- Raleigh Tavern
Raleigh Tavern in
Williamsburg, Virginia , gained some fame in the pre-Revolutionary War Colony of Virginia as a gathering place for the Burgesses after several Royal Governors officially dissolved theHouse of Burgesses , the elected legislative body, when their actions did not suit the Crown. Such dissension became more common between the end of theFrench and Indian War in1763 and the outbreak of theAmerican Revolution in1776 .In 1769, the Raleigh Tavern began its career as a center of sedition when the Burgesses, dissolved because of resolutions against the
British Revenue Act , convened in the Apollo Room as the 'late representatives of the people' and adopted the Non-Importation Agreement. This room was the frequent rendezvous of Jefferson, Henry, and other Revolutionary patriots. They met here in 1773 to develop intercolonial committees of correspondence. Dissolved by Dunmore, the Burgesses met again in the Apollo Room in May 1774. The tavern was an institution. Auctions as well as balls were held under the Raleigh's aegis. The Marquis de Lafayette was entertained at a banquet here in 1824, and the building remained in continual use as a tavern until it burned, at the hands of an arsonist, in 1859.In modern times, the reconstructed Raleigh Tavern, rebuilt in 1932, is one of the more modest but popular attractions of
Colonial Williamsburg , aliving history museum depicting life in Virginia's colonial capital city. The Raleigh Tavern, an L-shaped white weatherboard building with 18 dormer windows, has been completely reconstructed on its original foundation. It stands onDuke of Gloucester Street in contrast to the elaborate Capitol Building as testament that the work of democracy did not require fancy trappings to function. In the restored Apollo Room, "Hilaritas sapientiae et bonae vitae proles" (jollity is the offspring of wisdom and good living) is the motto over the mantel. [http://xroads.virginia.edu/~Hyper/VAGuide/williamsburg.html]
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