Digital recreation of Mulberry Row as it looked circa 1790 shaded by trees with log dwellings on the left and blurried forms to represent people moving down its path
Digital recreation of Mulberry Row as it looked circa 1790. Image by RenderSphere, LLC.

Mulberry Row—a 1,300-foot-long section of the road encircling the Monticello house—was the hub of the plantation. Over time, it included more than 20 workshops, dwellings, and storage buildings where enslaved people, indentured servants, and free black and white workmen lived and worked as weavers, spinners, blacksmiths, tinsmiths, nail-makers, carpenters, sawyers, charcoal-burners, stablemen, joiners, or domestic servants. Mulberry Row changed over time―structures were built, removed, and re-purposed―to accommodate Jefferson’s changing plans for Monticello.