Winter Holiday Celebration
Come enjoy the beautifully and sensitively decorated historic house featuring Victorian style holiday decorations.
Ticket Price: Free
Marietta House Museum tours are FREE, Tuesday through Friday, the whole month of December!
Parking Lot
Picnic Tables
Restrooms & Comfort Stations
Event Buildings & Areas
Come enjoy the beautifully and sensitively decorated historic house featuring Victorian style holiday decorations.
Ticket Price: Free
Dr. Taiye Ayoola-Adedeji is the author of the interactive bilingual (English and Yoruba) book The Yoruba Sound Book for Children. She will engage children and adults in fun cultural activities including music and play about the Yoruba people and culture using Yoruba words for colors, animals, foods,…
Ticket Price: Free
While the U.S. was occupied with the War of 1812, many enslaved Black Marylanders seized the opportunity to seek their freedom. Dr. Kelly will discuss his archival research to tell key stories spanning the U.S., Canada, the…
Ticket Price: $5; children must be accompanied by an adult
Director of the D.C. Summer School Kimberly Springer will share the Black history of D.C. public education.
Ticket Price: Free
Author, historian, and professor, Dr. Richard Bell, will discuss his book, The American Revolution and the Fate of the World which offers a fresh look at the impact of the American Revolution by focusing on disenfranchised people…
Ticket Price: Free
Built in 1816, Marietta is a late Federal style brick house and past tobacco plantation, the former home of Gabriel Duvall and generations of his family, and the enforced home of many enslaved men, women, and children. Gabriel Duvall (1752-1844) was a lawyer, Maryland legislator, U.S. Congressman, U.S. Comptroller, and U.S. Supreme Court Justice. The Duvall family enslaved anywhere from nine to 40 people at Marietta during any given year between 1783 and 1864. The Duvalls enslaved multiple generations of the Duckett, Butler, Jackson, and Brown families at Marietta.
As an attorney, Gabriel Duvall worked on behalf of over 120 enslaved men, women and children who sued in court for their freedom. In this way he established his reputation as a successful lawyer who won nearly 75% of those enslaved people’s petitions for freedom. The paradox begs to be questioned when we know that Duvall fought against the petition of freedom filed by Thomas and Sarah Butler, whose family Duvall enslaved at Marietta.
Marietta is a nationally recognized historic site which includes a cemetery, original root cellar, and Duvall law office, as well as 25-acres where visitors can walk the sites of the plantation outbuildings and slave dwellings. Guided tours of the historic house and site highlight the relationships among the enslaved people and their enslavers that were shaped in part by the nation’s founding documents and local slave codes. Hear the histories of families’ decisions to seek freedom through flight, the courts, and deeds. Since 2004, Marietta has been part of the National Underground Railroad Network to Freedom.
Our field trip programs provide students with a hands-on immersive experience designed to complement Maryland school curricula. Each field trip package includes a guided tour of the historic house, law office, and grounds, and interactive group activities. Pre-visit and post-visit lesson materials are available. All programs seek to elevate the stories and experienced of the enslaved community at Marietta and foster a sense of social justice and equity with the students in their present lives. Choose from either of our “Ready-to-Go” packages below, or create your own experience with our “Build-Your-Own” activities.
To make reservations please call 301-464-5291 or email MariettaHouse@pgparks.com. Please plan your field trip visits a minimum of two weeks in advance.
Fees
Bus Driver Instructions
When you enter the front gate at Marietta on Bell Station Rd, make the immediate left onto the gravel road. Complete a full turn around and park the bus with the passenger door facing the gate, and the bus facing the house. You can park on the gravel. When exiting, please be careful of the tight turn and use as much space as needed (you may back into the car parking lot if you need to create more space). Drivers are welcome to use the museum’s restroom. Please check in at the front desk.
To make reservations please call 301-464-5291 or email MariettaHouse@pgparks.com.
Our Nation’s Great Paradox
Grades 6 & up (90 Minutes)
Students will engage in an interactive guided tour learning about the free and enslaved people who lived and labored at Marietta, a tobacco plantation. The special focus of this field trip is on how the Bill of Rights and U.S. Constitution protected slavery and shaped the lived experiences of multiple enslaved generations. Students exam the Bill of Rights in a group activity to see how civil and human rights are outlined in the first amendment. This activity illustrates how the Bill of Rights affected enslaved people’s pursuits for freedom. After reviewing the preamble of the U.S. Constitution, students can think like a founder! Students will dissect the language of the preamble and discuss what it meant for enslaved people. Students get to use a feather pen and sealing wax to finalize their amendments to the U.S. Constitution!
Founding of the New Government (1776-1791)
Topic: United States Constitution
Topic: Ratification and the Bill of Rights
From Enslavement to Freedom: Duckett Family Found in Primary Sources
Grades 4 & up (90 Minutes)
Students engage in an interactive guided tour learning about the free and enslaved people who lived and labored at Marietta, a 19th-century tobacco plantation. The focus for this field trip is on how to use primary sources to discover the history of the people who lived and labored at Marietta and how they lived immediately after the U.S. Civil War. The Duckett family was enslaved at Marietta for over three generations, and they settled in D.C. and Alexandria, VA, after Emancipation. Students use authentic documents from census records, maps, tax records, wills, and court records to connect the Ducketts to life after the Civil War.
Topic: Using Primary Sources
Topic: Historical Thinking Skills
Build-Your-Own Field Trip
Students engage in an interactive guided tour learning about the free and enslaved people who lived and labored at Marietta. Choose one or more of these activities to complement the tour:
Slavery Shaped by Law (grades 8-12):
Freedom Routes (grades 6-12):
Pack-a-Sack (grades 3-10):
Scavenger Hunt (grades preK-5):
For Prince George’s County Schools, we offer the option of in-class visits by our museum educators. Adapted from our field trips to fit a classroom environment, these lessons are 45 minutes.
To make reservations please call 301-464-5291 or email MariettaHouse@pgparks.com.
Our Nation’s Great Paradox
Grades 6 & up (45 Minutes)
Students see how U.S. Supreme Court Justice Gabriel Duvall’s actions represent the paradox of liberty – enslaving some people at Marietta while helping other people gain their freedom in courts. Students interact with the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights to see how the U.S. government protected slavery.
From Enslavement to Freedom: Duckett Family Found in Primary Sources
Grades 4 & up (45 Minutes)
Students become detectives following the story of the formerly enslaved Duckett family using primary sources, including census records, newspaper clippings, and maps. Students use critical thinking skills to interpret the information and get a glimpse of the lives of the Duckett family after Emancipation.
Making My Own Way: Self Emancipation Grades 3 & up (45 Minutes)
Students explore the ways in which enslaved people at Marietta used self-emancipation to be free. They will collectively make decisions about what items a freedom seeker might bring on the Underground Railroad and trace freedom route from Marietta using maps and historical self-emancipation ads.
Grade: Middle and High School (6–12)
Topics: Civics, U.S. Constitution, Founding Government, Supreme Court
Duration: 30–45 minutes
Lesson Overview: Students will complete an unscramble activity on laws pertaining to slavery and a reading about freedom petitions connected to Marietta House Museum history in order to grasp the paradox of liberty espoused by the founding government.
Grade: Upper Elementary and Middle School (4–8)
Topics: Primary Sources, Genealogy
Duration: 30–50 minutes
Lesson Overview: Students will write a letter to a future historian and create a family tree to engage with their own family history and identify significance in one’s own life.
Lesson Plan Grades: Upper Elementary (3–5)
Topics: U.S. History, Enslavement, Freedom Seeking, Underground Railroad
Duration: 35 minutes
Lesson Overview: Students will engage with how freedom seekers prepared for their journey, including leaving one’s family and packing specific items, through a video clip from the movie Harriet and a worksheet activity.
Conference Room:
Conference Room and Patio:
*Capacity for the Conference Room is up to 50 persons for theater style and 36 person for table seating
1. Contact Stacey Hawkins, Program Coordinator to check availability of the date and time you desire for your event, 301-464-5291 or MariettaHouse@pgparks.com
2. Schedule an appointment with Stacey to preview the rental space at Marietta House Museum. Please contact us early to start planning.
3. Rentals in the Conference Room are up to six hours plus one hour for final clean-up on weekdays and up to four hours and one hour for final clean-up on Saturdays.
4. Make an official reservation by paying the required security deposit and rental deposit (50% of the relevant flat rate) and sign the use agreement.
5. Interested renters have up to ten days to hold their desired date by making a refundable security deposit. However, the hold will automatically be cancelled at the end of the ten days if the 50% rental deposit and agreement are not received and signed within the ten days.
6. The date and time of your event is confirmed upon the receipt of the deposits and signed agreement.
Marietta House Museum, located in Glenn Dale, Maryland, is the former home and tobacco plantation of Gabriel Duvall (1752-1844), a U.S. Supreme Court Justice and enslaver. The site highlights the relationships among the enslaved people and their enslavers that were shaped in part by the nation’s founding documents and local slave codes. To enhance interpretation, Marietta staff conducted extensive research on the individuals enslaved by generations of Duvall family members in Maryland. A custom Access database was developed which provides details of enslaved individuals’ names, ages, dates of birth and death (if known), enslavers (including local non-Duvall family members), occupations, family relationships, significant life events (self-emancipation, marriage, childbirth, tax assessments, enumerations, military service, etc.), and the sources used to compile this information. The digital (searchable) database is available at Marietta House Museum’s research library, the following document is a PDF copy of the information contained within the database to serve as a reference resource.
The Marietta House Museum sits on 25 acres of lawn and woodland. Our grounds boast two County Champion trees, an old Osage Orange, several fruit and nut trees, as well as a small number of the original boxwoods that flanked the main entrance in the early 20th century.
Download our tree map