First thing you wouldve seen, most likely, would be enslaved people. There would be no place on this mountaintop that slavery was not visible. We want to restore that and make that known to visitors that come here today. So we are now in the middle of recreating and restoring dwellings along mulberry row. The plantation street as well as rooms attached to the house just behind that. All this is part of an effort to sort of shift the focus away from just jefferson and talk about the dozens of other people. We are near jeffersons made house main house. And we are standing next to mulberry row, which is the main plantation street of monticello. 1300 feet through documentary research. Over 20 workshops and dwellings line the streets. There were enslaved families here, indentured servants, hired white artisans. And several of these were supervised by jefferson and members of his white family. Mountaintop,t this but was a 5000 acre plantation. This plantation is enormous. The centered activi