
The Collingwood Library and Museum
on Americanism (CLMA) occupies 8.75 acres of land on the banks of the Potomac
River, midway between old town Alexandria and Mount Vernon on what was once
part of George Washington's River Farm.
Collingwood is named for the British Admiral, Lord Cuthbert Collingwood,
the hero of the Battle of Trafalgar, who had a friendly relationship in the
early 1800's with Tobias Lear, inheritor of a life tenancy to the River Farm in
Washington's will. The original
building was a two-room, with attic, built by Washington for a Sam Johnson and
his family, who, in addition to duties as deputy overseer of the farm, was
responsible for operating the ferry across the Potomac at the site and also
collecting fees from ship captain's who stopped near the ferry dock to fill
their barrels with fresh water from a spring near the bank of the river. The original farm house has been added to
over the years and has had a series of owners. In the 1920's, it was the home
of Mark Reid Yates and his family who operated a dairy farm on 200 acres
extending from the river bank to Fort Hunt Road, 1/2 mile to the west. At that
time, the property was divided by a right-of-way for an interurban street car
line to Mt. Vernon.
Under President Herbert Hoover, the street car line
was converted into the Mount Vernon Parkway as part of the Bicentennial
Celebration of Washington's Birthday in 1932.
It was following the opening of the Parkway that the farmhouse was
converted into a restaurant and gained fame as one of the finer dining places
in the Washington area. The restaurant closed for business in 1974 and the
current foundation, which was chartered in October 1976, acquired the property
in April 1977.
Click for more information about Collingwood and CLMA. Click for driving instructions.