News & Announcements » Local Students, Families Invited to Prince George Regional Heritage Center’s 'Give Me Liberty' Exhibition Highlighting Virginia History

Local Students, Families Invited to Prince George Regional Heritage Center’s 'Give Me Liberty' Exhibition Highlighting Virginia History

February 6, 2026
 
The Prince George County Regional Heritage Center is featuring a special exhibition for local students, staff, families, and history buffs as the Commonwealth celebrates its 250th anniversary.
 
“Give Me Liberty: Virginia & The Forging of a Nation” is now on display at the Center, located at 6406 Courthouse Road near the county government complex, through Friday, February 20, 2026. Created by the Virginia Museum of History and Culture and The American Revolution Museum, “Give Me Liberty” highlights Virginia’s role in the American Revolution, while also exploring “the continental and global forces as well as the actions of both iconic and ordinary people that brought about a model of democratic government that changed the world.”
 
The Heritage Center has added special weekend hours to share “Give Me Liberty” with the community!
  • Tuesday - Friday: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
  • Saturday - Sunday: 1 to 4 p.m.
  • Closed Monday
  • 6406 Courthouse Road
  • Prince George, VA  23875
  • Admission is FREE
Virginians featured in “Give Me Liberty” include George Washington, Patrick Henry, George Mason, Richard Henry Lee, and Prince George’s own Richard Bland, the namesake of the county’s local junior college. Beyond the historical facts and figures, stories of average Colonial Virginians are shared, posing the question to today’s visitors: “What would you have done,” at this pivotal time in our history.
 
On display, one of the nearly two dozen panels that feature in the "Give Me Liberty" exhibition.
 
The exhibition offers diverse perspectives from enslaved men and women, Native Americans, and white women - often not represented in the historical record.
 
The exhibition explores the impact and influence of this moment in history on modern society - "Our Living Revolution of Ideas.”
 
For more information, contact the Center at (804) 863-0212.
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