First White House of the Confederacy – Montgomery, AL
While visiting Montgomery, Alabama, we visited the First White House of the Confederacy.

What made the house striking to us was how early it entered the story of the Civil War. The Davis family moved into this Montgomery residence in February 1861, when the Confederate States of America had only just been formed. That same month, delegates from the seceding Southern states gathered in the city to organize their new government. Jefferson Davis was inaugurated as president on February 18, all before a single shot had been fired.
Open warfare would not begin until April 12, 1861, when Confederate forces bombarded Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor. This First White House of the Confederacy was already functioning as an executive home and political center nearly three months before the war officially started. These rooms witnessed strategy meetings as well as the domestic life of a family preparing for a conflict whose scale is not yet fully understood.
Once the fighting began and Virginia seceded, the Confederate capital was moved to Richmond in May 1861. The Davis family moved, leaving Montgomery and relocated to what became known as the Second White House of the Confederacy in Richmond. Their stay in this Albam house had been brief, but it marked the opening chapter of a government stepping into a war that would soon engulf the nation.
Read More From Nancy
Arrowhead
I’ve visited Arrowhead a couple of times over the years, and each visit leaves me with a deep appreciation of the home and the life that lived within its rooms. Nestled among the hills of Pittsfield, MA, this farmhouse holds an important chapter in American literary history. It was here, from 1850 to 1863, that Herman […]
John Brown House – Providence Rhode Island
Perched on College Hill in Providence, Rhode Island, the John Brown House stands as one of the finest surviving examples of 18th-century American architecture. It also is a powerful reminder of wealth, ambition and the moral complexity of early American life. John Brown was one of Providence’s most prominent citizens in the late 1700s. Brown […]
Lilian Ngoyi – Soweto, South Africa
On our teaching trip to South Africa, we took a tour of Soweto and stopped outside a modest home that holds extraordinary history: the house of Lilian Masediba Matabane Ngoyi. Lilian Ngoyi was one of the most prominent women in the anti-apartheid movement. A trade unionist and political leader, she became the first woman elected to […]