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Visite audioguidée à pied de Colonial Williamsburg

Aperçu
Ne vous contentez pas d'apprendre l'histoire américaine… vivez-la ! À Colonial Williamsburg, le passé colonial de l'Amérique prend vie à travers une architecture magnifiquement restaurée et des reconstitutions authentiques. Promenez-vous dans ces rues historiques pendant que cette visite vous explique tout ce que vous devez savoir sur Williamsburg, les débuts de l'Amérique, la vie coloniale, etc.

Williamsburg a une histoire longue et complexe qui précède de près la création des États-Unis 150 ans ! Creusez dans les origines de la ville, les luttes dramatiques qui se sont déroulées ici pendant la révolution et les gens qui ont mis Williamsburg sur la carte.

Aucune expiration - La visite est valable à vie !

C'est ce n'est pas un billet d'entrée.
Ville: Williamsburg
Sat 19 Oct
i
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Sat 19 Oct
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Ce qui est inclu
Offline use: No cell signal or wifi required. Offline GPS Map & route. Stop-to-stop direction.
Private tour in your/rental car: No group. Take breaks for photos/ snacks/hikes. Go at your own pace
Don’t miss a thing: Full itinerary, travel tips, professionally narrated hidden stories, video, text
Flexible schedule: Use any day, any time. Travel over multiple days or on next trip. Never expires.
Good value: Buy just one per car. Don’t pay for each person. Save money compared to a bus tour.
App on your phone: A link to download the Action Guide app. Password for your tours. Preview at home
Easy to use: Stories play automatically by GPS. Hands-free. Get HELP all day: Call, Chat or Email.
Information additionnelle
  • Des options de transport en commun sont disponibles à proximité
  • Convient à tous les niveaux de forme physique
  • Comment ça marche : une fois que vous avez réservé une visite, vous recevrez un SMS/e-mail avec des consignes. Téléchargez l'application (avec un bon wifi/signal) et utilisez votre mot de passe unique pour accéder à vos visites. Pour commencer la visite, rendez-vous au point de départ et lancez l'application. Le son démarre automatiquement. Respectez l'itinéraire et la limite de vitesse pour la meilleure expérience. Veuillez noter que personne ne vous rencontrera au point de départ.
  • Bon rapport qualité-prix : achetez une visite par personne. Si vous êtes un couple et préférez partager, achetez une visite et n'oubliez pas d'apporter des écouteurs que vous pouvez diviser.
  • Horaire flexible : une fois l'application/la visite sur votre téléphone, vous pouvez l'utiliser n'importe quel jour et à à toute heure. Vous pouvez l'utiliser sur plusieurs jours. Et utilisez-le également lors de votre prochain voyage ici. Cette visite n'expire jamais.
  • Aperçu de la visite : vous pouvez l'utiliser avant le voyage à la maison (fortement recommandé), l'utiliser pendant le voyage et l'utiliser après votre retour.
  • Ne manquez rien : vous obtiendrez tout avec l'application - un itinéraire complet, des conseils de voyage, des histoires audio racontées par des professionnels, un scénario, des images, des vidéos, des plongées profondes, des trésors cachés, des lieux passionnants, des recommandations pour des randonnées, des aventures, activités, randonnées et direction étape par étape.
  • Tour privé : vous pouvez l'utiliser dans votre voiture ou votre voiture de location. Pas de soucis pour les groupes ou les foules. Démarrez l'application de visite sur votre téléphone. Et il vous guidera pas à pas. Vous pouvez vous arrêter pour autant de pauses que vous le souhaitez. Faites une pause pour les photos Instagram et faites une pause pour le déjeuner/les collations. Faire une randonnée. La visite vous attendra et commencera lorsque vous recommencerez. Vous pouvez même faire le tour sur plusieurs jours. Allez à votre rythme.
  • Facile à utiliser : les histoires se jouent dès que le GPS est activé. Il ne nécessite aucune utilisation de vos mains. Vous pouvez obtenir de l'AIDE en appelant, en discutant ou en envoyant un e-mail à tout moment de la journée.
  • Hors ligne : il n'est pas nécessaire d'avoir un signal cellulaire ou une connexion Wi-Fi pendant la visite. La carte GPS de l'application fonctionne hors ligne.
  • Expiration/reprise : la visite durera le reste de votre vie sur votre téléphone. Il peut être utilisé n'importe quel jour de votre prochain voyage.
  • Utilisez des images pour un livre photo : créez un livre photo en utilisant des images d'application propres (pas de foule) de chaque endroit pour faire un voyage mémorable. Toutes les photos importantes et la séquence correcte sont prêtes dans l'application pour que vous puissiez les utiliser.
  • Médias sociaux : partagez des images propres (pas de foule) avec vos amis/famille.
  • Les appareils pris en charge incluent iPhones avec iOS 13 et versions ultérieures, téléphones Android avec version 9 et versions ultérieures et toutes les tablettes et iPads compatibles avec les téléphones portables.
  • Masques faciaux requis pour les voyageurs dans les espaces publics
À quoi s'attendre
1
Colonial Williamsburg Visitor Center
The tour of this beautifully preserved slice of Colonial America begins at the Visitor Center, where you can get your first taste of the nation's largest living museum.
2
Colonial Williamsburg Capitol Building
Keep your ears open at our next stop for the iconic fife and drum parade which marches through the town regularly. Here, you'll also learn about the military significance of these old-timey instruments
3
Bassett Hall
A simple two-story 18th-century white frame farmhouse nestled on 585 acres of lawn, garden, and woodlands, Bassett Hall once was the Williamsburg home of John D. Rockefeller Jr. and his wife Abby Aldrich Rockefeller .Philip Johnson, a member of the House of Burgesses from King and Queen County, Virginia, is believed to have built the 18th-century frame house sometime between 1753 and 1766. Purchased by Burwell Bassett around 1800 Union cavalryman George Armstrong Custer guest in home during the Civil War
4
Colonial Williamsburg Capitol Building
Built between 1701 and 1705, the first Williamsburg statehouse served the colony of Virginia until fire destroyed the building in 1747.The first floor of the west building was for the General Court and the colony's secretary, the first floor of the east for the House of Burgesses and its clerk. Arched windows marched across the facades. Stairs on one side led to the Council Chamber, a lobby, and the Council clerk's office stairs on the other side led to three committee rooms. A second-floor conference room connected the classically corniced structures, and a six-sided cupola on the ridge of the hipped and dormered roof crowned it all. Though the west wing was completed by July 1703, it took Cary until November 1705 to finish all the work.
5
Colonial Williamsburg Magazine
Then you'll come to the Colonial Williamsburg Magazine, the site of a tense standoff between American patriots and British soldiers trying to steal all the gunpowder from the town before it could fall into rebel hands
6
Governor's Palace
Then you'll see the extravagant Governor's Palace, and maybe start to get a sense of why the residents of Williamsburg didn't particularly care for their British royal governors!
7
George Wythe House
Up next is the house of George Wythe, a signer of the Declaration of Independence who stands out from most of his compatriots because of one simple fact: he was an abolitionist. In Virginia, a state which used a huge amount of slave labor, this didn't exactly make him a lot of friends!
8
Bruton Parish Episcopal Church
Continuing on, you'll arrive at the oldest building in Colonial Williamsburg: the Bruton Parish Episcopal Church. Here, you'll learn not just about the church's surprising history, but also about how it's the whole reason Colonial Williamsburg exists in the first place
9
The College of William and Mary
Your route takes you next onto the campus of William & Mary College, the oldest college in the United States
10
Colonial Williamsburg Visitor Center
The tour of this beautifully preserved slice of Colonial America begins at the Visitor Center, where you can get your first taste of the nation's largest living museum.
11
Colonial Williamsburg Capitol Building
Keep your ears open at our next stop for the iconic fife and drum parade which marches through the town regularly. Here, you'll also learn about the military significance of these old-timey instruments
12
Bassett Hall
A simple two-story 18th-century white frame farmhouse nestled on 585 acres of lawn, garden, and woodlands, Bassett Hall once was the Williamsburg home of John D. Rockefeller Jr. and his wife Abby Aldrich Rockefeller .Philip Johnson, a member of the House of Burgesses from King and Queen County, Virginia, is believed to have built the 18th-century frame house sometime between 1753 and 1766. Purchased by Burwell Bassett around 1800 Union cavalryman George Armstrong Custer guest in home during the Civil War
13
Colonial Williamsburg Capitol Building
Built between 1701 and 1705, the first Williamsburg statehouse served the colony of Virginia until fire destroyed the building in 1747.The first floor of the west building was for the General Court and the colony's secretary, the first floor of the east for the House of Burgesses and its clerk. Arched windows marched across the facades. Stairs on one side led to the Council Chamber, a lobby, and the Council clerk's office stairs on the other side led to three committee rooms. A second-floor conference room connected the classically corniced structures, and a six-sided cupola on the ridge of the hipped and dormered roof crowned it all. Though the west wing was completed by July 1703, it took Cary until November 1705 to finish all the work.
14
Colonial Williamsburg Magazine
Then you'll come to the Colonial Williamsburg Magazine, the site of a tense standoff between American patriots and British soldiers trying to steal all the gunpowder from the town before it could fall into rebel hands
15
Governor's Palace
Then you'll see the extravagant Governor's Palace, and maybe start to get a sense of why the residents of Williamsburg didn't particularly care for their British royal governors!
16
George Wythe House
Up next is the house of George Wythe, a signer of the Declaration of Independence who stands out from most of his compatriots because of one simple fact: he was an abolitionist. In Virginia, a state which used a huge amount of slave labor, this didn't exactly make him a lot of friends!
17
Bruton Parish Episcopal Church
Continuing on, you'll arrive at the oldest building in Colonial Williamsburg: the Bruton Parish Episcopal Church. Here, you'll learn not just about the church's surprising history, but also about how it's the whole reason Colonial Williamsburg exists in the first place
18
The College of William and Mary
Your route takes you next onto the campus of William & Mary College, the oldest college in the United States
19
Colonial Williamsburg Visitor Center
The tour of this beautifully preserved slice of Colonial America begins at the Visitor Center, where you can get your first taste of the nation's largest living museum.
20
Colonial Williamsburg Capitol Building
Keep your ears open at our next stop for the iconic fife and drum parade which marches through the town regularly. Here, you'll also learn about the military significance of these old-timey instruments
21
Bassett Hall
A simple two-story 18th-century white frame farmhouse nestled on 585 acres of lawn, garden, and woodlands, Bassett Hall once was the Williamsburg home of John D. Rockefeller Jr. and his wife Abby Aldrich Rockefeller .Philip Johnson, a member of the House of Burgesses from King and Queen County, Virginia, is believed to have built the 18th-century frame house sometime between 1753 and 1766. Purchased by Burwell Bassett around 1800 Union cavalryman George Armstrong Custer guest in home during the Civil War
22
Colonial Williamsburg Capitol Building
Built between 1701 and 1705, the first Williamsburg statehouse served the colony of Virginia until fire destroyed the building in 1747.The first floor of the west building was for the General Court and the colony's secretary, the first floor of the east for the House of Burgesses and its clerk. Arched windows marched across the facades. Stairs on one side led to the Council Chamber, a lobby, and the Council clerk's office stairs on the other side led to three committee rooms. A second-floor conference room connected the classically corniced structures, and a six-sided cupola on the ridge of the hipped and dormered roof crowned it all. Though the west wing was completed by July 1703, it took Cary until November 1705 to finish all the work.
23
Colonial Williamsburg Magazine
Then you'll come to the Colonial Williamsburg Magazine, the site of a tense standoff between American patriots and British soldiers trying to steal all the gunpowder from the town before it could fall into rebel hands
24
Governor's Palace
Then you'll see the extravagant Governor's Palace, and maybe start to get a sense of why the residents of Williamsburg didn't particularly care for their British royal governors!
25
George Wythe House
Up next is the house of George Wythe, a signer of the Declaration of Independence who stands out from most of his compatriots because of one simple fact: he was an abolitionist. In Virginia, a state which used a huge amount of slave labor, this didn't exactly make him a lot of friends!
26
Bruton Parish Episcopal Church
Continuing on, you'll arrive at the oldest building in Colonial Williamsburg: the Bruton Parish Episcopal Church. Here, you'll learn not just about the church's surprising history, but also about how it's the whole reason Colonial Williamsburg exists in the first place
27
The College of William and Mary
Your route takes you next onto the campus of William & Mary College, the oldest college in the United States
28
Colonial Williamsburg Visitor Center
The tour of this beautifully preserved slice of Colonial America begins at the Visitor Center, where you can get your first taste of the nation's largest living museum.
29
Colonial Williamsburg Capitol Building
Keep your ears open at our next stop for the iconic fife and drum parade which marches through the town regularly. Here, you'll also learn about the military significance of these old-timey instruments
30
Bassett Hall
A simple two-story 18th-century white frame farmhouse nestled on 585 acres of lawn, garden, and woodlands, Bassett Hall once was the Williamsburg home of John D. Rockefeller Jr. and his wife Abby Aldrich Rockefeller .Philip Johnson, a member of the House of Burgesses from King and Queen County, Virginia, is believed to have built the 18th-century frame house sometime between 1753 and 1766. Purchased by Burwell Bassett around 1800 Union cavalryman George Armstrong Custer guest in home during the Civil War
31
Colonial Williamsburg Capitol Building
Built between 1701 and 1705, the first Williamsburg statehouse served the colony of Virginia until fire destroyed the building in 1747.The first floor of the west building was for the General Court and the colony's secretary, the first floor of the east for the House of Burgesses and its clerk. Arched windows marched across the facades. Stairs on one side led to the Council Chamber, a lobby, and the Council clerk's office stairs on the other side led to three committee rooms. A second-floor conference room connected the classically corniced structures, and a six-sided cupola on the ridge of the hipped and dormered roof crowned it all. Though the west wing was completed by July 1703, it took Cary until November 1705 to finish all the work.
32
Colonial Williamsburg Magazine
Then you'll come to the Colonial Williamsburg Magazine, the site of a tense standoff between American patriots and British soldiers trying to steal all the gunpowder from the town before it could fall into rebel hands
33
Governor's Palace
Then you'll see the extravagant Governor's Palace, and maybe start to get a sense of why the residents of Williamsburg didn't particularly care for their British royal governors!
34
George Wythe House
Up next is the house of George Wythe, a signer of the Declaration of Independence who stands out from most of his compatriots because of one simple fact: he was an abolitionist. In Virginia, a state which used a huge amount of slave labor, this didn't exactly make him a lot of friends!
35
Bruton Parish Episcopal Church
Continuing on, you'll arrive at the oldest building in Colonial Williamsburg: the Bruton Parish Episcopal Church. Here, you'll learn not just about the church's surprising history, but also about how it's the whole reason Colonial Williamsburg exists in the first place
36
The College of William and Mary
Your route takes you next onto the campus of William & Mary College, the oldest college in the United States
37
Centre d'accueil colonial de Williamsburg
La visite de cette tranche magnifiquement préservée de l'Amérique coloniale commence au centre d'accueil, où vous pourrez découvrir pour la première fois le plus grand musée vivant du pays.
38
Capitole colonial de Williamsburg
Gardez vos oreilles ouvertes lors de notre prochain arrêt pour l'emblématique défilé de fifres et tambours qui défile régulièrement dans la ville. Ici, vous découvrirez également la signification militaire de ces instruments anciens
39
Salle Bassett
Une simple ferme à deux étages à ossature blanche du XVIIIe siècle nichée sur 585 acres de pelouse, de jardin et de bois, Bassett Hall était autrefois la maison de Williamsburg de John D. Rockefeller Jr. et de sa femme Abby Aldrich Rockefeller .Philip Johnson, membre de on pense que la maison des bourgeois du comté de King et Queen, en Virginie, a construit la maison à ossature du XVIIIe siècle entre 1753 et 1766. Acheté par Burwell Bassett vers 1800 Le cavalier de l'Union George Armstrong Custer invité à la maison pendant la guerre civile
40
Capitole colonial de Williamsburg
Construite entre 1701 et 1705, la première maison d'État de Williamsburg a servi la colonie de Virginie jusqu'à ce qu'un incendie détruise le bâtiment en 1747. Le premier étage du bâtiment ouest était pour le tribunal général et le secrétaire de la colonie, le premier étage de l'est pour la Chambre des Burgesses et son greffier. Des fenêtres cintrées défilaient sur les façades. Des escaliers d'un côté menaient à la salle du conseil, à un hall et au bureau du greffier du conseil des escaliers de l'autre côté menaient à trois salles de comité. Une salle de conférence au deuxième étage reliait les structures à corniches classiques, et une coupole à six pans sur la crête du toit en croupe et à lucarnes couronnait le tout. Bien que l'aile ouest ait été achevée en juillet 1703, il a fallu à Cary jusqu'en novembre 1705 pour terminer tous les travaux.
41
Magazine colonial de Williamsburg
Ensuite, vous arriverez au Colonial Williamsburg Magazine, le site d'une confrontation tendue entre des patriotes américains et des soldats britanniques essayant de voler toute la poudre à canon de la ville avant qu'elle ne tombe entre les mains des rebelles.
42
Palais du Gouverneur
Ensuite, vous verrez l'extravagant palais du gouverneur et commencerez peut-être à comprendre pourquoi les habitants de Williamsburg ne se souciaient pas particulièrement de leurs gouverneurs royaux britanniques !
43
Maison George Wythe
Vient ensuite la maison de George Wythe, signataire de la déclaration d'indépendance qui se démarque de la plupart de ses compatriotes par un simple fait : il était abolitionniste. En Virginie, un état qui utilisait énormément de main-d'œuvre esclave, cela ne lui faisait pas vraiment beaucoup d'amis !
44
Église épiscopale paroissiale de Bruton
En continuant, vous arriverez au plus ancien bâtiment de Colonial Williamsburg : l'église épiscopale paroissiale de Bruton. Ici, vous en apprendrez non seulement sur l'histoire surprenante de l'église, mais aussi sur la raison pour laquelle Colonial Williamsburg existe en premier lieu
45
Le Collège de William et Mary
Votre itinéraire vous emmène ensuite sur le campus du William & Mary College, le plus ancien collège des États-Unis.
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Photos de voyageurs
Commentaires (14)
Jag_G
Dec 2021
Good content about history of area and requires no input to start info at each stop since app monitors your progress through route. Can always repeat or pause or go to desired stop manually. Not easy to follow directions at beginning of tour from Visitors Center to Colonial Williamsburg because app doesn’t guide you to pedestrian walkway. Free shuttle driver stopped and told us how to get to Village. Along the way app and our path sync after awhile. Tour directions are also confusing around Lafayette St which is a busy road outside of Village with no sidewalks. Probably not safe with little children. If you wish to enter any of the sites purchase tickets to do so at Visitor Center before starting. Other than the two technical issues, we felt the audio walking tour was worth the money and we enjoyed ourselves.
Réponse de l'hôte
Dec 2021
Thanks for the great feedback! We’ve already been informed on the issues at the beginning (those updates will be live by tonight) and will work on clarifying the path around Layfayette (there’s a safe route but it could be more clear on the map). I’m so glad you enjoyed the tour outside of these points! We’re also adding more content over time to make the tour even more worthwhile! I hope you get the chance to try our other self-guided audio tours at ActionTourGuide.com.
813richied
Oct 2021
The actors were well informed and the sites were beautiful. Everything is obviously well maintained and there was more to see around every corner
Réponse de l'hôte
Oct 2021
So glad you enjoyed our self-guided tour through Colonial Williamsburg! It’s definitely an amazing place to visit — a literal town-turned-museum. If you enjoyed the tour, we have more self-guided experiences across the country at ActionTourGuide.com. Thanks again!

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