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Monday, August 7, 2017

Patrick Henry's Scotchtown

Location: 16120 Chiswell Lane, Beaverdam, VA 23015

Phone:  (804) 227-3500
Website: https://preservationvirginia.org/visit/historic-properties/patrick-henrys-scotchtown

Hours: March 3, 2017 through December 2017
    Friday: 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
    Saturday: 10:00 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.
    Sunday: 12:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.

Ticket Price:
Preservation Virginia Members:Free 
General Admission:$10
AAA Members, Military and Senior Citizens (60+): $9
Students:$7
Children Under 6:Free

Visited: Friday, 3/3/17, 2:30 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.

Scotchtown was built around 1720 by Charles Chiswell. 




The Parson’s Cause trial (1763) made Patrick Henry famous.  He became known as a champion of the common man after that trial. He owned the Scotchtown property from 1771-1778. It is his only remaining original still-standing home.

In March of 1775, he traveled to St. John's Church in Richmond. It was there that he gave his famous and inspiring speech to the Virginia Convention that included the phrase, "Give me liberty or give me death!"




A Guide by Cell tour is available by calling 804-200-4636, then following the prompts on the signs throughout the property. A guided tour of the house is available during operating hours. 

Proceed to the home and enter, the gift shop / tickets are immediately to the right. Kids can pick up a Kids Quiz at the ticket desk. At the end of the tour, the quiz can be turned in to exchange for a prize.

You can also find a few interesting, historical, and funny items for sale in the gift shop.



Scotchtown offers Halloween and Christmas tours. The site has been used to film Turn and also segments for the History Channel.

The tour begins by going outside then entering the cellar from the outside. There is an interior staircase but it’s very narrow and dangerous. It's located just inside the front door.



The cellar is where Sarah Shelton Henry, his first wife, was kept for the last 2 years of her life.


The items in the home are not originals, except for one chair in the bedroom. Most of his items were auctioned after his death, then the home in which he passed away – Red Hill – burned.


He was a sensible man and lived modestly, but he had a large and beautiful home because of Sarah Shelton. However, she suffered from severe depression - some believe it was post partum depression after her last child. She had been his childhood sweetheart. Her health deteriorated to the point where she didn’t recognize her family and was a harm to herself and others, so they made a straightjacket dress for her.


Henry had a small number of slaves. He called them by their first names. A copy of a letter to Henry was on the table inquiring about how he could own slaves after talking about Liberty. His response was that it was an evil of the time.


People thought Sarah was possessed. Patrick Henry’s mother and Sarah’s oldest daughter took care of her. Sometimes now, people see a woman in white walking through the house with a candle. The local deputies have been called out in the middle of the night because the security system’s motion detectors sensed motion. People have sometimes heard chains on the brick floor.
She died in February, 1775. He said he could never stay another night there and he didn’t. He buried her but no one knows where. Superstitions of the time required him to have a secret burial so people did not disturb her grave. Only a couple of weeks after her death, on March 23, he gave his impassioned Give Me Liberty speech.
His family remained at Scotchtown but he did not. He remarried 2 years later to Dorthea Dandridge – Martha Washington’s cousin. He was later Governor of Virginia.
He was a great family man who spent time with his kids and played with them. He was a musician and also wrote poetry.



He didn’t want to be known except as a politician so he burned all his poems and music. He owned a peach satin suit. He had 17 children total between his two marriages. He was a self-taught lawyer and passed the bar without going to college. This is still possible in the Commonwealth of Virginia.

Thomas Jefferson didn’t like him and thought he was a country bumpkin. He resented the fact that Patrick Henry had a silver tongue and could make everyone like him, in spite of not having a fancy college education. Henry had George Washington’s ear and they were great friends.


Henry was proud of being a country bumpkin and didn’t powder his wig, which was unusual for that time. His wig was the color of his natural hair – reddish. The powder used for wigs was a taxable item, and anytime you could get away with not paying taxes to the King, you were supporting the revolution.
In 1799, Henry was given mercury for his stomach issues and he died.


On display, you'll find one of the few remaining colonial-era wigs. It's made out of horse hair and human hair.


Scotchtown also has books from Henry’s day but not ones that were owned by him.



At the conclusion of the house tour, a self-guided tour begins of a room dedicated to the idea of Liberty - not just in Henry's day, but how his legacy has inspired others throughout history.



The grounds can be toured on your own. The out buildings aren't original but have been set up to appear how they would have in Henry's day.


The kitchen building is used for special events and demonstrations.


A small herd of Hog Island sheep live on the property.



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