Virginia Vacation Guide System
Virginia History
The history of Virginia began with settlement of the geographic
region now known as the Commonwealth of Virginia in the United States
thousands of years ago by Native Americans. Permanent European
settlement began with the establishment of Jamestown in 1607, by
English colonists. As tobacco emerged as a profitable export, Virginia
imported more African laborers to cultivate it. Gradually the colony
hardened the boundaries of slavery, raising insurmountable barriers
between the black slaves and the white population. The Virginia Colony
became the wealthiest and most populated British colony in North
America. Although elections were democratic, the colony was dominated
by elite planters, who also controlled the local Anglican Church.
Common planters, yeomen farmers and artisans in the 18th century tended
to join the Baptist and Methodist churches after the Great Awakening, a
trend that deepened in the 19th century and led to more democracy and
social equality. A quarter of the population comprised slaves, most of
whom worked the tobacco plantations.
Virginia leaders (together
with those of Massachusetts) had a major role in the road to winning
independence, with Thomas Jefferson's writing the Declaration of
Independence and George Washington's commanding the American army.
Washington captured the main British army at Yorktown, Virginia in 1781
to win the American Revolutionary War. The state produced more national
leaders than any other, including four of the first five presidents:
Washington, Jefferson, James Madison, and James Monroe. After the
Revolution and with the weakening of the tobacco economy, some planters
manumitted slaves, bringing the number of free blacks in the state from
a few thousand before the Revolution up to 13,000 in 1790 and 20,000 in
1800.
In 1861, Virginia was a slave state but refused to join
the cotton states in the new Confederacy until Lincoln called for
troops to confront the seceding states. Then it seceded and Richmond
became the new Confederate capital. Because the Confederacy needed to
defend Richmond in order to maintain its legitimacy as an independent
nation, Virginia became the main target of Union attacks and thus the
major theater of the American Civil War. Unionists in western Virginia
resisted secession in 1861, declared the state offices vacant, and
elected new state officers. They were recognized by Washington as the
Restored government of Virginia. In 1863 West Virginia became a
separate state. Richmond fell in April 1865, effectively ending the
Civil War. The slaves were free, and were aided by the new Freedman's
Bureau and civil rights laws passed by Congress.
With thousands
of small skirmishes and many large campaigns fought on its soil,
Virginia's economy was devastated. The lucrative slave trade was ended.
Dependence on tobacco farming kept the economy weak. The growth of the
cigarette industry late in the century was the first sign of
industrialization. After Reconstruction, the state government segregate
public facilities, made blacks second class citizens through Jim Crow
rules, and approved a constitution that effectively disfranchised
blacks by 1900.
The state was dominated by the "Byrd machine" of
conservative rural Democrats from the 1920s to the 1960s. The long
struggle by African Americans to regain equal rights through education,
litigation and nonviolent activism, lasted deep into the 1960s. The US
Congress passed federal civil rights legislation in 1964 and 1965
establishing equality under the law, ending public segregation and
protecting citizens' voting rights.
After World War II, the
state's economy began to thrive, with a new industrial and urban base.
In recent decades, the agricultural base has lost its preeminence. The
contemporary economy includes many new professional and high-tech
industries, consultants and defense-related businesses employing highly
educated people, especially in Northern Virginia, in association with
the government. This change in demographic has disrupted the
traditional conservative rural base, making for closely divided but
still generally conservative state politics.
"The Generall Historie
of Virginia, New-England, and the Summer Isles", 1624, by Capt. John
Smith, one of the first histories of Virginia.
Native Americans
Virginia
Indian chief in engraving after John White watercolor. Sparsely wooded
hunting ground in background suggests the region's savanna.
The
portion of the New World designated Virginia had been inhabited for
thousands of years by varying cultures of indigenous peoples.
Archaeological and historical research by anthropologist Helen Rountree
and others established 3,000 years of settlement in much of the
Tidewater. Recent archaeological work at Pocahontas Island has revealed
prehistoric habitation dating to about 6500 BCE.
At the end of
the 16th century, Native Americans living in what is now Virginia were
part of three major groups, based chiefly on language families. The
largest group, known as the Algonquian, numbered over 10,000 and
occupied most of the coastal area up to the fall line. Groups to the
interior were the Iroquoian (numbering 2,500) and the Siouan. Tribes
included the Algonquian Chesepian, Chickahominy, Doeg, Mattaponi,
Nansemond, Pamunkey, Pohick, Powhatan, and Rappahannock; the Iroquoian
Cherokee, Meherrin, Nottoway, and Tuscarora; and the Siouan Monacan and
Saponi.
When the first English settlers arrived at Jamestown in
1607, Algonquian tribes controlled most of Virginia east of the fall
line. Nearly all were united in what has been historically called the
Powhatan Confederacy. Researcher Rountree has noted that empire more
accurately describes their political structure. In the late 16th and
early 17th centuries, a Chief named Wahunsunacock created this powerful
empire by conquering or affiliating with approximately 30 tribes whose
territories covered much of eastern Virginia. Known as the Powhatan, or
paramount chief, he called this area Tenakomakah ("densely inhabited
Land"). The empire was advantageous to some tribes, who were
periodically threatened by other Native Americans, such as the Monacan.
The
Native Americans had a different culture than the English. Despite some
successful interaction, issues of ownership and control of land and
other resources, and trust between the peoples, became areas of
conflict. Virginia has drought conditions an average of every three
years. The colonists did not understand that the natives were
ill-prepared to feed them during hard times. In the years after 1612,
the colonists cleared land to farm export tobacco, their crucial cash
crop. As tobacco exhausted the soil, the settlers continually needed to
clear more land for replacement. This reduced the wooded land which
Native Americans depended on for hunting to supplement their food
crops. As more colonists arrived, they wanted more land.
The
tribes tried to fight the encroachment by the colonists. Major
conflicts took place in the Indian massacre of 1622 and the war of
1644, both under the leadership of the late Chief Powhatan's younger
brother, Chief Opechancanough. By the mid-17th century, the Powhatan
and allied tribes were in serious decline in population, due in large
part to epidemics of newly introduced infectious diseases, such as
smallpox and measles, to which they had no natural immunity. The
European colonists had expanded territory so that they controlled
virtually all the land east of the fall line on the James River. Fifty
years earlier, this territory had been the empire of the mighty
Powhatan Confederacy.
Surviving members of many tribes
assimilated into the general population of the colony. Some retained
small communities with more traditional identity and heritage. In the
21st century, the Pamunkey and Mattaponi are the only two tribes to
maintain reservations originally assigned under the English. As of
2010, the state has recognized eleven Virginia Indian tribes. Others
have renewed interest in seeking state and Federal recognition since
the celebration of the 400th anniversary of Jamestown in 2007. State
celebrations gave Native American tribes prominent formal roles to
showcase their contributions to the state.
Early European exploration
After
their discovery of the New World in the 15th century, European states
began trying to establish New World colonies. England, the Dutch
Republic, France, Portugal, and Spain were the most active.
A
Spanish exploration party had come to the lower Chesapeake Bay region
of Virginia about 1560. In 1570, the Jesuits planned the Ajacan Mission
on the lower peninsula. However, in 1571 it was destroyed by Indians,
and the Spanish ended their efforts in Virginia.
In 1584 Sir
Walter Raleigh sent Philip Amadas and Arthur Barlowe to explore what is
now the North Carolina coast, and they returned with word of a regional
"king" named Wingina, who ruled a land supposedly called Wingandacoa.
The latter word was modified later that year by the Queen to
"Virginia", perhaps in part noting her status as the "Virgin Queen." On
the next voyage, Raleigh was to learn that, while the chief of the
Secotans was indeed called Wingina, the expression wingandacoa heard by
the English upon arrival actually meant "What good clothes you wear!"
in Carolina Algonquian, and was not the name of the country as
previously misunderstood.
Virginia is the oldest surviving
English place-name in the U.S. not wholly borrowed from a Native
American word, and the fourth oldest surviving English place name,
though it is Latin in form.
Roanoke Island
The Roanoke Colony
was the first English colony in the New World. It was founded at
Roanoke Island in what was then Virginia, and is now part of Dare
County in the state of North Carolina. Between 1584 and 1587, there
were two major groups of settlers sponsored by Sir Walter Raleigh who
attempted to establish a permanent settlement at Roanoke Island, and
each failed. The final group disappeared completely after supplies from
England were delayed three years by a war with Spain. Because they
disappeared, they were called "The Lost Colony."
Virginia Company of London
After
the death of Queen Elizabeth I, in 1603 King James I assumed the throne
of England. After years of war, England was strapped for funds, so he
granted responsibility for England's New World colonization to the
Virginia Company, which became incorporated as a joint stock company by
a proprietary charter drawn up in 1606. There were two competing
branches of the Virginia Company and each hoped to establish a colony
in Virginia in order to exploit gold (which the region did not actually
have), to establish a base of support for English privateering against
Spanish ships, and to spread Protestantism to the New World in
competition with Spain's spread of Catholicism. Within the Virginia
Company, the Plymouth Company branch was assigned a northern portion of
the area known as Virginia, and the London Company area to the south.
History of the Jamestown Settlement (1607–1699)
First landing
In
December, 1606, the London Company dispatched a group of 104 colonists
in three ships: the Susan Constant, Godspeed, and Discovery, under the
command of Captain Christopher Newport. After a long, rough voyage of
144 days, the colonists finally arrived in Virginia on April 26, 1607
at the entrance to the Chesapeake Bay. At Cape Henry, they went ashore,
erected a cross, and did a small amount of exploring, an event which
came to be called the "First Landing."
Under orders from London
to seek a more inland location safe from Spanish raids, they explored
the Hampton Roads area and sailed up the newly christened James River
to the fall line at what would later became the cities of Richmond and
Manchester.
Settlement
After weeks of exploration, the
colonists selected a location and founded Jamestown on May 14, 1607. It
was named in honor of King James I (as was the river). However, while
the location at Jamestown Island was favorable for defense against
foreign ships, the low and marshy terrain was harsh and inhospitable
for a settlement. It lacked drinking water, access to game for hunting,
or much space for farming. While it seemed favorable that it was not
inhabited by the Native Americans, within a short time, the colonists
were attacked by members of the local Paspahegh tribe.
The
colonists arrived ill-prepared to become self-sufficient. They had
planned on trading with the Native Americans for food, were dependent
upon periodic supplies from England, and had planned to spend some of
their time seeking gold. Leaving the Discovery behind for their use,
Captain Newport returned to England with the Susan Constant and the
Godspeed, and came back twice during 1608 with the First Supply and
Second Supply missions. Trading and relations with the Native Americans
was tenuous at best, and many of the colonists died from disease,
starvation, and conflicts with the Natives. After several failed
leaders, Captain John Smith took charge of the settlement, and many
credit him with sustaining the colony during its first years, as he had
some success in trading for food and leading the discouraged colonists.
After
Smith's return to England in August 1609, there was a long delay in the
scheduled arrival of supplies. During the winter of 1609-10 and
continuing into the spring and early summer, no more ships arrived. The
colonists faced what became known as the "starving time". When the new
governor Sir Thomas Gates, finally arrived at Jamestown on May 23,
1610, he discovered over 80% of the 500 colonists had died; many of the
survivors were sick.
Back in England, the Virginia Company was
reorganized under its Second Charter, ratified on May 23, 1609, which
gave most leadership authority of the colony to the governor, the
newly-appointed Thomas West, 3rd Baron De La Warr. In June 1610, he
arrived with 150 men and ample supplies. De La Warr began the First
Anglo-Powhatan War, against the natives. Under his leadership, Samuel
Argall kidnapped Pocahontas, daughter of the Powhatan chief, and held
her at Henricus.
The economy of the Colony was another problem.
Gold had never been found, and efforts to introduce profitable
industries in the colony had all failed until John Rolfe introduced his
two foreign types of tobacco: Orinoco and Sweet Scented. These produced
a better crop than the local variety and with the first shipment to
England in 1612, the customers enjoyed the flavor, thus making tobacco
a cash crop that established Virginia's economic viability.
The First Anglo-Powhatan War ended when Rolfe married Pocahontas in 1614; peace was established.
Plantation beginnings
During this time, perhaps 5000 Virginians died of disease or were killed in the Indian massacre of 1622.
George
Yeardley took over as Governor of Virginia in 1619. He ended one-man
rule and created a representative system of government with the General
Assembly, the first elected legislative assembly in the New World.
Also
in 1619, the Virginia Company sent 90 single women as potential wives
for the male colonists to help populate the settlement. That same year
the colony acquired a group of "twenty and odd" Angolans, brought by
two English privateers. They were probably the first Africans in the
colony. They, along with many European indentured servants helped to
expand the growing tobacco industry which was already the colony's
primary product. Although these black men were treated as indentured
servants, this marked the beginning of America's history of slavery.
Major importation of African slaves by both African and Europeans
profiteers did not take place until much later in the century.
Also
in 1619, the plantations and developments were divided into four
"incorporations" or "citties" (sic), as they were called. These were
Charles Cittie, Elizabeth Cittie, Henrico Cittie, and James Cittie,
which included the relatively small seat of government for the colony
at Jamestown Island. Each of the four "citties" (sic) extended across
the James River, the main conduit of transportation of the era.
Elizabeth Cittie, know initially as Kecoughtan (a Native word with many
variations in spelling by the English), also included the areas now
known as South Hampton Roads and the Eastern Shore.
In some
areas, individual rather than communal land ownership or leaseholds
were established, providing families with motivation to increase
production, improve standards of living, and gain wealth. Perhaps
nowhere was this more progressive at than Sir Thomas Dale's ill-fated
Henricus, a westerly-lying development located along the south bank of
the James River, where natives were also to be provided an education at
the Colony's first college.
About 6 miles (9.7 km) south of the
falls at present-day Richmond, in Henrico Cittie the Falling Creek
Ironworks was established near the confluence of Falling Creek, using
local ore deposits to make iron. It was the first in North America.
Virginians
were intensely individualistic at this point, weakening the small new
communities. According to Breen (1979) their horizon was limited by the
present or near future. They believed that the environment could and
should be forced to yield quick financial returns. Thus everyone was
looking out for number one at the expense of the cooperative ventures.
Farms were scattered and few villages or towns were formed. This
extreme individualism led to the failure of the settlers to provide
defense for themselves against the Indians, resulting in two massacres.
Conflict with natives
While
the developments of 1619 and continued growth in the several following
years were seen as favorable by the English, many aspects, especially
the continued need for more land to grow tobacco, were the source of
increasing concern to the Native Americans most affected, the Powhatan.
The
central issue was who would be in charge. The Powhatan formally and
ritually admitted Virginia into their political system in 1607 and
1608. For years under the rule of Chief Powhatan, and even later, they
fought to enforce the control they felt was rightfully theirs. The
colonists, however, never recognized Powhatan's authority, and they
also fought to take control.
By this time, the remaining
Powhatan Empire was led by Chief Opechancanough, chief of the Pamunkey,
and brother of Chief Powhatan. He had earned a reputation as a fierce
warrior under his brother's chiefdom. Soon, he gave up on hopes of
diplomacy, and resolved to eradicate the English colonists.
On
March 22, 1622, the Powhatan killed about 400 colonists in the Indian
Massacre of 1622. With coordinated attacks, they struck almost all the
English settlements along the James River, on both shores, from Newport
News Point on the east at Hampton Roads all the way west upriver to
Falling Creek, a few miles above Henricus and John Rolfe's plantation,
Varina Farms.
At Jamestown, a warning by an Indian boy named
Chanco to his employer, Richard Pace, helped reduce total deaths. Pace
secured his plantation, and rowed across the river during the night to
alert Jamestown, which allowed colonists some defensive preparation.
They had no time to warn outposts, which suffered deaths and captives
at almost every location. Several entire communities were essentially
wiped out, including Henricus and Wolstenholme Towne at Martin's
Hundred. At the Falling Creek Ironworks, which had been seen as
promising for the Colony, two women and three children were among the
27 killed, leaving only two colonists alive. The facilities were
destroyed.
Despite the losses, two thirds of the colonists
survived; after withdrawing to Jamestown, many returned to the outlying
plantations, although some were abandoned. The English carried out
reprisals against the Powhatan and there were skirmishes and attacks
for about a year before the colonists and Powhatan struck a truce.
The
colonists invited the chiefs and warriors to Jamestown, where they
proposed a toast of liquor. Dr. John Potts and some of the Jamestown
leadership had poisoned the natives' share of the liquor, which killed
about 200 men. Colonists killed another 50 Indians by hand.
The
period between the coup of 1622 and another Powhatan attack on English
colonists along the James River (see Jamestown) in 1644 marked a
turning point in the relations between the Powhatan and the English In
the early period, each side believed it was operating from a position
of power; by 1646, the colonists had taken the balance of power.
The
colonists defined the 1644 coup as an "uprising". Chief Opechancanough
expected the outcome would reflect what he considered the morally
correct position: that the colonists were violating their pledges to
the Powhatan. During the 1644 event, Chief Opechancanough was captured.
While imprisoned, he was murdered by one of his guards. After the death
of Opechancanough, and following the repeated colonial attacks in 1644
and 1645, the remaining Powhatan tribes had little alternative but to
accede to the demands of the settlers.
Royal colony
In 1624,
the Virginia Company's charter was revoked and the colony transferred
to royal authority as a crown colony, but the elected representatives
in Jamestown continued to exercise a fair amount of power. Under royal
authority, the colony began to expand to the North and West with
additional settlements. In 1630, under the governorship of John Harvey,
the first settlement on the York River was founded. In 1632, the
Virginia legislature voted to build a fort to link Jamestown and the
York River settlement of Chiskiack and protect the colony from Indian
attacks. This fort would become Middle Plantation and later
Williamsburg, Virginia. In 1634, a palisade was built near Middle
Plantation. This wall stretched across the peninsula between the York
and James rivers and protected the settlements on the eastern side of
the lower Peninsula from Indians. The wall also served to contain
cattle.
Also in 1634, a new system of local government was
created in the Virginia Colony by order of the King of England. Eight
shires were designated, each with its own local officers. These shires
were renamed as counties only a few years later. They were:
Accomac (now Northampton County)
Charles City Shire (now Charles City County)
Charles River Shire (now York County)
Elizabeth City Shire (existed as Elizabeth City County until 1952, when
it was absorbed into the city of Hampton)
Henrico (now Henrico County)
James City Shire (now James City County)
Warwick River Shire (existed as Warwick County until 1952, then the
city of Warwick until 1958 when it was absorbed into the city of
Newport News)
Warrosquyoake Shire (now Isle of Wight County)
Of
these, as of 2011, five of the eight original shires of Virginia are
considered still extant in essentially their same political form
(county), although some boundaries have changed. Also, including the
earlier names of the cities (sic) in their names resulted in the source
of some confusion, as that resulted in such seemingly contradictory
names as "James City County" and "Charles City County".
Governor Berkeley
The
first significant attempts at exploring the Trans-Allegheny region
occurred under the administration of Governor William Berkeley. Efforts
to explore farther into Virginia were hampered in 1644 when about 500
colonists were killed in another Indian massacre led, once again, by
Opechancanough. Berkeley is credited with efforts to develop others
sources of income for the colony besides tobacco such as cultivation of
mulberry trees for silkworms and other crops at his large Green Spring
Plantation, now a largely unexplored archaeological site maintained by
the National Park Service near Jamestown and Williamsburg.
Most
Virginia colonists were loyal to the crown (Charles I) during the
English Civil War, but in 1652, Oliver Cromwell sent a force to remove
and replace Gov. Berkeley with Governor Richard Bennett, who was loyal
to the Commonwealth of England. This governor was a moderate Puritan
who allowed the local legislature to exercise most controlling
authority, and spent much of his time directing affairs in neighboring
Maryland Colony. Bennett was followed by two more "Cromwellian"
governors, Edward Digges and Samuel Matthews, although in fact all
three of these men were not technically appointees, but were selected
by the House of Burgesses, which was really in control of the colony
during these years.
Many royalists fled to Virginia after their
defeat in the English Civil War. Many of them established what would
become the most important families in Virginia. After the Restoration,
in recognition of Virginia's loyalty to the crown, King Charles II of
England bestowed Virginia with the nickname "The Old Dominion", which
it still bears today.
Bacon's Rebellion
Governor Berkeley,
who remained popular after his first administration, returned to the
governorship at the end of Commonwealth rule. However, Berkeley's
second administration was characterized with many problems. Disease,
hurricanes, Indian hostilities, and economic difficulties all plagued
Virginia at this time. Berkeley established autocratic authority over
the colony. To protect this power, he refused to have new legislative
elections for 14 years in order to protect a House of Burgesses that
supported him. He only agreed to new elections when rebellion became a
serious threat.
Berkeley finally did face a rebellion in 1676.
Indians had begun attacking encroaching settlers as they expanded to
the north and west. Serious fighting broke out when settlers responded
to violence with a counter-attack against the wrong tribe, which
further extended the violence. Berkeley did not assist the settlers in
their fight. Many settlers and historians believe Berkeley's refusal to
fight the Indians stemmed from his investments in the fur trade. Large
scale fighting would have cut off the Indian suppliers Berkeley's
investment relied on. Nathaniel Bacon organized his own militia of
settlers who retaliated against the Indians. Bacon became very popular
as the primary opponent of Berkeley, not only on the issue of Indians,
but on other issues as well. Berkeley condemned Bacon as a rebel, but
pardoned him after Bacon won a seat in the House of Burgesses and
accepted it peacefully. After a lack of reform, Bacon rebelled
outright, captured Jamestown, and took control of the colony for
several months. The incident became known as Bacon's Rebellion.
Berkeley returned himself to power with the help of the English
militia. Bacon burned Jamestown before abandoning it and continued his
rebellion, but died of disease. Berkeley severely crushed the remaining
rebels.
In response to Berkeley's harsh repression of the
rebels, the English government removed him from office. After the
burning of Jamestown, the capital was temporarily moved to Middle
Plantation, located on the high ground of the Virginia Peninsula
equidistant from the James and York Rivers.
The Bodleian Plate,
showing (top row; also middle row, center) the Wren Building at the
College of William and Mary; (middle row left) views of the first
Capitol at Williamsburg; (middle-row right) the Governor's Palace.
College of William and Mary; capital relocated
Local
leaders had long desired a school of higher education, for the sons of
planters, and for educating the Indians. An earlier attempt to
establish a permanent university at Henricus failed after the Indian
Massacre of 1622 wiped out the entire settlement. Finally, seven
decades later, with encouragement from the Colony's House of Burgesses
and other prominent individuals, Reverend Dr. James Blair, the colony's
top religious leader, prepared a plan. Blair went to England and in
1693, obtained a charter from King William and Queen Mary II of
England. The college was named the College of William and Mary in honor
of the two monarchs.
The rebuilt statehouse in Jamestown burned
again in 1698. After that fire, upon suggestion of college students,
the colonial capital was permanently moved to nearby Middle Plantation
again, and the town was renamed Williamsburg, in honor of the king.
Plans were made to construct a capitol building and plat the new city
according to the survey of Theodorick Bland.
Governor Spotswood
Alexander
Spotswood became lieutenant governor, or acting royal governor, of
Virginia 1710, a post he held until recalled in 1722.
In 1716 he
led an expedition of westward exploration, later known as the Knights
of the Golden Horseshoe Expedition. Spotswood's party reached the top
ridge of the Blue Ridge Mountains at Swift Run Gap (elevation 2,365
feet (721 m)). Such was the English colonials understanding of the
extent of the land, that they thought they had reached the continental
divide. There was some expectation that, "like Balboa", they would be
overlooking the Pacific Ocean. Spotswood was also behind the creation
of Germanna, a settlement of German immigrants brought over for the
purpose of iron production, in modern-day Spotsylvania County, itself
named after Spotswood.
Social order
Historian Edmund Morgan
(1975) argues that Virginians in the 1650s—and for the next two
centuries—turned to slavery and a racial divide as an alternative to
class conflict. "Racism made it possible for white Virginians to
develop a devotion to the equality that English republicans had
declared to be the soul of liberty." That is, white men became
politically much more equal than was possible without a population of
low-status slaves.
By 1700 the population reached 70,000 and
continued to grow rapidly from a high birth rate, low death rate,
importation of slaves from the Caribbean, and immigration from Britain
and Germany, as well as from Pennsylvania. The climate was mild, the
farm lands were cheap and fertile.
Historian Douglas Southall Freeman has explained the hierarchical social structure of the 1740s:
West of the fall line... the settlements fringed toward the frontier of
the Blue Ridge and the Valley of the Shenandoah. Democracy was real
where life was raw. In Tidewater, the flat country East of the fall
line, there were no less than eight strata of society. The uppermost
and the lowliest, the great proprietors and the Negro slaves, were
supposed to be of immutable station. The others were small farmers,
merchants, sailors, frontier folk, servants and convicts. Each of these
constituted a distinct class at a given time, but individuals and
families often shifted materially in station during a single
generation. Titles hedged the ranks of the notables. Members of the
Council of State were termed both "Colonel" and "Esquire." Large
planters who did not bear arms almost always were given the courtesy
title of "Gentlemen." So were Church Wardens, Vestrymen, Sheriffs and
Trustees of towns. The full honors of a man of station were those of
Vestryman [of the Church], Justice [lifetime member of the County
Court, appointed by the legislature] and Burgess [elected member of the
legislature]. Such an individual normally looked to England and
especially to London and sought to live by the social standards of the
mother country.
Religion in early Virginia
St.
Luke's Church in Smithfield, built in the mid- to late-17th century, is
the oldest extant brick church in the Thirteen colonies.
The
Church of England was legally established in the colony in 1619, and
authorities in England sent in 22 Anglican clergyman by 1624. In
practice, establishment meant that local taxes were funneled through
the local parish to handle the needs of local government, such as roads
and poor relief, in addition to the salary of the minister. There never
was a bishop in colonial Virginia, and in practice the local vestry
consisted of laymen controlled the parish.
Anglican parishes
After
five very difficult years, during which the majority of the new
arrivals quickly died, the colony began to grow more successfully. As
in England, the parish became a unit of local importance, equal in
power and practical aspects to other entities, such as the courts and
even the House of Burgesses and the Governor's Council (the precursors
of the Virginia General Assembly). (A parish was normally led
spiritually by a rector and governed by a committee of members
generally respected in the community which was known as the vestry). A
typical parish contained three or four churches, as the parish churches
needed to be close enough for people to travel to worship services,
where attendance was expected of everyone. Parishes typically had a
church farm (or "glebe") to help support it financially.
Expansion
and subdivision of the church parishes and, after 1634, the shires (or
counties) followed population growth. The intention of the Virginia
parish system was to place a church not more than six miles (10
km)-easy riding distance-from every home in the colony. The shires,
soon after initial establishment in 1634 known as "counties", were
planned to be not more than a day's ride from all residents, so that
court and other business could be attended to in a practical manner.
The
Bruton Parish Church in Williamsburg. Government and college officials
in the capital at Williamsburg were required to attend services at this
Anglican church.
In the 1740s, the established Anglican church
had about 70 parish priests around the colony. There was no bishop, and
indeed, there was fierce political opposition to having a bishop in the
colony. The Anglican priests were supervised directly by the Bishop of
London. Each county court gave tax money to the local vestry, composed
of prominent layman. The vestry provided the priest a glebe of 200 or
300 acres (1.2 km2), a house, and perhaps some livestock. The vestry
paid him an annual salary of 16,000 pounds-of-tobacco, plus 20
shillings for every wedding and funeral. While not poor, the priests
lived modestly and their opportunities for improvement were slim.
Missionaries
Religious
leaders in England felt they had a duty as missionaries to bring
Christianity (or more specifically, the religious practices and beliefs
of the Church of England), to the Native Americans. There was an
assumption that their own "mistaken" spiritual beliefs were largely the
result of a lack of education and literacy, since the Powhatan did not
have a written language. Therefore, teaching them these skills would
logically result in what the English saw as "enlightenment" in their
religious practices, and bring them into the fold of the church, which
was part of the government, and hence, a form of control.
The
efforts to educate and convert the natives were minimal, though the
Indian school remained open until the Revolution. Apart from the
Nansemond tribe, which had converted in 1638, and a few isolated
individuals over the years, the other Powhatan tribes as a whole did
not fully convert to Christianity until 1791.
Alternatives to the established church
The
colonists were typically inattentive, disinterested, and bored during
church services, according to the ministers, who complained that the
people were sleeping, whispering, ogling the fashionably dressed women,
walking about and coming and going, or at best looking out the windows
or staring blankly into space. The lack of towns means the church had
to serve scattered settlements, while the acute shortage of trained
ministers meant that piety was hard to practice outside the home. Some
ministers solved their problems by encouraged parishioners to become
devout at home, using the Book of Common Prayer for private prayer and
devotion (rather than the Bible). This allowed devout Anglicans to lead
an active and sincere religious life apart from the unsatisfactory
formal church services. However the stress on private devotion weakened
the need for a bishop or a large institutional church of the sort Blair
wanted. The stress on personal piety opened the way for the First Great
Awakening, which pulled people away from the established church.
Especially
in the back country, most families had no religious affiliation
whatsoever and their low moral standards were shocking to proper
Englishmen The Baptists, Methodists, Presbyterians and other
evangelicals directly challenged these lax moral standards and refused
to tolerate them in their ranks. The evangelicals identified as sinful
the traditional standards of masculinity which revolved around
gambling, drinking, and brawling, and arbitrary control over women,
children, and slaves. The religious communities enforced new standards,
creating a new male leadership role that followed Christian principles
and became dominant in the 19th century. Baptists, German Lutherans and
Presbyterians, funded their own ministers, and favored disestablishment
of the Anglican church.
Presbyterians
The Presbyterians were
evangelical dissenters, mostly Scots-Irish Americans who expanded in
Virginia between 1740 and 1758, immediately before the Baptists.
Spangler (2008) argues they were more energetic and held frequent
services better atuned to the frontier conditions of the colony.
Presbyterianism grew in frontier areas where the Anglicans had made
little impress, especially the western areas of the Piedmont and the
valley of Virginia. Uneducated whites and blacks were attracted to the
emotional worship of the denomination, its emphasis on biblical
simplicity, and its psalm singing. Presbyterians were a cross-section
of society; they were involved in slaveholding and in patriarchal ways
of household management, while the Presbyterian Church government
featured few democratic elements. Some local Presbyterian churches,
such as Briery in Prince Edward County owned slaves. The Briery church
purchased five slaves in 1766 and raised money for church expenses by
hiring them out to local planters.
Baptists
Helped by the
First Great Awakening and numerous itinerant self-proclaimed
missionaries, by the 1760s Baptists were drawing Virginians, especially
poor white farmers, into a new, much more democratic religion. Slaves
were welcome at the services and many became Baptists at this time.
Baptist services were highly emotional; the only ritual was baptism,
which was applied by immersion (not sprinkling like the Anglicans) only
to adults. Opposed to the low moral standards prevalent in the colony,
the Baptists strictly enforced their own high standards of personal
morality, with special concern for sexual misconduct, heavy drinking,
frivolous spending, missing services, cursing, and revelry. Church
trials were held frequently and members who did not submit to disciple
were expelled.
Historians have debated the implications of the
religious rivalries for the American Revolution. The Baptist farmers
did introduce a new egalitarian ethic that largely displaced the
semi-aristocratic ethic of the Anglican planters. However, both groups
supported the Revolution. There was a sharp contrast between the
austerity of the plain-living Baptists and the opulence of the Anglican
planters, who controlled local government. Baptist church discipline,
mistaken by the gentry for radicalism, served to ameliorate disorder.
As population became more dense, the county court and the Anglican
Church were able to increase their authority. The Baptists protested
vigorously; the resulting social disorder resulted chiefly from the
ruling gentry's disregard of public need. The vitality of the religious
opposition made the conflict between 'evangelical' and 'gentry' styles
a bitter one. The strength of the evangelical movement's organization
determined its ability to mobilize power outside the conventional
authority structure. The struggle for religious toleration erupted and
was played out during the American Revolution, as the Baptists, in
alliance with Anglicans Thomas Jefferson and James Madison worked
successfully to disestablish the Anglican church.
Methodists
Methodist
missionaries were also active in the late colonial period. From 1776 to
1815 Methodist Bishop Francis Asbury made 42 trips into the western
parts to visit Methodist congregations. During the war about 700
Methodist slaves went over to the British, who freed them and in 1791
helped them resettle in Sierra Leone in Africa. In the 1780s itinerant
Methodist preachers carried copies of an anti-slavery petition in their
saddlebags throughout the state, calling for an end to slavery. At the
same time, counter-petitions were circulated. The petitions were
presented to the Assembly; they were debated, but no legislative action
was taken, and after 1800 there was less and less religious opposition
to slavery.
Religious freedom and disestablishment
The
Baptists and Presbyterians were subject to many legal constraints and
faced growing persecution; between 1768 and 1774 about half of the
Baptists ministers in Virginia were jailed for preaching. At the start
of the Revolution, however, the Anglican Patriots realized that they
needed dissenter support for effective wartime mobilization, so they
met most of the dissenters' demands for the freedom to practice their
religion in return for their support of the war effort.
After
the victory at Yorktown, the Anglican establishment sought to
reintroduce state support for religion. This effort failed when
non-Anglicans gave their full support to Thomas Jefferson's Bill for
Establishing Religious Freedom, which became law in 1786. With Freedom
of religion the new watchword, the Church of England was
dis-established in Virginia. Most ministers were Loyalists and returned
to England. When possible, worship continued in the usual fashion, but
the local vestry was no longer the recipient of tax money and no longer
had local government functions such as poor relief. The Right Reverend
James Madison (1749–1812), a cousin of Patriot James Madison, was
appointed in 1790 as the first Episcopal Bishop of Virginia and slowly
rebuilt the denomination.
American Revolution
Antecedents
Patrick Henry's speech on the Virginia Resolves.
Revolutionary
sentiments first began appearing in Virginia shortly after the French
and Indian War ended in 1763. The very same year, the British and
Virginian governments clashed in the case of Parson's Cause. The
Virginia legislature had passed the Two-Penny Act to stop clerical
salaries from inflating. King George III vetoed the measure, and clergy
sued for back salaries. Patrick Henry first came to prominence by
arguing in the case against the veto, which he declared tyrannical.
The
British government had accumulated a great deal of debt through
spending on its wars. To help payoff this debt, Parliament passed the
Sugar Act in 1764 and the Stamp Act in 1765. The General Assembly
opposed the passage of the Sugar Act on the grounds of no taxation
without representation. Patrick Henry opposed the Stamp Act in the
Burgesses with a famous speech advising George III that "Caesar had his
Brutus, Charles I his Cromwell..." and the king "may profit by their
example." The legislature passed the "Virginia Resolves" opposing the
tax. Governor Francis Fauquier responded by dismissing the Assembly.
Opposition
continued after the resolves. The Northampton County court overturned
the Stamp Act February 8, 1766. Various political groups, including the
Sons of Liberty met and issued protests against the act. Most notably,
Richard Bland published a pamphlet entitled An Enquiry into the Rights
of Ike British Colonies. This document would set one of the basic
political principles of the Revolution by stating that Virginia was a
part of the British Empire, not the Kingdom of Great Britain, so it
only owed allegiance to the Crown, not Parliament.
The Stamp Act
was repealed, but additional taxation from the Revenue Act and the 1769
attempt to transport Bostonian rioters to London for trial incited more
protest from Virginia. The Assembly met to consider resolutions
condemning on the transport of the rioters, but Governor Botetourt,
while sympathetic, dissolved the legislature. The Burgesses reconvened
in Raleigh Tavern and made an agreement to ban British imports. Britain
gave up the attempt to extradite the prisoners and lifted all taxes
except the tax on tea in 1770.
In 1773, because of a renewed
attempt to extradite Americans to Britain, Richard Henry Lee, Thomas
Jefferson, Patrick Henry, George Mason, and others created a committee
of correspondence to deal with problems with Britain. Unlike other such
committees of correspondence, this one was an official part of the
legislature.
Following the closure of the port in Boston and
several other offenses, the Burgesses approved June 1, 1774 as a day of
"Fasting, Humiliation, and Prayer" in a show of solidarity with
Massachusetts. The Governor, Lord Dunmore, dismissed the legislature.
The first Virginia Convention was held August 1–6 to respond to the
growing crisis. The convention approved a boycott of British goods,
expressed solidarity with Massachusetts, and elected delegates to the
Continental Congress where Virginian Peyton Randolph was selected as
president of the Congress.
War begins
On April 20, 1775, a
day after the Battle of Lexington and Concord, Dunmore ordered royal
marines to remove the gunpowder from the Williamsburg Magazine to a
British ship. Patrick Henry led a group of Virginia militia from
Hanover in response to Dunmore's order. Carter Braxton negotiated a
resolution to the Gunpowder Incident by transferring royal funds as
payment for the powder. The incident exacerbated Dunmore's declining
popularity. He fled the Governor's Palace to the British ship Fowey at
Yorktown. On November 7, Dunmore issued a proclamation declaring
Virginia was in a state of rebellion and that any slave fighting for
the British would be freed. By this time, George Washington had been
appointed head of the American forces by the Continental Congress and
Virginia was under the political leadership of a Committee of Safety
formed by the Third Virginia Convention in the governor's absence.
On
December 9, 1775, Virginia militia moved on the governor's forces at
the Battle of Great Bridge. The British had held a fort that guarded
the land route to Norfolk. The British feared the militia, who had no
cannon for a siege, would receive reinforcements, so they abandoned the
fort and attacked. The militia won the 30 minute battle. Dunmore
responded by bombarding Norfolk with his ships on January 1, 1776.
Independence
The
Fifth Virginia Convention met on May 6 and declared Virginia a free and
independent state on May 15, 1776. The convention instructed its
delegates to introduce a resolution for independence at the Continental
Congress. Richard Henry Lee introduced the measure on June 7. While the
Congress debated, the Virginia Convention adopted George Mason's Bill
of Rights (June 12) and a constitution (June 29) which established an
independent commonwealth. Congress approved Lee's proposal on July 2
and approved Jefferson's Declaration of Independence on July 4.
The
constitution of the Fifth Virginia Convention created a system of
government for the state that would last for 54 years. The constitution
provided for a chief magistrate, a bicameral legislature with both the
House of Delegates and the Senate. The legislature elected a governor
each year (picking Patrick Henry to be the first) and a council of
eight for executive functions. In October, the legislature appointed
Jefferson, Edmund Pendleton, and George Wythe to adopt the existing
body of Virginia law to the new constitution.
After the Battle
of Great Bridge, little military conflict took place on Virginia soil
for the first part of the American Revolutionary War. Nevertheless,
Virginia sent forces to help in the fighting to the North and South,
including Daniel Morgan and his company of marksmen who fought in early
battles in the north. Charlottesville served as a prison camp for the
Convention Army, Hessian and British soldiers captured at Saratoga.
Virginia also sent forces to its frontier in the northwest, which then
included much of the Ohio Country. George Rogers Clark led forces in
this area and captured the fort at Kaskaskia and won the Battle of
Vincennes, capturing the royal governor, Henry Hamilton. Clark
maintained control of areas south of the Ohio River for most of the
war, but was unable to make gains in the Indian-dominated territories
north of the river.
War returns to Virginia
The British
brought the war back to coastal Virginia in May, 1779 when Admiral
George Collier landed troops at Hampton Roads and used Portsmouth
(after destroying the naval yard) as a base of attack. The move was
part of an attempted blockade of trade with the West Indies. The
British abandoned the plan when reinforcements from General Henry
Clinton failed to arrive to support Collier.
Fearing the
vulnerability of Williamsburg, then-Governor Thomas Jefferson moved the
capital farther inland to Richmond in 1780. That October, the British
made another attempt at invading Virginia. British General Alexander
Leslie entered the Chesapeake with 2,500 troops and used Portsmouth as
a base; however, after the British defeat at the Battle of Kings
Mountain, Leslie moved to join General Charles Cornwallis farther
south. In December, Benedict Arnold, who had betrayed the Revolution
and become a general for the British, attacked Richmond with 1,000
soldiers and burned part of the city before the Virginia Miltia drove
his army out of the city. Arnold moved his base of operations to
Portsmouth and was later joined by another 2,000 troops under General
William Phillips. Phillips led an expedition that destroyed military
and economic targets, against ineffectual militia resistance. The
state's defenses, led by General Friedrich Wilhelm, Baron von Steuben,
put up resistance in the April 1781 Battle of Blandford, but was forced
to retreat.
George Washington sent the French General Lafayette
to lead the defense of Virginia. Lafayette marched south to Petersburg,
preventing Phillips from immediately taking the town. Cornwallis,
frustrated in the Carolinas, moved up from North Carolina to join
Phillips and Arnold, and began to pursue Lafayette's smaller force.
Lafayette only had 3,200 troops to face Cornwallis's 7,200. The
outnumbered Lafayette avoided direct confrontation and could do little
more than annoy Cornwallis with a series of skirmishes. Lafayette
retreated to Fredericksburg, met up with General Anthony Wayne, and
then marched into the southwest. Cornwallis dispatched two smaller
missions: 500 soldiers under Colonel John Graves Simcoe to take the
arsenal at Point of Fork and 250 under Colonel Banastre Tarleton to
march on Charlottesville and capture Gov. Jefferson and the
legislature. The expedition to Point of Fork forced Steuben to retreat
further while Tarleton's mission captured only seven legislators and
some officers. Jack Jouett had ridden all night ride to warn Jefferson
and the legislators of Tarleton's coming. Cornwallis reunited his army
in Elk Hill and marched to the Tidewater region. Lafayette, uniting
with von Steuben, now had 5,000 troops and followed Cornwallis.
Surrender of Cornwallis at Yorktown (John Trumbull, 1797)
Under
orders from General Clinton, Cornwallis moved down the Virginia
Peninsula towards the Chesapeake Bay were Clinton planned to extract
part of the army for a siege of New York City. Cornwallis passed
through Williamsburg and near Jamestown. When Cornwallis appeared to be
moving to cross the James River, Lafayette saw a chance to attack
Cornwallis during the crossing, and sent 800 troops under General Wayne
against what they believed to be Cornwallis' rear guard. Cornwallis had
set a trap, and Wayne was very nearly caught by the much larger, 5,000
soldier, main body of Cornwallis' forces at the Battle of Green Spring
on July 6, 1781. Wayne ordered a charge against Cornwallis in order to
feign greater strength and stop the British advance. Casualties were
light with the Americans losing 140 and the British 75, but the ploy
allowed the Americans to escape.
Cornwallis moved his troops
across the James to Portsmouth to await Clinton's orders. Clinton
decided that a position on the peninsula must be held and that Yorktown
would be a valuable naval base. Cornwallis received orders to move his
troops to Yorktown and begin construction of fortifications and a naval
yard. The Americans had initially expected Cornwallis to move either to
New York or the Carolinas and started to make arrangements to move from
Virginia. Once they discovered the fortifications at Yorktown, the
Americans began to place themselves around the city. Gen. Washington
saw the opportunity for a major victory. He moved a portion of his
troops, along with Rochambeau's French troops, from New York to
Virginia. The plan hinged on French reinforcements of 3,200 troops and
a large naval force under the Admiral de Grasse. On September 5,
Admiral de Grasse defeated a fleet of the Royal Navy at the Battle of
the Virginia Capes. The defeat ensured French dominance of the waters
around Yorktown, thereby preventing Cornwallis from receiving troops or
supplies and removing the possibility of evacuation. Between October 6
and 17 the American forces laid siege to Yorktown. Outgunned and
completely surrounded, Cornwallis decided to surrender. Papers for
surrender were officially signed on October 19. As a result of the
defeat, the king lost control of Parliament and the new British
government offered peace in April 1782. The Treaty of Paris of 1783
officially ended the war.
Early Republic and antebellum periods
The
new Virginia State Capitol, begun in 1785 and completed in 1792,
designed by Thomas Jefferson following the relocation of the government
to Richmond.
Victory in the Revolution brought peace and prosperity to the new state, as export markets in Europe reopened for its tobacco.
While
the old local elites were content with the status quo, younger veterans
of the war had developed a national identity. Led by George Washington
and James Madison, Virginia played a major role in the Constitutional
Convention of 1787 in Philadelphia, where Madison proposed the Virginia
Plan, which would give representation in Congress according to
population. Virginia was the most populous state, and it was allowed to
count all of its white residents and 3/5 of the black slaves for its
congressional representation and its electoral vote. (Most white men
owned land and could vote, but no one else.) Ratification was bitterly
contested; the pro-Constitution forces prevailed only after promising
to add a Bill of Rights. The Virginia Ratifying Convention approved the
Constitution by a vote of 89-79 on June 25, 1788, becoming the tenth
state to enter the Union. Madison played a central role in the new
Congress, while Washington was the unanimous choice as first president.
He was followed by the Virginia Dynasty, including Thomas Jefferson,
Madison, and James Monroe, giving the state four of the first five
presidents.
Slavery and freedmen in Antebellum Virginia
The
Revolution meant change and sometimes political freedom for enslaved
African Americans, too. Thousands of slaves from southern states
escaped to British lines and freedom during the war. Some left with the
British; others disappeared into rural and frontier areas or the North.
Inspired by the Revolution and evangelical preachers, numerous
slaveholders in the Chesapeake region wrote wills that manumitted some
or all of their slaves. From a few thousand, the population of free
blacks in Virginia increased to 13,000 in 1790 and 20,000 in 1800. One
planter, Robert Carter III freed more than 450 slaves in his lifetime,
more than anyone else.
Many free blacks migrated from rural
areas to towns such as Petersburg, Richmond, and Charlottesville for
jobs and community; others migrated with their families to the frontier
where social strictures were more relaxed. Among the oldest black
Baptist congregations in the nation were two founded near Petersburg
before the Revolution. Each moved into the city and built churches by
the early 19th century.
Twice Virginia experienced slave
rebellions--Gabriel's Rebellion in 1800, and Nat Turner's Rebellion in
1831. White reaction as swift and harsh.
Westward expansion
In
the late 18th century, the Wilderness Road through the Cumberland Gap
in far southwestern Virginia served as a key route across the
Appalachians to Kentucky, and for points west until the National Road
opened in the early 19th century.
Beginning in the 1750s, the
Ohio Company of Virginia was created to survey and settle its new
lands. Following the French and Indian War, westward settlement by
Virginians was limited to more southern portions of the American Old
West. In 1784 Virginia relinquished its claims to the Northwest
Territory, except for the Virginia Military District. It was given to
veterans of the Revolutionary War. In 1792, three western counties
formed Kentucky.
As the new nation of the United States of
America experienced growing pains and began to speak of Manifest
Destiny, Virginia, too, found its role in the young republic to be
changing and challenging. Beginning with the Louisiana Purchase, many
of the Virginians whose grandparents had created the Virginia
Establishment began to expand westward. Famous Virginian-born Americans
affected not only the destiny of the state of Virginia, but the rapidly
developing American Old West. Virginians Meriwether Lewis and William
Clark were influential in their famous expedition to explore the
Missouri River and possible connections to the Pacific Ocean. Notable
names such as Stephen F. Austin, Edwin Waller, Haden Harrison Edwards,
and Dr. John Shackelford were famous Texan pioneers from Virginia. Even
eventual Civil War general Robert E. Lee distinguished himself as a
military leader in Texas during the 1846-1848 Mexican-American War.
As
the western reaches of Virginia were developed in the first half of the
19th century, the vast differences in the agricultural basis, cultural,
and transportation needs of the area became a major issue for the
Virginia General Assembly. In the older, eastern portion, slavery
contributed to the economy. While planters were moving away from
labor-intensive tobacco to mixed crops, they still held numerous slaves
and their leasing out or sales was also part of their economic
prospect. Slavery had become an economic institution upon which
planters depended. Watersheds on most of this area eventually drained
to the Atlantic Ocean. In the western reaches, families farmed smaller
homesteads, mostly without enslaved or hired labor. Settlers were
expanding the exploitation of resources: mining of minerals and
harvesting of timber. The land drained into the Ohio River Valley, and
trade followed the rivers.
Representation in the state
legislature was heavily skewed in favor of the more populous eastern
areas and the historic planter elite. This was compounded by the
partial allowance for slaves when counting population; as neither the
slaves nor women had the vote, this gave more power to white men. The
legislature's efforts to mediate the disparities ended without
meaningful resolution, although the state held a constitutional
convention on representation issues. Thus, at the outset of the
American Civil War, Virginia was caught not only in national crisis,
but in a long-standing controversy within its own boundaries. While
other border states had similar regional differences, Virginia had a
long history of east-west tensions which finally came to a head; it was
the only state to divide into two separate states during the War.
Begun
in the late 18th century, the James River and Kanawha Canal was
intended to form a transportation link between the James River in the
east, and the Kanawha River (flowing into the Ohio River) across the
Appalachians.
Infrastructure and Industrial Revolution
After
the Revolution, various infrastructure projects began to be developed,
including the Dismal Swamp Canal, the James River and Kanawha Canal,
and various turnpikes. Virginia was home to the first of all Federal
infrastructure projects under the new Constitution, the Cape Henry
Light of 1792, located at the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay. Following
the War of 1812, several Federal national defense projects were
undertaken in Virginia. Drydock Number One was constructed in
Portsmouth in the 1827. Across the James River, Fort Monroe was built
to defend Hampton Roads, completed in 1834.
In the 1830s,
railroads began to be built in Virginia. In 1831, the Chesterfield
Railroad began hauling coal from the mines in Midlothian to docks at
Manchester (near Richmond), powered by gravity and draft animals. The
first railroad in Virginia to be powered by locomotives was the
Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac Railroad, chartered in 1834, with
the intent to connect with steamboat lines at Aquia Landing running to
Washington, D.C.. Soon after, others (with equally descriptive names)
followed: the Richmond and Petersburg Railroad and Louisa Railroad in
1836, the Richmond and Danville Railroad in 1847, the Orange and
Alexandria Railroad in 1848, and the Richmond and York River Railroad.
In 1849, the Virginia Board of Public Works established the Blue Ridge
Railroad. Under Engineer Claudius Crozet, the railroad successfully
crossed the Blue Ridge Mountains via the Blue Ridge Tunnel at Afton
Mountain.
Remains of the Washington Iron Furnace in Franklin County, which operated from around 1770 to 1850.
Iron industry
With
extensive iron deposits, especially in the western counties, Virginia
was a pioneer in the iron industry. The first ironworks in the new
world was established at Falling Creek in 1619, though it was destroyed
in 1622. There would eventually grow to be 80 ironworks, charcoal
furnaces and forges with 7,000 hands at any one time, about 70 percent
of them slaves. Ironmasters hired slaves from local slave owners
because they were cheaper than white workers, easier to control, and
could not switch to a better employer. But the work ethic was weak,
because the wages went to the owner, not to the workers, who were
forced to work hard, were poorly fed and clothed, and were separated
from their families. Virginia's industry increasingly fell behind
Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Ohio, which relied on free labor. Bradford
(1959) recounts the many complaints about slave laborers and argues the
over-reliance upon slaves contributed to the failure of the ironmasters
to adopt improved methods of production for fear the slaves would
sabotage them. Most of the blacks were unskilled manual laborers,
although Lewis (1977) reports that some were in skilled positions.
Civil War
The Battle of Hampton Roads was fought in the James River near Hampton in 1862.
Virginia
began a convention about secession on February 13, 1861 after six
states seceded to form the Confederate States of America on February 4.
Unionist members blocked secession but, on April 15 Lincoln called for
troops from all states still in the Union in response to the firing on
Fort Sumter. That meant Federal troops crossing Virginia on the way
south to subdue South Carolina. On April 17, 1861 the convention voted
to secede. The Confederacy rewarded the state by moving the national
capital from Montgomery, Alabama to Richmond in late May—a decision
that exposed the Confederate capital to unrelenting attacks and made
Virginia a continuous battleground. Virginians ratified the articles of
secession on May 23. The following day, the Union army moved into
northern Virginia and captured Alexandria without a fight, and
controlled it for the remainder of the war.
The first major
battle of the Civil War occurred on July 21, 1861. Union forces
attempted to take control of the railroad junction at Manassas, but the
Confederate Army had moved its forces by train to meet the Union. The
Confederates won the First Battle of Manassas (known as "Bull Run" in
Northern naming convention). Both sides mobilized for war; the year
went on without another major fight.
Men from all economic and
social levels, both slaveholders and nonslaveholders, as well as former
Unionists, enlisted in great numbers. The only areas that sent few or
no men to fight for the Confederacy had few slaves, a high percentage
of poor families, and a history of opposition to secession, were
located on the border with the North, and were sometimes under Union
control.
Richmond and war industry
The Tredegar Iron Works was a key strategic asset for the Confederacy, located in Richmond.
After
Virginia joined in secession, the capital of the Confederate States of
American was relocated from Montgomery, Alabama, to Richmond. The White
House of the Confederacy, located a few blocks north of the State
Capital, was home to the family of Confederate President Jefferson
Davis. A major center of iron production during the civil war was
located in Richmond at Tredegar Iron Works. Tredegar was run partially
by slave labor, and it produced most of the artillery for the war,
making Richmond an important point to defend.
Petersburg became
a manufacturing center, as well as a city where free black artisans and
craftsmen could make a living. In 1860 half its population was black
and of that, one-third were free blacks, the largest such population in
the state. Richmond and Petersburg were linked by railroad before the
Civil War, and the latter was an important shipping point for goods.
Saltville was a primary source of Confederate salt (critical for food
preservation and thus feeding the military) during the war, leading to
the two Battles of Saltville. The most industrialized area of Virginia,
around Wheeling, stayed loyal to the Union.
West Virginia breaks away
The
western counties could not tolerate the Confederacy. Breaking away,
they first formed the Union state of Virginia (recognized by
Washington); it is called the Restored government of Virginia. The
Restored government did little except give its permission for Congress
to form the new state of West Virginia in 1862.
At the Richmond
secession convention on April 17, 1861, the delegates from western
counties were 17 in favor and 30 against secession. From May to August
1861, a series of Unionist conventions met in Wheeling; the Second
Wheeling Convention constituted itself as a legislative body called the
Restored Government of Virginia. It declared Virginia was still in the
Union but that the state offices were vacant and elected a new
governor, Francis H. Pierpont; this body gained formal recognition by
the Lincoln administration on July 4. On August 20 the Wheeling body
passed an ordinance for the creation; it was put to public vote on Oct.
24. The vote was in favor of a new state—West Virginia—which was
distinct from the Pierpont government, which persisted until the end of
the war. Congress and Lincoln approved, and, after providing for
gradual emancipation of slaves in the new state constitution, West
Virginia became the 35th state on June 20, 1863.
During the War,
West Virginia contributed about 32,000 soldiers to the Union Army and
about 10,000 to the Confederate cause. The government in Richmond did
not recognize the new state, and Confederates did not vote there.
Everyone realized the decision would be made on the battlefield, and
the government in Richmond sent in Robert E. Lee. But Lee found little
local support and was defeated by Union forces from Ohio. Union
victories in 1861 drove the Confederate forces out of the Monongahela
and Kanawha valleys, and throughout the remainder of the war the Union
held the region west of the Alleghenies and controlled the Baltimore
and Ohio Railroad in the north. The new state was not subject to
Reconstruction.
Dead soldiers along Sunken Road after the Second Battle of Fredericksburg, 1863
Later War Years
For
the remainder of the war, battles were fought across Virginia,
including the Seven Days Battles, the Battle of Fredericksburg, the
Battle of Chancellorsville, the Battle of Brandy Station, the Overland
Campaign and the Battle of the Wilderness, culminating in the Siege of
Petersburg. In April 1865, Richmond was burned by a retreating
Confederate Army and was returned to Union control. The Confederate
government fled southwest to Danville, with the Army of Northern
Virginia following. Days later, the Army of Northern Virginia
surrendered at Appomattox.
Reconstruction
Remains of a locomotive of the Richmond and Petersburg Railroad, at the destroyed depot in Richmond.
Virginia
had been devastated by the war, with the infrastructure (such as
railroads) in ruins; many plantations burned out; and large numbers of
refugees without jobs, food or supplies beyond rations provided by the
Union Army, especially its Freedman's Bureau.
There were three
phases in Virginia's Reconstruction era: wartime, presidential, and
congressional. Immediately after the war President Andrew Johnson
recognized the Pierpont government as legitimate; it restored local
government; passed Black Codes that gave the Freedman a higher status
than slaves but they were not citizens, could not vote, and had only
limited rights. It ratified the 13th amendment to abolish slavery
(which had already disappeared), and revoked the 1861 ordnance of
secession. That was enough for Johnson who said Reconstruction was
complete. It was not adequate for the Radical Republicans in Congress
who refused to seat the newly elected state delegation; the Radicals
wanted proof that slavery was really dead (and not to be revived as
some kind of serfdom), and that Virginia had truly renounced
Confederate nationalism. After winning large majorities in the 1866
election, the Radical Republicans took full charge. They closed down
the state's civilian government and put Virginia (and nine other
ex-Confederate states) under military rule. Virginia was administered
as the "First Military District" in 1867-69 under General John
Schofield Meanwhile the Freedmen became politically active by forming
their own political organizations, holding conventions, and demanding
universal male suffrage and equal treatment under the law, as well as
demanding disfranchisement of ex-Confederates and the seizure of their
plantations.
In 1867 James Hunnicutt (1814–1880), a white editor
and Scalawag (white Virginian) mobilized the black Republican vote with
promises of confiscating the large plantations and turning them over to
the Freedmen. The moderate Republicans, including led by former Whigs,
businessmen and planters, while supportive of black suffrage, drew the
line at confiscation. Hunnicutt's coalition took control of the
Republican Party, and began to demand the permanent disfranchisement of
all whites who had supported the Confederacy. The Virginia Republican
party was now permanently split, and many moderates switched to the
opposition "Conservatives". The Radicals won the 1867 election for
delegates to a constitutional convention.
The 1868
constitutional convention included 33 white Conservatives, and 72
Radicals (of whom 24 were Blacks, 23 Scalawag, and 21
Carpetbaggers Called the "Underwood Constitution" after the
presiding officer, the main accomplishment was to reform the tax
system, and create, for the first time in Virginia, a system of public
schools After furious debates over disfranchising Confederates, the new
Constitution made it impossible for an ex-Confederate to hold office,
but he could vote. General Schofield, under pressure from national
Republicans to be more moderate, still controlled the state through the
Army. He appointed a personal friend, Henry H. Wells as provisional
governor. Wells was a Carpetbagger and a former Union general. Using
the Freedman's Bureau, to control the black element in the Republican
Party, Schofield and Wells fought and defeated Hunnicutt and the
Scalawag Republicans and ruined Hunnicutt's newspaper financially by
taking away state printing. The national government ordered elections
in 1869 that included a vote on the new Underwood constitution, a
separate one on its two disfranchisement clauses that would have
permanently stripped the vote from most former rebels, and a separate
vote for state officials. The Army enrolled the Freedmen (ex-slaves) as
voters but would not allow some 20,000 prominent whites to vote or hold
office. The Republicans nominated Wells for governor, as Hunnicutt and
most Scalawags went over to the opposition.
The leader of the
moderate Republicans, calling themselves "True Republicans" was William
Mahone (1826–1895), a railroad president and former Confederate general
who formed a coalition of white Scalawag Republicans, some blacks, and
the ex-Democrats who formed the Conservative Party. Mahone said it was
time for a New Departure for Virginia: whites had to accept the results
of the war, including civil rights and the vote for Freedmen. Mahone
convinced the Conservative Party to drop its own candidate and endorse
Mahone's candidate for governor Gilbert C. Walker, while Mahone's
people would endorse Conservatives for the legislative races. Mahone's
plan worked, as the voters in 1869 elected Walker and defeated as well
the proposed disfranchisement of ex-Confederates. When the new
legislature ratified the 14th and Fifteenth Amendments to the U.S.
Constitution, Congress seated its delegation and Virginia
Reconstruction came to an end in January 1870. The Radical Republicans,
although in power 1867-69 during Army rule, were thus ousted in a fair,
non-violent election. Indeed, Virginia was thus the only southern state
not to have a civilian Radical government. Nevertheless white
Virginians generally came to share the bitterness so typical of the
southern attitudes.
Gilded Age
Railroad and industrial growth
In
addition to those that were rebuilt, new railroads developed after the
Civil War. In 1868, under railroad baron Collis P. Huntington, the
Virginia Central Railroad was merged and transformed into the
Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad. In 1870, several railroads were merged to
form the Atlantic, Mississippi and Ohio Railroad, later renamed Norfolk
& Western. In 1880, the towpath of the now-defunct James River
& Kanawha canal was transformed into the Richmond and Allegheny
Railroad, which within a decade would merge into the Chesapeake &
Ohio. Others would include the Southern Railroad, the Seaboard Air
Line, and the Atlantic Coast Line; still others would eventually reach
into Virginia, including the Baltimore & Ohio and the Pennsylvania
Railroad. The rebuilt Richmond, Fredericksburg, and Potomac Railroad
eventually was linked to Washington, D.C..
In the 1880s, the
Pocahontas Coalfield opened up in far southwest Virginia, with others
to follow, in turn providing more demand for railroads transportation.
In 1909, the Virginian Railway opened, built for the express purpose of
hauling coal from the mountains of West Virginia to the ports at
Hampton Roads. The growth of railroads resulted in the creation of new
towns and rapid growth of others, including Clifton Forge, Roanoke,
Crewe and Victoria. The railroad boom was not without incident: the
Wreck of the Old 97 occurred en route from Danville to North Carolina
in 1903, later immortalized by a popular ballad.
With the
invention of the cigarette rolling machine, and the great increase in
smoking in the early twentieth century, cigarettes and other tobacco
products became a major industry in Richmond and Petersburg. Tobacco
magnates such as Lewis Ginter funded a number of public institutions.
Readjustment, public education, segregation
Former Confederate General William Mahone led the Readjuster Party during the 1870s.
A
division among Virginia politicians occurred in the 1870s, when those
who supported a reduction of Virginia's pre-war debt ("Readjusters")
opposed those who felt Virginia should repay its entire debt plus
interest ("Funders"). Virginia's pre-war debt was primarily for
infrastructure improvements overseen by the Virginia Board of Public
Works, much of which were destroyed during the war or in the new State
of West Virginia.
After his unsuccessful bid for the Democratic
nomination for governor in 1877, former confederate General and
railroad executive William Mahone became the leader of the
"Readjusters", forming a coalition of conservative Democrats and white
and black Republicans. The so-called Readjusters aspired "to break the
power of wealth and established privilege" and to promote public
education. The party promised to "readjust" the state debt in order to
protect funding for newly-established public education, and allocate a
fair share to the new State of West Virginia. Its proposal to repeal
the poll tax and increase funding for schools and other public
facilities attracted biracial and cross-party support.
The
Readjuster Party was successful in electing its candidate, William E.
Cameron as governor, and he served from 1882 to 1886. Mahone served as
a Senator in the U.S. Congress from 1881 to 1887, as well as fellow
Readjustor Harrison H. Riddleberger, who served in the U.S. Senate from
1883 to 1889. Readjusters' effective control of Virginia politics
lasted until 1883, when they lost majority control in the state
legislature, followed by the election of Democrat Fitzhugh Lee as
governor in 1885. The Virginia legislature replaced both Mahone and
Riddleberger in the U.S. Senate with Democrats.
In 1888 the
exception to Readjustor and Democratic control was John Mercer
Langston, who was elected to Congress from the Petersburg area on the
Republican ticket. He was the first black elected to Congress from the
state, and the last for nearly a century. He served one term. A
talented and vigorous politician, he was an Oberlin College graduate.
He had long been active in the abolitionist cause in Ohio before the
Civil War, had been president of the National Equal Rights League from
1864 to 1868, and had headed and created the law department at Howard
University, and acted as president of the college. When elected, he was
president of what became Virginia State University.
While the
Readjustor Party faded, the goal of public education remained strong,
with institutions established for the education of schoolteachers. In
1884, the state acquired a bankrupt women's college at Farmville and
opened it as a normal school. Growth of public education led to the
need for additional teachers. In 1908, two additional normal schools
were established, one at Fredericksburg and one at Harrisonburg, and in
1910, one at Radford.
After the Readjuster Party disappeared,
Virginia Democrats rapidly passed legislation and constitutional
amendments that effectively disfranchised African Americans and many
poor whites, through the use of poll taxes and literacy tests. They
created white, one-party rule under the Democratic Party for the next
80 years. White state legislators passed statutes that restored white
supremacy through imposition of Jim Crow segregation. In 1902 Virginia
passed a new constitution that reduced voter registration.
Progressive Era
Lexington
High School by architect Charles M. Robinson, built in 1908, was
typical of the modern public schools that cities built during the
Progressive Era.
The Progressive Era after 1900 brought numerous
reforms, designed to modernize the state, increase efficiency, apply
scientific methods, promote education and eliminate waste and
corruption.
A key leader was Governor Claude Swanson (1906-10),
a Democrat who left machine politics behind to win office using the new
primary law. Swanson's coalition of reformers in the legislature, built
schools and highways, raised teacher salaries and standards, promoted
the state's public health programs, and increased funding for prisons.
Swanson fought against child labor, lowered railroad rates and raised
corporate taxes, while systematizing state services and introducing
modern management techniques. The state funded a growing network of
roads, with much of the work done by black convicts in chain gangs.
After Swanson moved to the U.S. Senate in 1910 he promoted
Progressivism at the national level as a supporter of President Woodrow
Wilson, who had been born in Virginia and was considered a native son.
Swanson, as a power on naval affairs, promoted the Norfolk Navy Yard
and Newport News Ship Building and Drydock Corporation. Swanson's
statewide organization evolved in to the "Byrd Organization."
The
State Corporation Commission (SCC) was formed as part of the 1902
Constitution, over the opposition of the railroads, to regulate
railroad policies and rates. The SCC was independent of parties,
courts, and big businesses, and was designed to maximize the public
interest. It became an effective agency, which especially pleased local
merchants by keeping rates low.
Virginia has a long history of
agricultural reformers, and the Progressive Era stimulated their
efforts. Rural areas suffered persistent problems, such as declining
populations, widespread illiteracy, poor farming techniques, and
debilitating diseases among both farm animals and farm families.
Reformers emphasized the need to upgrade the quality of elementary
education. With federal help, in they set up a county agent system
(today the Virginia Cooperative Extension) that taught farmers the
latest scientific methods for dealing with tobacco and other crops, and
farm house wives how to maximize their efficiency in the kitchen and
nursery.
Some upper-class women, typified by Lila Meade
Valentine of Richmond, promoted numerous Progressive reforms, including
kindergartens, teacher education, visiting nurses programs, and
vocational education for both races. Middle-class white women were
especially active in the Prohibition movement. The woman suffrage
movement became entangled in racial issues -- whites were reluctant to
allow black women the vote--and was unable to broaden its base beyond
middle-class whites. Virginia women got the vote in 1920, the result of
a national constitutional amendment.
In higher education, the
key leader was Edwin A. Alderman, president of the University of
Virginia, 1904-31. His goal was the transformation of the southern
university into a force for state service and intellectual leadership.
and educational utility. Alderman successfully professionalized and
modernized the state's system of higher education. He promoted
international standards of scholarship, and a statewide network of
extension services. Joined by other college presidents, he promoted the
Virginia Education Commission, created in 1910. Alderman's crusade
encountered some resistance from traditionalists, and never challenged
the Jim Crow system of segregated schooling.
While the
progressives were modernizers, there was also a surge of interest in
Virginia traditions and heritage, especially among the aristocratic
First Families of Virginia (FFV). The Association for the Preservation
of Virginia Antiquities (APVA), founded in Williamsburg in 1889,
emphasized patriotism in the name of Virginia's 18th-century Founding
Fathers. In 1907, the Jamestown Exposition was held near Norfolk to
celebrate the tricentennial of the arrival of the first English
colonists and the founding of Jamestown.
Attended by numerous
federal dignitaries, and serving as the launch point for the Great
White Fleet, the Jamestown Exposition also spurred interest in the
military potential of the area. The site of the exposition would later
become, in 1917, the location of the Norfolk Naval Station. The
proximity to Washington, D.C., the moderate climate, and strategic
location of a large harbor at the center of the Atlantic seaboard made
Virginia a key location during World War I for new military
installations. These included Fort Story, the Army Signal Corps station
at Langley, Quantico Marine Base in Prince William County, Fort Belvoir
in Fairfax County, Fort Lee near Petersburg and Fort Eustis, in Warwick
County (now Newport News).
Interwar
Rapidan Camp served as
Herbert Hoover's Presidential retreat (the predecessor to Camp David),
in what would become Shenandoah National Park.
Temperance became
an issue in the early 20th century. In 1916, a statewide referendum
passed to outlaw the consumption of alcohol. This was overturned in
1933.
After 1930, tourism began to grown exponentially with the
development of Colonial Williamsburg, which helped the Historic
Triangle area become one of the most popular tourist destinations in
the world. Shenandoah National Park was constructed from newly gathered
land, as well as the Blue Ridge Parkway and Skyline Drive. The Civilian
Conservation Corps played a major role in developing that National
Park, as well as Pocahontas State Park. By 1940 new highway bridges
crossed the lower Potomac, Rappahannock, York, and James Rivers,
bringing to an end the long-distance steamboat service which had long
served as primary transportation throughout the Chesapeake Bay area.
Ferryboats remain today in only a few places.
Byrd machine
Blacks
comprised a third of the population but lost nearly all their political
power. The electorate was so small that from 1905 to 1948 government
employees and officeholders cast a third of the votes in state
elections. This small, controllable electorate facilitated the
formation of a powerful statewide political machine by Harry Byrd
(1887–1966), which dominated from the 1920s to the 1960s. Most of the
blacks who remained politically active supported the Byrd organization,
which in turn protected their right to vote, making Virginia's race
relations the most harmonious in the South before the 1950s, according
to V.O. Key. Not until Federal civil rights legislation was passed in
1964 and 1965 did African Americans recover the power to vote and the
protection of other basic constitutional civil rights.
WWII and Modern era
The
economic stimulus of World War II brought full employment for workers,
high wages, and high profits for farmers. It brought in many thousands
of soldiers and sailors for training. Virginia sent 300,000 men and
4,000 women to the services. The buildup for the war greatly increased
the state's naval and industrial economic base, as did the growth of
federal government jobs in Northern Virginia and adjacent Washington,
DC. The Pentagon was built in Arlington as the largest office building
in the world. Additional installations were added: in 1941, Fort A.P.
Hill and Fort Pickett opened, and Fort Lee was reactivated. The Newport
News shipyard expanded its labor force from 17,000 to 70,000 in 1943,
while the Radford Arsenal had 22,000 workers making explosives.
Turnoverr was very high--in one three month period the Newport News
shipyard hired 8400 new workers as 8,300 others quit.
Cold War and Space Age
A Little Joe rocket being prepared for launch at the Wallops Flight Facility near Chincoteague, as part of Project Mercury
In
addition to general postwar growth, the Cold War resulted in further
growth in both Northern Virginia and Hampton Roads. With the Pentagon
already established in Arlington, the newly formed Central Intelligence
Agency located its headquarters further afield at Langley (unrelated to
the Air Force Base). In the early 1960s, the new Dulles International
Airport was built, straddling the Fairfax County-Loudoun County border.
Other sites in Northern Virginia included the listening station at Vint
Hill. Due to the presence of the U.S. Atlantic Fleet in Norfolk, in
1952 the Allied Command Atlantic of NATO was headquartered there, where
it remained for the duration of the Cold War. Later in the 1950s and
across the river, Newport News Shipbuilding would begin construction of
the USS Enterprise--the world's first nuclear-powered aircraft
carrier-- and the subsequent atomic carrier fleet.
Virginia also
witnessed American efforts in the Space Race. When the National
Advisory Committee for Aeronautics was transformed into the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration in 1958, the resulting Space Task
Group headquartered at the laboratories of Langley Research Center.
From there, it would initiate Project Mercury, and would remain the
headquarters of the U.S. manned spaceflight program until its transfer
to Houston in 1962. On the Eastern Shore, near Chincoteague, Wallops
Flight Facility served as a rocket launch site, including the launch of
Little Joe 2 on December 4, 1959, which sent a Rhesus monkey, Sam, into
suborbital spaceflight. Langley later oversaw the Viking program to
Mars.
The new U.S. Interstate highway system begun in the 1950s
and the new Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel in 1958 helped transform
Virginia Beach from a tiny resort town into one of the state's largest
cities by 1963, and spurring the growth of the Hampton Roads region
linked by the Hampton Roads Beltway. In the western portion of the
state, completion of north-south Interstate 81 brought better access
and new businesses to dozens of counties over a distance of 300 miles
(480 km) as well as facilitating travel by students at the many
Shenandoah area colleges and universities. The creation of Smith
Mountain Lake, Lake Anna, Claytor Lake, Lake Gaston, and Buggs Island
Lake, by damming rivers, attracted many retirees and vacationers to
those rural areas. As the century drew to a close, Virginia tobacco
growing gradually declined due to health concerns, although not at
steeply as in Southern Maryland. A state community college system
brought affordable higher education within commuting distance of most
Virginians, including those in remote, underserved localities. Other
new institutions were founded, most notably George Mason University and
Liberty University. Localities such as Danville and Martinsville
suffered greatly as their manufacturing industries closed.
Massive resistance and Civil Rights
The
state government orchestrated systematic resistance to federal court
orders requiring the end of segregation. It even closed all public
schools in Prince Edward County, but finally relented. The first black
students attended the University of Virginia School of Law in 1950, and
Virginia Tech in 1953. In 2008, various actions of the Civil Rights
Movement were commemorated by the Virginia Civil Rights Memorial in
Richmond.
Postmodern commonwealth
Opening in 1976, the Washington Metro began to link Washington D.C. with the growing population centers in Northern Virginia
By
the 1980s, Northern Virginia and the Hampton Roads region had achieved
the greatest growth and prosperity, chiefly because of employment
related to Federal government agencies and defense, as well as an
increase in technology in Northern Virginia. Shipping through the Port
of Hampton Roads began expansion which continued into the early 21st
century as new container facilities were opened. Coal piers in Newport
News and Norfolk had recorded major gains in export shipments by
August, 2008. The recent expansion of government programs in the areas
near Washington has profoundly affected the economy of Northern
Virginia whose population has experienced large growth and great
ethnic/ cultural diversification, exemplified by communities such as
Tysons Corner, Reston and dense, urban Arlington. The subsequent growth
of defense projects has also generated a local information technology
industry. In recent years, intolerably heavy commuter traffic and the
urgent need for both road and rail transportation improvements have
been a major issue in Northern Virginia. The Hampton Roads region has
also experienced much growth, as have the western suburbs of Richmond
in both Henrico and Chesterfield Counties.
On January 13, 1990,
Douglas Wilder became the first African American to be elected as
Governor of a US state since Reconstruction when he was elected
Governor of Virginia.
Virginia served as a major center for
information technology during the early days of the Internet and
network communication. Internet and other communications companies
clustered in the Dulles Corridor. By 1993, the Washington area had the
largest amount of Internet backbone and the highest concentration of
Internet service providers. In 2000, more than half of all Internet
traffic flowed along the Dulles Toll Road. Bill von Meister founded two
Virginia companies that played major roles in the commercialization of
the Internet: McLean, Virginia based The Source and Control Video
Corporation, forerunner of America Online. While short-lived, The
Source was one of the first online service providers along side
CompuServe. On hand for the launch of The Source, Isaac Asimov remarked
"This is the beginning of the information age." The Source helped pave
the way for future online service providers including another Virginia
company founded by von Meister, America Online (AOL). AOL became the
largest provider of Internet access during the Dial-up era of Internet
access. AOL maintained a Virginia headquarters until the
then-struggling company moved in 2007.
In 2006 former Governor
of Virginia Mark Warner gave a speech and interview in the massively
multiplayer online game Second Life, becoming the first politician to
appear in a video game. In 2007 Virginia speedily passed the nation's
first spaceflight act by a vote of 99-0 in the House of Delegates.
Northern Virginia company Space Adventures is currently the only
company in the world offering space tourism. In 2008 Virginia became
the first state to pass legislation on Internet safety, with mandatory
educational courses for 11- to 16-year-olds.
Virginia was
targeted in the September 11, 2001 attacks, as American Airlines Flight
77 was hijacked and crashed into the Pentagon in Arlington County.


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