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Prince Street
Brick townhouse built ca. 1763 in the colonial heart of Alexandria. NRHP-listed 1991.
- Extant
- National Register of Historic Places
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Nearby in time

Doug Kerr from Albany, NY, United States · via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 2.0 321 South Fairfax Street
Brick Presbyterian meeting house begun in 1775; site of the city's memorial services for George Washington on December 29, 1799, four days …

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 …

Beyond My Ken · via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 4.0 118 North Washington Street
Alexandria's Georgian-style Episcopal parish church, consecrated in 1773; pew owners included George Washington and, decades later, the Lee …

Placeholder illustration of Ramsay House. Seed placeholder — KingSt.com, 2026. To be replaced with archival photograph. 221 King Street
Small frame house at King and Fairfax streets, traditionally held to be the oldest extant house in Alexandria; home of founding trustee …
Nearby in space

AgnosticPreachersKid at en.wikipedia · via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 3.0 201 Prince Street
Late-19th-century commercial building at the corner of Prince and Lee streets, an early local example of small-town bank architecture. …

The Burke & Herbert Bank building in Alexandria, Virginia, a city immediately south of Washington, D.C., and once a larger, more thriving river port than the nation's capital city · Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division · http://www.loc.gov/item/2020724810/ 100 South Fairfax Street
The 1903 neoclassical home of at the corner of King and South Fairfax streets, the bank's sixth and final headquarters after a half-century …

Placeholder illustration of Ramsay House. Seed placeholder — KingSt.com, 2026. To be replaced with archival photograph. 221 King Street
Small frame house at King and Fairfax streets, traditionally held to be the oldest extant house in Alexandria; home of founding trustee …

The original uploader was Ser Amantio di Nicolao at English Wikipedia . · via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY 3.0 105 South Fairfax Street
Apothecary operated 1792-1933 by the Stabler and Leadbeater families; designated a National Historic Landmark in 2021. NRHP-listed 1982.
Now
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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 5 historical interpretive signs within walking distance of this place. Each links to the actual sign image on alexandriava.gov.
Stabler-Leadbeater Apothecary Museum
218 King St
132 King St
207 King St
The Lynching of Benjamin Thomas
300 King St
221 King St
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