Mulberry Row . Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello
Mulberry Row was the dynamic, industrial hub of Jefferson’s 5,000-acre agricultural enterprise. As the principal plantation street, it was the center of work and domestic life for dozens of people — free whites, free blacks, indentured servants, and enslaved people. It was populated by more than 20 dwellings, workshops, and storehouses between 1770 and the sale of Monticello in 1831.
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Interesting. I should go back to Monticello to see what’s changed.
ReplyDeleteRather quiet on this day.
ReplyDelete