MD, USA
Annapolis
7 historic sites to visit.
Places
Historic Sites
Maryland Inn (Historic Tavern Site)
Tavern · 16 Church Circle, Annapolis, MD 21401
Site of colonial-era tavern activity at Church and Main Streets, the social hub of Revolutionary Annapolis where Continental Congress delegates dined and debated during the 1783–84 session. Mann's Tavern nearby hosted the 1786 Annapolis Convention.
Maryland State House
Government · 100 State Circle, Annapolis, MD 21401
The oldest state capitol in continuous legislative use in the United States, completed in 1779. Washington resigned his commission here on December 23, 1783, and the Continental Congress ratified the Treaty of Paris on January 14, 1784. The large wooden dome served as a Chesapeake Bay navigation landmark.
St. Anne's Church
Church · Church Circle, Annapolis, MD 21401
The oldest Episcopal parish in Annapolis, established 1692. The churchyard preserves burials of several Maryland founders; the parish anchored the colonial social life that surrounded the State House and its Revolutionary-era proceedings.
U.S. Naval Academy Museum
Museum · 118 Maryland Ave, Annapolis, MD 21402
Museum on the Naval Academy grounds preserving American naval history from the Revolutionary War forward, including ship models, navigational instruments, and Chesapeake Bay operational collections. The Academy sits on ground that was an Army fort during the Revolutionary era.