Washington, DC & Colonial Virginia

Length: 6 days  
 

Washington DC and Colonial Virginia Educational Tour | Ash Lawn
 
Map of Washington, DC & Colonial Virginia Educational Student Tour and Trip
 
Washington DC and Colonial Virginia Educational Tour | Capitol Building
 
  • Day 1 Hello Washington
    Meet your Tour Director & check into hotel
    Washington DC Evening Guided Sightseeing Tour 
    Lincoln MemorialVietnam Veterans MemorialKorean War MemorialNational MallTidal BasinMartin Luther King MemorialJefferson MemorialWashington MonumentWhite House
    Details: Washington DC Evening Guided Sightseeing Tour
    Night is the perfect time to see the capital, when white marble monuments and silvery pools glow in the floodlights. See the geometric memorials of the Mall—the imposing rectangular Lincoln Memorial, and the line of the Washington Monument bisecting the sky—as well as the innovative and moving monuments to the veterans of the Vietnam and Korean Wars
  • Day 2 Washington DC Landmarks
    Optional  Evening Ghost Tour   $20
    Details: Guided Tour of US Capitol
    Go on a guided tour of the building where the men and women who have been chosen to represent the citizens of the United States convene to discuss and decide on important legislature.
    Details: Guided tour of Supreme Court
    Follow your guide through the hallways where some of the most influential Americans have walked and see the courtrooms where some of the most defining decisions in American history have been made.
    Details: Embassy Row & Georgetown
    Drive down Massachusetts Avenue N.W, also known as Embassy Row, to see where diplomats from around the world live, work and represent their respective countries. Then head to Georgetown and learn the history of Herring Hill’s 200-year-old mansions and other houses of the movers and shakers during this two-mile tour. In the mood to shop? You’ll end up in Georgetown’s shopping and restaurant district.
    Details: Mount Vernon excursion
    George Washington so liked his estate at Mount Vernon that he placed the capital nearby so he didn’t have to move when elected president. Tour his gardens and mansion, where George and Martha lived from 1761 until his death in 1799. Don’t look for any cherry tree stumps in the garden, though -- Washington never actually chopped down the tree as a lad. (We hate to ruin the story, but we cannot tell a lie!)
    Details: Arlington National Cemetery & Marine Corps War Memorial (Iwo Jima)
    Created on the former estate of the family of Robert E. Lee’s wife Mary Anna Custis Lee (herself a descendent of Martha Washington), the Arlington National Cemetery contains the remains of more than 245,000 persons, mainly comprised of veterans and military casualties from every military incursion—from the American Revolution to the Iraq War. At the cemetery, make sure to visit the Tomb of Unknowns. Comprised of Yule marble quarried in Colorado, the tomb weighs more than 75 tons. And see the eternal flame that marks the grave of President John F. Kennedy.
  • Day 3 Washington DC
    Smithsonian Museums Visit 
    Options include the National Air and Space MuseumNational Museum of Natural HistoryNational Museum of American HistoryNational Portrait GalleryNational Museum of the American IndianSmithsonian American Art Museum
    Details: National Archives visit
    Visit the building that houses the most important documents in the history of the United States, including the Constitution, Bill of Rights and the Declaration of Independence.
    Details: Smithsonian Museums Visit
    Choose between visiting the Air & Space Museum, the Natural History Museum, the American History Museum, the National Portrait Gallery, the American Indian Museum or the American Art Museum. In a tomb in the Smithsonian Castle lie the remains of John Smithson, an Englishman who left his fortune to the U.S. government in 1829 for the establishment of a museum in his name. (The government was a bit at a loss, given that Smithson had never visited the U.S., had no connections to the U.S., and never told anyone why he was leaving his money to the U.S.) Since then, the Smithsonian Institution has grown into 16 museums, covering everything from art to zoology. See the giant squid and the insect zoo in the National Museum of Natural History, check out the Wright Brothers’ plane in the National Air and Space Museum, or venture with your Tour Director into the further reaches of this world-class institution.
    Details: Holocaust Museum visit (Subject to Availability)
    With more than 900 artifacts, 70 video monitors, and four theaters screening historic film footage and eyewitness testimonies, the Holocaust Museum provides a comprehensive -- and moving -- account of the Nazi persecution of Europe's Jewish communities and others during the 1930s and 40s. See newspapers and newsreels from the period, recreations of ghettos and concentration camp barracks, and a room filled shoes stolen from deported Jews that helps make real the sheer number of people killed during this tragedy.
    Details: Ford's Theatre visit
    Ford’s Theatre may not be the best place to visit if you’re in government—not only was Lincoln assassinated here in 1865, but 22 War Department clerks were also killed when the floor collapsed in 1893. Tour the infamous theater and see how John Wilkes Booth crept up behind the president’s private box, shot him point blank, and leapt down to the stage below (breaking his leg in the process).
  • Day 4 Washington DC--Williamsburg
    Travel to Williamsburg
    Williamsburg Guided Sightseeing Tour 
    Governor's PalaceThe MagazineTrade ShopsHopes PlantationHistoric Gardens
    Details: Williamsburg Guided Sightseeing Tour
    Life in colonial Williamsburg wasn’t all picturesque apothecary shops and hand-dipped candles. Pirates regularly raided the town; thirteen of Blackbeard’s pirates were tried in the courthouse of the impressive capitol building. (Legend claims that the skull of Blackbeard himself was lined with silver and turned into a mug for the nearby Raleigh Tavern.) Fires destroyed buildings on a regular basis, settlers suffering from headaches got prescriptions for rose petals rather than aspirin, and pesky Revolutionaries like Jefferson and Washington provoked the British into full-scale war. Get a look at these Williamsburg secrets and others with a licensed local guide.
  • Day 5 Williamsburg Landmarks
    Jamestown Settlement visit 
    Powhatan VillageJames Fort1607 Ship Replicas
    Details: Jamestown Settlement visit
    Start at the very beginning. Jamestown was the first permanent settlement in America (13 years before the Pilgrims at Plymouth Rock) and originally home to Pocahontas and the Powhatan Native Americans. Tour full-size replicas of the three ships that brought the settlers from England in 1607, watch a musket-firing demonstration, explore a Powhatan village, and learn how the colonists survived cold winters, lack of food, and enemy attacks to create the first capital of Virginia
  • Day 6 Williamsburg--Washington DC
    Travel to Washington DC
    Travel home
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