ROGER WILLIAMS NATIONAL MEMORIAL

ROGER WILLIAMS NATIONAL MEMORIAL

ROGER WILLIAMS NATIONAL MEMORIAL

📅23 November 2025, 13:15

Complete information about visiting Roger Williams National Memorial is now on National Park Planner!

Roger Williams National Memorial is located in downtown Providence, Rhode Island, the city founded by Roger Williams in 1636 in an attempt to create a settlement that was free from state-sponsored religion. At the time, most countries around the world had an official religion, as did every English colony in America up until Rhode Island was founded. Williams is credited with developing the idea of the separation of Church and State, a philosophy later incorporated by the Founding Fathers of the United States.

The Roger Williams National Memorial was created in 1965, though it took the government ten years to purchase the land for the park. Nothing remains of the original town of Providence, for most everything was burned down in 1676 during an Indian uprising, including Williams’s home. However, the land that was eventually purchased was part of Providence’s original common land, and Williams’s house once stood across and a short distance down the street from the Visitor Center. Because there is nothing of major historical importance remaining, the Memorial is one of the least involving of all National Parks, consisting only of a visitor center with a small exhibit area dedicated to Williams and a 4.5-acre inner-city park that is of interest mainly to local residents. The National Park Service holds concerts and plays in the park during the summer season. There is also a small picnic area on the property.

PARK AT A GLANCE

VISITOR CENTER

ROGER WILLIAMS MEMORIAL PARK

PICNIC AREA

PROSPECT TERRACE

ROGER WILLIAMS BIOGRAPHY AND DOCUMENTARY

DIRECTIONS AND CONTACT INFORMATION


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Last updated on November 23, 2025
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