Alexandria NewsCommunity News Alexandria VirginiaLOCAL NewsPublisher's Note

Why Visiting Mount Vernon Still Matters — Especially at Thanksgiving

A holiday visit to the Mount Vernon Inn reminded me that facing our difficult history honors the people who lived it — including here in Alexandria.

Mt Vernon in Alexandria VA
Mt Vernon in Alexandria VA Photo: Mary Wadland

ALEXANDRIA, VA – Every so often, and it happened again yesterday in a text, someone tells me they won’t visit Mount Vernon because “it was a slave plantation.” I understand that instinct. Living in a city as old as Alexandria, where every street corner seems to hold both beauty and pain, we are constantly wrestling with the truth of our past.

Just a couple of nights ago, I had Thanksgiving dinner with friends at the Mount Vernon Inn, where the candlelight, the warmth, and the centuries-old traditions felt meaningful. It brought to mind the little-known fact that George Washington himself helped shape early national observances of Thanksgiving. His 1789 proclamation urged the young nation to pause, give thanks, and reflect — even as enslaved men, women, and children lived and labored on the estate that made such celebrations possible. That contradiction is not something to turn away from. It’s something to face.

Because the truth is, Mount Vernon was a slave plantation. More than 300 human beings were enslaved there. Their names, their stories, their families, their suffering — all of it matters.

But avoiding Mount Vernon doesn’t erase that history. It erases the opportunity to learn it.

And if any community understands the need to face its past honestly, it is Alexandria.

Aerial photo of the Old Town Farmers Market
Old Town Farmer’s Market. Photo: Visit Alexandria

Only a few miles from Mount Vernon, our own Market Square — now home to more than 70 colorful, joyful vendors every Saturday — once served as a slave market. Ships came in just two blocks away at what is now our beautiful, green Waterfront Park. Enslaved people were sold on or near this very ground, steps from where visitors now buy pastries, coffee, flowers, and fresh produce. Thousands enjoy the Old Town Farmers’ Market every year, often unaware of the painful history beneath their feet.

Yet the square’s modern purpose — community, connection, locally grown food, small-business joy — stands in powerful contrast to what happened there centuries ago. It reminds us that places can hold both trauma and transformation. They can be reclaimed, reinterpreted, and retold truthfully.

Mount Vernon is doing the same work.

Over the past two decades, the estate has invested deeply in uncovering and presenting the lives of the enslaved people who lived there. The Slave Memorial and Cemetery, reconstructed quarters, archaeological discoveries, documented family histories, and ongoing research all help restore dignity to individuals whose lives were once overshadowed by the mansion’s grandeur.

Choosing not to visit means missing their stories.

Freedom House Exterior Restoration f
Alexandria Mayor Alyia Gaskins (center) with city officials at the Freedom House Exterior Restoration Ribbon Cutting  Photo: Lisa Helene Lawson

Here in Alexandria, we know how essential those stories are. We see it at the newly restored Freedom House Museum — once the headquarters of the largest domestic slave-trading operation in the United States — where the city has committed to telling the truth thoroughly and compassionately. We see it at Fort Ward, in the markers across Old Town, and in the Contrabands & Freedmen Cemetery, where those who escaped bondage found their first moments of freedom.

We do not look away.

Mary Wadland and Phil Wadland at Mount Vernon
Mary and Phil Wadland at George Washington’s Mount Vernon. Photo: The Zebra Press

And we shouldn’t look away from Mount Vernon either. Visiting is not a celebration of the plantation. It is an act of witnessing. Of acknowledging complexity. Of honoring lives too often reduced to footnotes. Of recognizing that George Washington’s brilliance and his failures coexisted — and that our understanding of him, and of our country, must hold both truths at once.

Thanksgiving itself sits at that intersection — ideals and contradictions side by side.

Mary and Robinsons at Mount Vernon
Mary Wadland with Phyllis and Ava Robinson at the Mount Vernon Inn for Thanksgiving 2025. Photo: Mary Wadland

So if you’ve hesitated to go to Mount Vernon because of its history with slavery, I understand. But I hope you’ll reconsider. Not to enjoy the mansion tour or the gardens — though they are beautiful — but to honor the people whose names now stand at the Slave Memorial. To learn their stories. To look their history in the eye, the way we do here in Alexandria every day.

History is rarely comfortable. But avoiding the places where painful truths live does not make us better. Facing them does.

If you go, go not as a tourist, but as a witness. And you may come away with a deeper understanding of our shared American story — one that still shapes us, challenges us, and calls us to do better.

MORE ON ALEXANDRIA’S AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY

Mary Wadland

Mary Wadland is the Publisher and Editor in Chief of The Zebra Press, the award-winning Alexandria news publication she founded in 2010 with a mission of celebrating community, culture, and all the good news happening across the city. A longtime community advocate and storyteller, Mary was selected for the Alexandria Chamber of Commerce inaugural 40 Under 40 class and has served as President of Living Legends of Alexandria since 2022. Known for her deep local roots, sharp editorial instincts, and passion for connecting people through journalism, she has spent decades chronicling the personalities, businesses, events, and civic life that make Alexandria unique. Originally from Delray Beach, Florida, Mary is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Hollins College in Roanoke, Virginia, and has been part of Alexandria’s publishing and media community since 1987.

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Todd
Todd
6 months ago

George Washington has done more for this country than anyone, however, I will never go back to Mount Vernon due to their agenda of diminishing Washington’s accomplishments in favor of perpetuating their slavery agenda. Shameful!

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