Wilton House Museum is a museum in a historic house located in Richmond, Virginia. Wilton was constructed c. 1753 by William Randolph III, son of William Randolph II, of Turkey Island. Wilton was originally the manor house on a 2,000-acre tobacco plantation known as "World's End" located on the north bank of the James River several miles east of the city of Richmond. Between 1747 and 1759, William III acquired more than a dozen contiguous tracts of land. About 1753, Randolph completed building a Georgian manor house, which he named "Wilton," on a site overlooking the river.
In 1934, with commercial development encroaching on the opposite bank of the James and the property in danger of foreclosure, The National Society of The Colonial Dames of America in the Commonwealth of Virginia saved the mansion from destruction by purchasing, dismantling, moving, and rebuilding it on a site overlooking the James River a few miles west of its original location.
Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilton_House_Museum
Official website http://www.wiltonhousemuseum.org/
Email efleming@wiltonhousemuseum.org
Phone +1 804 282 5936
Address 215 S. Wilton Rd, Richmond, VA 23226, USA
Coordinates 37°33'45.086" N -77°31'10.614" E