Skip to main content
You're logged in with MyAlex  |  Logout

City of Alexandria, VA

Search results cleared

Include archived pages
Most of the content here is written in English. Translate your search to find more content? Translating "" to English... Searching for English phrase ""
  • Live
  • Play
  • Services
  • Business
  • Government
  • Projects & Plans
  • Calendar
  • I want to…

Wayfinding: The Lyceum

The Greek Revival building, constructed in 1839, is now opened to the public as The Lyceum, Alexandria’s History Museum.
Page updated on December 29, 2021 at 1:26 PM

Historic Sites

  • Historic Alexandria (Home)
  • About Historic Alexandria
  • City Museums
    • Alexandria Archaeology Museum
    • Alexandria Black History Museum
    • Alexandria History Museum at The Lyceum
    • Fort Ward Museum & Historic Site
    • Freedom House Museum
    • Friendship Firehouse Museum
    • Gadsby's Tavern Museum
    • Stabler-Leadbeater Apothecary Museum
  • City Historic Sites
    • Alexandria African American Heritage Park
    • Alexandria Union Station
    • Contrabands and Freedmen Cemetery Memorial
    • Lloyd House
    • Murray-Dick-Fawcett House
    • The Fort: A Post-Civil War African American Community
  • African American History Division
  • Alexandria Oral History Center
  • Archives and Records Center
  • Commissions Supporting Historic Alexandria
  • More Historic Sites
    • African American Heritage Trail
    • Del Ray and the Town of Potomac
    • Historic Cemeteries
    • Union Hospitals during the Civil War
    • Wayfinding: Historic Signs
  • News Releases
  • Stay Connected
  • Support Historic Alexandria
    • Make a Gift
    • Become a Member
    • Join a Commission
    • Volunteer

Share

Bluesky Share on Facebook Share on X Share via Email
Translate icon
Translate icon
XWARNING: You have chosen to translate this page using an automated translation system. This translation has not been reviewed by the City of Alexandria and may contain errors.

The Lyceum

Wayfinding sign, Lyceum

201 S. Washington Street

One block south is The Alexandria Lyceum, formed as a public education organization in 1834 by Quaker schoolmaster Benjamin Hallowell and other civic leaders. In 1839, the founders joined with the Alexandria Library Company to construct a magnificent Greek Revival structure that the two institutions would share. On the first floor, the library offered reading materials to subscribers, and Lyceum displays contained collections of historical memorabilia and natural history. The second floor lecture hall welcomed community and national speakers such as Caleb Cushing, Daniel Webster, and John Quincy Adams.

During the American Civil War, federal forces seized The Lyceum for use as a hospital. Wounded soldiers underwent treatment and recovery in the former reading rooms and lecture hall, resting in folding hospital beds that lined the rooms in neat rows.

After the war, the building was remodeled into a private residence, and then in the 1940s, as an office building. Deteriorating and threatened with demolition, a local community effort convinced the City of Alexandria to preserve it in 1969. The Lyceum was renovated and re-opened in 1974 as the George Washington Bicentennial Center of Northern Virginia—the first visitors center for the national Bicentennial of the American Revolution. In 1985, it re-opened to the public as The Lyceum, Alexandria’s History Museum.

Read the sign.

Where to find this sign

In Old Town, mini kiosks are located at designated intersections along King Street, Cameron Street, and the Waterfront to provide an orientation for pedestrians. 

This wayfinding sign is located on King at the corner of S. Washington Street. (For those taking the King Street Trolley, please check the schedule as times may have changed.)

See all the wayfinding signs on and around King Street.

 

  • Historic Alexandria
  • Historic Sites
  • Lyceum
  • Museums
Contact Us
Alex311 | 703.746.4311
Follow Us
  • BlueSky
  • Facebook
  • X
  • YouTube
Visitor Information

VisitAlexandriaVA.com

  • Jobs
  • Payments
  • Departments
  • Newsroom
  • Social Media
  • Emergency Hotlines
  • Accessibility
  • FOIA Requests
  • Privacy & Legal

Alexandria City Hall
301 King Street
Alexandria, VA 22314

City of Alexandria Seal
© 1995–2023 City of Alexandria, VA and others.
Hold on, redirecting...