320
South Washington Street
Founded in 1863 by formerly enslaved Black congregants; one of the earliest independent Black Baptist churches in the South. NRHP-listed 2004.
- Extant
- National Register of Historic Places
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Nearby in time
1200 Duke Street 1200 Duke Street
Headquarters of T. J. Fannon & Sons at 1200 Duke Street, the Alexandria heating-fuel firm founded by Thomas J. Fannon as a wood-and-coal …

Ser Amantio di Nicolao · via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 3.0 2823 King Street
Garden cemetery established 1856 on the western edge of Alexandria; among its interments are several mayors and Confederate veterans. …
1100 Wilkes Street 1100 Wilkes Street
Cluster of twelve adjacent burial grounds stretching across the 1100 block of Wilkes Street, including Methodist Protestant, Presbyterian, …

photographer not credited · via Wikimedia Commons · Public domain 300 North West Street
Glass bottle and jar works that operated in west-end Alexandria from the 1890s until the Depression, employing hundreds of workers including …
Nearby in space
530 South St. Asaph Street 530 South St. Asaph Street
Continuously operating school site on South St. Asaph Street whose institutional lineage runs from the city's segregated Black schools of …

AgnosticPreachersKid at en.wikipedia · via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 3.0 Old and Historic Alexandria District, the colonial-through-antebellum core of the city, listed on the National Register in 1966.

Ser Amantio di Nicolao Che dicono a Signa? Lo dicono a Signa. · via Wikimedia Commons · Public domain South Washington Street and Prince Street
Confederate monument cast 1889 by Caspar Buberl, relocated from the intersection of Washington and Prince streets on June 2, 2020. …
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. …
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.
Commonwealth Avenue
Named for The Commonwealth of Virginia, c. 1894.
Interpretive signs nearby
The City of Alexandria has installed 3 historical interpretive signs within walking distance of this place. Each links to the actual sign image on alexandriava.gov.
320 S Washington St
Washington St and Wolfe St
301 S. St. Asaph St.
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