Provided By: Heritage Travel, Inc. - a subsidiary of the NATIONAL TRUST FOR HISTORIC PRESERVATION
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Tudor Place

Washington, District of Columbia

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Site Details

1644 31st Street NW
Washington, DC  20007
202-965-0400
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Tudor Place was built by Martha Washington's granddaughter, Martha Custis Peter, and her husband, Thomas Peter, son of a successful Scottish tobacco merchant.  In 1805, Thomas Peter purchased the land for a city lot in Georgetown Heights, with an $8,000 legacy from Martha Custis Peter's step-grandfather, George Washington.

The Peters asked Dr. William Thornton, architect of the U.S. Capitol, to design the stately neoclassical house, with its circular domed portico and expansive gardens.  Completed in 1816, Tudor Place remained under the ownership of six succeeding generations of the Peter family, until 1983.

The Peter family witnessed the birth and growth of the capital, playing active roles in government, business and society.  The family entertained the Marquis de Lafayette, Daniel Webster, Henry Clay, John C. Calhoun and others who shaped America's history.

The story of those who worked at the estate and served the family as slaves and free servants presents a fuller picture of life at Tudor Place.  Tudor Place presents a unique window into the lives of those who served and how their lives were shaped by major events, during the time of the forced immigration of slaves to the free immigration of English and Irish in the late 19th century.

Following the death of its last owner, Armistead Peter 3rd, the historic site opened to the public in 1988 under the stewardship of the Tudor Place Foundation.  Tudor Place brings to life the cultural and social history of more than 180 years of the Peter family.

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Tudor Place was built by Martha Washington's granddaughter, Martha Custis Peter, and her husband, Thomas Peter, son of a successful Scottish tobacco merchant.  In 1805, Thomas Peter purchased the land for a city lot in Georgetown Heights, with an $8,000 legacy from Martha Custis Peter's step-grandfather, George Washington.

The Peters asked Dr. William Thornton, architect of the U.S. Capitol, to design the stately neoclassical house, with its circular domed portico and expansive gardens.  Completed in 1816, Tudor Place remained under the ownership of six succeeding generations of the Peter family, until 1983.

The Peter family witnessed the birth and growth of the capital, playing active roles in government, business and society.  The family entertained the Marquis de Lafayette, Daniel Webster, Henry Clay, John C. Calhoun and others who shaped America's history.

The story of…

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