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Duke Street
Townhouse associated with Dr. Albert Johnson, a 19th-century African-American physician in Alexandria. NRHP-listed 2004.
- Extant
- National Register of Historic Places
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Nearby in time

The 1807 Bank of Alexandria building at 133 N. Fairfax Street, Old Town Alexandria — the surviving Federal-style banking house after the late-1960s demolition of the Civil War-era hotel expansion. Photographed June 2014. Bank of Alexandria photographed by Ken Lund / Flickr, CC BY-SA 2.0 (2014) 133 North Fairfax Street
Federal-style 1807 banking house at the corner of North Fairfax and Cameron Streets — the surviving home of the Bank of Alexandria, …
609 Oronoco Street 609 Oronoco Street
Federal-style brick house at 609 Oronoco Street where Quaker educator ran a boys' classical school from 1824. received his pre–West Point …
Parker-Gray neighborhood Parker-Gray neighborhood
Historically African-American residential and commercial district north and west of Old Town, anchored by the Parker-Gray School. …

APK · via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 4.0 313 South Alfred Street
One of the oldest African-American Baptist congregations in the United States, founded in 1803; present sanctuary erected 1855. NRHP-listed …
Nearby in space
107 South Alfred Street 107 South Alfred Street
1855 Italianate firehouse at 107 South Alfred Street, home of the Friendship Fire Company — founded 1774, the oldest volunteer fire company …

APK · via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 4.0 313 South Alfred Street
One of the oldest African-American Baptist congregations in the United States, founded in 1803; present sanctuary erected 1855. NRHP-listed …
411 South Columbus Street 411 South Columbus Street
Late-19th-century Black fraternal lodge, part of Alexandria's African-American civic infrastructure during Jim Crow. NRHP-listed 2004.
Ser Amantio de Nicalao · via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 3.0 811 Prince Street
Italianate residence built 1854 by merchant John Bayne; later occupied by the Fowle family of shipbuilders. NRHP-listed 1986.
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.
Duke Street
Named for Royal duke (likely the Duke of Cumberland, son of George II), c. 1749.
Interpretive signs nearby
The City of Alexandria has installed 1 historical interpretive sign within walking distance of this place. Each link below opens the sign's page on this site, with the full image and trail context.
301 S Alfred St
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