Marietta House Museum
5626 Bell Station Road
Glenn Dale, MD
Tel: (301) 464-5291
Email: mariettahouse@pgparks.com
Hours:
· Museum Hours : Tues - Fri from 11AM - 4PM
· Museum Tour Times : 11am, 1pm, 3pm
· Library Hours : Mon - Fri from 10AM - 4PM
· Business Hours : Mon - Fri from 9:30AM - 4:30PM
Amenities
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Parking Lot
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Picnic Tables
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Restrooms & Comfort Stations
Rentals
Event Buildings & Areas
Upcoming Programs
The 1856 Project: Underground Railroad Activity on the Washington Baltimore Turnpike
World Rainbow Project: DC Pride Archives
Unfinished Revolutions: A Poetry Workshop
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.