Royal Street that hosted George Washington's final Birthnight Ball in 1799 and served as a …
Now
No current occupant on file. Are you, or someone you know, the present occupant? Claim this place to add operating hours, a current photo, and a short note.
Prince Street
Named for The Prince of Wales (Frederick, then his son George, later King George III), c. 1749.
Interpretive signs nearby
The City of Alexandria has installed 6 historical interpretive signs within walking distance of this place. Each link below opens the sign's page on this site, with the full image and trail context.
500 King St
The Law Office of Cohen, Hirschkop & Hall
423 King St
326 King St
411 King St
Suffragists and a Courtroom Decision in Alexandria
200 block S. St. Asaph near Patrick St.
Market Square
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Every correction is logged dated to this page. Family history, old photographs, or a citation we missed — everything goes into the file.
