| Virginia, Lexington — Barracks The Virginia Military Institute |
| | has been designated a Registered National Historic Landmark Under the provisions of the Historic Sites Act of August 21, 1935 this site possesses exceptional value in commemorating or illustrating the history of the United States. U. S. Department of the Interior National Park Service 1966 — Map (db m58620) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — Campbell House, ca. 1845 — Historic Lexington |
| | Andrew Reid purchased this lot in 1784 from the town’s trustees. Later, between 1844 and 1845, Alexander T. Sloan, a local hotel owner and businessman, built this house. His wife reported that the site was a “rough and unsightly piece of ground” when they purchased it, but they transformed it into their “mansion house.” The building is referred to as an “I” house, a vernacular building tradition with origins in England. Distinguished by elegant Federal . . . — Map (db m58734) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — Cincinnatus Citizen-Soldier |
| | VMI and the Citizen – Soldier The Virginia Military Institute program is based on the concept of the citizen - soldier, a man prepared to take his place in civilian life but trained and ready for military leadership in time of national need. It is this philosophy of higher education that has distinguished the Institute since 1839 when J. T. L. Preston, who championed the founding of the college, envisioned its graduates as “fair specimens of citizen – soldiers.” It . . . — Map (db m58850) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — Colonel Claudius Crozet |
| | Born in France Dec. 31, 1789 Died in Virginia Jan. 29, 1864 Soldier Scholar Educator Engineer Chairman of the first Board of Visitors V. M. I. 1837 1845 — Map (db m58849) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — Cyrus Hall McCormick — 1809 • • • 1884 |
| | Native of RockBridge County Virginia He liberated agriculture befriended education and advanced the cause of religion Trustee and benefactor of Washington and Lee University — Map (db m58713) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — General Lee’s Beloved Traveller |
| | In Memory of General Lee’s Beloved Traveller Rarely has an animal captured so much affection. Traveller, first called Jeff Davis and later Greenbrier, was born in 1857 near Blue Sulphur Springs (now in West Virginia). In 1862, Lee purchased him and renamed him after one of George Washington’s horses. This sturdy American saddlebred, sixteen hands high, iron gray with black mane and tail, carried Lee through many of the Civil War’s major campaigns, and later on pleasant late afternoon rides . . . — Map (db m58695) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — General Lemuel C. Shepherd Jr. |
| | U.S.M.C. VMI 1917 Combat Veteran World Wars I and II – Korea Commandant U.S. Marine Corps Chairman VMI Foundation Presented by Bruce B. Cameron VMI 1938 — Map (db m58743) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — George C. Marshall — V.M.I. Class of 1901 |
| | General of the Army George Catlett Marshall was born December 31, 1880, at Uniontown, Pennsylvania. After graduating from the Virginia Military Institute in 1901 as First Captain of the Corps of Cadets, he spent fifty years in the active service of his country. He died October 16, 1959, at Washington, D.C., and is buried in Arlington National Cemetery. Chief of Staff, United States Army 1939 – 1945 Secretary of State 1947 – 1949 President, American Red Cross 1949 – 1950 . . . — Map (db m58740) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — George Catlett Marshall |
| | The Virginia Military Institute is a school that has given to the United States and to the armed services many of its most distinguished members. Among these is a man who in World War II stood out as one of the great soldiers and later as one of the great statesmen of our time.George Catlett MarshallHe is a patriot, a distinguished soldier, and the most selfless public servant I have ever met. Any school that can boast graduates like General Marshall – and all his associates who have . . . — Map (db m58704) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — George Washington |
| | The General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Virginia have caused this Statue to be erected as a monument of affection and gratitude toGeorge Washingtonwho uniting to the endowments of the Hero, the virtues of the Patriot, and exerting both in establishing the Liberties of his Country, has rendered his name dear to his Fellow Citizens, and given the world an immortal example of true Glory. Done in the year of Christ one thousand seven hundred and eighty eight and in the year of the Commonwealth the twelfth. — Map (db m58708) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — Hotchkiss House |
| | Farris P. Hotchkiss received his B.A. from Washington and Lee University in 1958. He was a member of Beta Theta Pi, Phi Eta Sigma, the freshman honorary society and Omicron Delta Kappa leadership fraternity; editor of the Calyx yearbook; and president of the Student Service Society. Farris began 35 years of exemplary service to W&L in 1966 as Assistant Dean of Students and Director of Financial Aid. In 1968 he became the University’s first Director of Development, presiding over the first . . . — Map (db m58745) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — Jackson’s Classroom |
| | This second story room and those immediately to the right and left of this plaque composed the classroom used by Major Thomas Jonathan Jackson when he served as Professor of Natural and Experimental Philosophy at the Virginia Military Institute 1851 – 1861 — Map (db m58619) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — Jackson's Garden |
| | This backyard kitchen garden provided the household with a variety of flowers, fruit and vegetables. Major Jackson reported in an 1860 letter that the garden included, “lima beans, snap beans, carrots, parsnips, salsify, onions, cabbage, turnips, beets, potatoes, and some inferior muskmelons.” By using a cold frame or hotbed to protect tender plants from frost, Major Jackson could extend the growing season. This practice helped insure a diet of fresh produce for much of the year. . . . — Map (db m15640) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — I 24 — John Chavis |
| | John Chavis (1763 – 1838), a free-born African-American veteran of the American Revolution was a native of Granville County, North Carolina. He was also one of the first college-educated men of color in the United States. Chavis studied at the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University) in 1792 and attended Liberty Hall Academy (present-day Washington and Lee University) in 1796. The Lexington Presbytery licensed him to preach in 1800. Chavis returned to North Carolina where he . . . — Map (db m58608) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — John Robinson |
| | Honor to whom honor Sacred to the memory of John Robinson a native of Ireland, a soldier of Washington, and a magnificent benefactor of Washington College Born A.D. 1754 Died A.D. 1826 Erected 1855 Restored 1939 — Map (db m58744) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — Jordan’s Point — “A day I will never forget . . . ” Margaret Junkin Preston diary, June 12, 1864 |
| | On this spot, in the early morning hours of Saturday, June 11, 1864, Confederate General John McCausland and about 1,500 gray-clad soldiers lined the riverbank between a cedar thicket and the warehouses that cluttered the canal landing. They stretched up the bluff behind you where a Confederate artillery section was located. By mid-morning, General David Hunter’s 18,000 Union infantry and artillery occupied the hillside across the river in front of you, en route to Lynchburg to destroy the . . . — Map (db m58589) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — Korean War — * Roll of Honor * — 25 July 1950 – 27 July 1953 |
| | In remembrance of VMI alumni who made the ultimate sacrifice while serving their country. First Lieutenant John Olin Bates, Jr., ’47, USA • First Lieutenant James Desmond Carey, ’51, USAF • First Lieutenant John Adam Dille, Jr., ‘48B, USA • Major William Edwin Dressler, ’38, USA • Lieutenant Patterson Gilliam, ’47, USAF • Colonel Douglas Hampton Hatfield, ’40, USA • Captain William Harris Hickman, ’40, USA • Major Clarence Ames Martin, Jr. ’44, USA • Lieutenant Irvin Edgar Nachman, ‘49A, USA • . . . — Map (db m58860) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — Last Home of Traveller |
| | The last home of Traveller Through war and peace the faithful, devoted and beloved horse of General Robert E. Lee Placed by the Virginia Division United Daughters of Confederacy — Map (db m58609) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — Lee-Jackson House |
| | Here lived Margaret Junkin Preston 1848 – 1857 Poetess of the Confederacy Thomas J. (Stonewall) Jackson 1853 – 1857 Robert E. Lee 1865 – 1869 Placed by The Rockbridge Historical Society 1957 — Map (db m58692) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — Lexington — ”Shells went through the houses” |
| | Hunter's Raid (Preface):On May 26, 1864, Union Gen. David Hunter marched south from Cedar Creek near Winchester to drive out Confederate forces, lay waste to the Shenandoah Valley, and destroy transportation facilities at Lynchburg. His raid was part of Gen. Ulysses S. Grant’s strategy to attack Confederates simultaneously throughout Virginia. After defeating Gen. William E. “Grumble” Jones at Piedmont on June 5, Hunter marched to Lexington, burned Virginia Military . . . — Map (db m4809) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — Liberty Hall Academy — 1782 - 1803 |
| | Washington and Lee University traces its origins to Augusta Academy, a small classical school established din 1749 by Scotch-Irish pioneers some twenty mile north of Lexington. In 1776, the patriotic fervor of the American Revolution caused Augusta Academy Trustees to change its name to Liberty Hall. In 1782, the same year that the school relocated at this site, the Virginia legislature chartered the institution as Liberty Hall Academy and granted it the authority to confer degrees upon its . . . — Map (db m32111) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — I 22 — Liberty Hall Academy Ruins |
| | Just north stand the ruins of Liberty Hall Academy's stone academic building, which was constructed in 1793. Founded in 1749 near Greenville as Augusta Academy, the school was reestablished in 1776 at Timber Ridge and patriotically renamed Liberty Hall Academy. It moved here to Mulberry Hill in 1782, when the Virginia General Assembly chartered it as a college. In 1796, in honor of President George Washington's endowment gift of James River (canal) Co. stock, it was renamed Washington Academy. . . . — Map (db m32109) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — Little Sorrel |
| | War horse of Gen. T. J. Jackson Placed by Virginia Division United Daughters of the Confederacy July 30, 1997 — Map (db m58697) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — Lt. Gen. Thomas Jonathan “Stonewall” Jackson 1824-1863 |
| | Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson is best known for his leadership of Confederate troops during the American Civil War, and especially for his celebrated Valley Campaign of 1862. Thomas Jackson was a country boy from (West) Virginia who became a graduate of the United States Military Academy and a hero of the Mexican War. In 1851 Major Jackson came to Lexington to teach Natural Philosophy at the Virginia Military Institute. Jackson left Lexington in April 1861, at the outbreak of war, . . . — Map (db m15637) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — Morris House |
| | The Joella & Stewart Morris House of Washington and Lee University Built 1842 as a faculty home. Restored 1986 as the University guest center by Mr. & Mrs. Morris of Houston, Texas — Map (db m58711) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — I 22-a — Original African American Cemetery |
| | Near the intersection of Washington and Lewis Streets stood the original burial ground for Lexington's substantial free black community and slaves dating to the early 1800's. The majority of the original burials were in unmarked graves and no records were maintained of these burials. The Town of Lexington obtained ownership of the cemetery in 1876 and closed itin 1880 and the persons buried there were purportedly moved to the Evergreen Cemetery, although there is little information to document . . . — Map (db m23800) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — Rockaway |
| | A rockaway is a low, four wheeled pleasure carriage with a standing top, open at the sides. It is named for the town of Rockaway, New jersey, where they were originally made. Jackson probably bought his rockaway in 1859, possibly from the local carriage dealer in Lexington. His wife wrote in her memoirs, “Upon a visit from my mother to us, he went out and, unexpected to me, bought a rockaway, saying she was not strong enough to walk all over town, and he wanted her to see and enjoy . . . — Map (db m15641) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — Sigma Nu Fraternity |
| | Founded at Virginia Military Institute January 1, 1869 on a rock ledge formerly located 65 yards north west of this spot Cadet Founders James Frank Hopkins Greenfield Quarles James McIlvaine Riley Erected August 25, 1935 during the Twenty-seventh Biennial Grand Chapter — Map (db m58710) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — Stonewall Jackson |
| | The Virginia Military Institute will be heard from today. General Jackson at Chancellorsville May 3, 1863 [ Lower Marker: ] The 1990 restoration of the Jackson statue was made possible by the descendants of William Bradford Ryland, Class of 1924, Alexander Fleet Ryland, Class of 1897, and Josiah Ryland, Class of 1859, who studied under Jackson at the Institute. — Map (db m58698) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — The Alexander-Withrow House, ca. 1793 — Historic Lexington |
| | The Alexander-Withrow House is one of the oldest surviving structures in Lexington. Dating from ca. 1793, it was built by William Alexander one of the area’s first settlers and the town’s first postmaster. A large and distinctive building, with unusually fine brickwork, it has undergone several renovations. It was badly damaged in the 1796 fire that destroyed much of the town, but it survived. In 1851, when the city lowered its streets, this house received a whole story underpinning it. The . . . — Map (db m58736) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — The Cabell House |
| | Dedicated to the memory of William Henry Cabell Cadet First Sergeant, Co. D. VMI Class of 1865 killed at the Battle of New Market May 15, 1864 Established by his descendants — Map (db m58749) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — The Cadet Battery |
| | (Original Plaque): These smooth-bore six-pounder cannon were received at V.M.I. early in June, 1848, and were especially cast lighter than standard, at Watervleit Arsenal. Each bears the seal of Virginia. They were used in war by the Richmond Howitzers, the Rockbridge Artillery and other units and served at First Manassas, Ball's Bluff, the Peninsula, Williamsburg, Savage's Station and Malvern Hill. At Falling Waters (Hainesville) they fired on July 2, 1861, the first hostile cannon-shot . . . — Map (db m42966) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — The Fame of Stonewall Jackson |
| | Field Marshal the Right Honorable Viscount Wolseley, K.P., G.C.B., G.M., G.C.M.G. British soldier of the highest rank, says: “The fame of Stonewall Jackson is no longer the exclusive property of Virginia and the South; it has become the birthright of every man privileged to call himself an American.” This tablet placed by the Camp Frank Paxton, S.C.V., and the Mary Custis Lee Chapter, U.D.C. — Map (db m58730) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — The Jacob Ruff House, ca. 1829 — Historic Lexington |
| | This house is a fine example of the Valley Federal style with elegant detailing including the fanlight over the front door and a molded brick cornice. When the streets were lowered in 1851, the entrance was reoriented to the side. The Ruff Family had a hat factory next door in the early 1800s, but used this house as a showroom and living space. In 1850 John Ruff deeded the property to his son, Jacob Ruff, with permission to build a future house between the two properties. That may explain the . . . — Map (db m58732) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — The Sloan House, ca. 1844-45 — Historic Lexington |
| | Alexander T. Sloan and his wife, prominent local hotel keepers, bought the land at the corner of Randolph and Washington Streets in 1844 and proceeded to build their “mansion house” and several “tenements.” This house, at 107 is one of the tenements. Typical of early nineteenth century houses in the valley, it is two stories with central passage dividing two rooms on each floor. What is unusual about the house is its site. The ground was described by Mrs. Sloan as . . . — Map (db m58735) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — The Stonewall Jackson House |
| | This typical Federal-style town house, with a later stone addition, was the home of Thomas Jonathan Jackson and his wife, Mary Anna. They lived here with five of their six slaves before the Civil War.
After her husband’s death in 1863, Mrs. Jackson kept the house as a rental property until 1906. She sold it to the United Daughters of the Confederacy for use as a community hospital. The house served as Stonewall Jackson Memorial Hospital for nearly fifty years and underwent many changes . . . — Map (db m15638) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — Traveller’s Grave |
| | Traveller Horse of Gen. Robert E. Lee Placed by Virginia Div UDC May 8, 1971 [ Second Marker : ] Traveller’s Grave This renovation and landscaping honors Anne Wilson in appreciation for her service to Washington and Lee as the University’s first lady from 1983 to 1995. Like General Lee, Anne Wilson is a lover of animals who believes that their company and care enhance the human condition. The Alumni Board of Directors Washington and Lee University 1995 Additional support for . . . — Map (db m58611) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — I 1 — Virginia Military Institute — A National Historic Landmark |
| | The nation's first state military college, VMI was founded in 1839 on the concept of the citizen-soldier. The Corps of Cadets fought as a unit in the 1864 Battle of New Market. Confederate General "Stonewall" Jackson and oceanographer Matthew Fontaine Maury were among its faculty. George C. Marshall, a 1901 graduate, served as Army Chief of Staff in W.W. II, and later as Secretary of State, devising the Marshall Plan to rebuild Europe. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. — Map (db m32100) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — I-1 — Virginia Military Institute |
| | A state military, engineering and arts college, founded in 1839. Graduates of it have taken a prominent part in every war since the Mexican War, 2,000 of them serving in the World War. The cadets fought as a corps at New Market in 1864. Among the members of the faculty were Stonewall Jackson and the noted scientist Matthew F. Maury and John M. Brooke. — Map (db m50376) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — Virginia Military Institute — The Nation’s First State-Sponsored Military College |
| | Virginia Military Institute was founded in 1839, becoming the nation’s first state-sponsored military college. Consistently ranked among America’s best undergraduate colleges, VMI educates the citizen-soldier by offering a rigorous academic program set within a military framework and governed by an unparalleled honor code. All cadets participate in the Reserve Officer Training Corps, choosing Army, Marine Corps, Navy, or Air Force. Over half of the graduating class accepts a commission. . . . — Map (db m58864) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — Virginia Military Institute Historic District |
| | has been designated a National Historic Landmark This site possesses national significance in commemorating the history of the United States of America 1975 National Park Service United States Department of the Interior — Map (db m58621) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — Virginia Mourning Her Dead |
| | Company A Henry A. Wise, Jr., Captain Commanding C. H. Minge, Cadet Captain W. C. Hardy, Lieutenant • W. Morson, Lieutenant • E. M. Ross, Sergeant • W. B. Shaw, Sergeant • W. T. Duncan, Sergeant • J. Douglass, Sergeant • H. Wood, Sergeant • L. Royster, Corporal • G. K. Macon, Corporal • R. L. Brockenbrough, Corporal • S. F. Atwill, Corporal Privates Adams, R. A. • Allen, D. • Anderson, C. J. • Ashley, C. G. • Bagnall, J. S. • Binford, R. J. • Bowen, H. C. • . . . — Map (db m58845) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — VMI World War II Memorial |
| | Men of the Virginia Military Institute who died in the Armed Services in World War II 1941 – 1946 Reid Stanley Aaron Va. 1940 • Hawes Netherlands Adams N.J. 1943 • James Rivers Adams Va. 1931 • George David Akers Va. 1948 – A • James Granville Allen, Jr. Tenn. 1944 • James Pleasant Allen, Jr. Ga. 1933 • Marvin Judson Anderson, Jr. Va. 1943 • Charles Castro Arms N.C. 1939 • Charles Harwood Augustine Va. 1945 • John Richard Banks N.J. 1942 • Joseph X. Bell Va. . . . — Map (db m63836) HM WM |
| Virginia, Lexington — I-8 — Washington and Lee University |
| | Founded, 1749, as Augusta Academy, near Greenville; reestablished at Timber Ridge, May, 1776, as Liberty Hall Academy; moved to Lexington and chartered as a college, 1782; endowed by George Washington, 1796, and named for him. Under presidency, 1865-1870, of Robert E. Lee (buried in the university chapel), whose name after death was incorporated in the official title. — Map (db m12271) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — Washington and Lee University |
| | has been designated a Registered National Historic Landmark Under the provisions of the Historic Sites Act of August 21, 1935 this site possesses exceptional value in commemorating or illustrating the history of the United States. U. S. Department of the Interior National Park Service 1972 — Map (db m58613) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — William Graham — 1746 - 1799 |
| | Was the founder and first rector of Liberty Hall Academy which was later to become Washington and Lee University. He was first buried in the churchyard of St. John’s Church, Richmond, VA. In 1911 his remains were brought to Lexington and now lie here beneath the original tombstone, near the grave of his friend and classmate, “Lighthorse Harry” Lee, on the campus of the school he administered and loved. — Map (db m58696) HM |
| Virginia, Lexington — A 42 — William Henry Ruffner |
| | William Henry Ruffner, educational reformer, clergyman, and geologist, was born in Lexington on 11 Feb. 1824. After pursuing careers as a preacher and a geological surveyor, he was appointed in 1870 as Virginia's first superintendent of public instruction by the General Assembly. During Ruffner's tenure, he developed Virginia's free public school system. Resigning from his position in 1882, Ruffner returned to geological surveying and farming before becoming the president of the State Female . . . — Map (db m23806) HM |
| Virginia (Rockbridge County), Lexington — A 52 — Birthplace of Sam Houston |
| | In a cabin on the hilltop to the east Sam Houston was born, March 2, 1793. As commander-in-chief of the Texas army, he won the battle of San Jacinto, which secured Texan independence, April 21, 1836. He was President of Texas, 1836-1838, 1841-1844; United States Senator, 1846-1859; Governor, 1860-1861. He died, July 26, 1863. — Map (db m32087) HM |
| Virginia (Rockbridge County), Lexington — Birthplace of Sam Houston |
| | On March 2, 1793, the noted soldier and statesman Sam Houston was born in a log cabin on a nearby knoll. Houston served with distinction in the U.S. Army and later as a congressman and governor of Tennessee before moving to Texas in the 1830s. In Texas, he soon became a leader in the revolution against the Mexican government under General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna. A signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence on March 2, 1836, Houston was chosen Commander-in-Chief of the Texan army. On . . . — Map (db m32089) HM |
| Virginia (Rockbridge County), Lexington — R 63 — Falling Spring Presbyterian Church |
| | The oldest congregation in the Fincastle Presbytery, the Falling Spring Presbyterian Church, was organized before 1748. The Hanover Presbytery met here in October, 1780. The present Gothic Revival church was constructed of slave-made brick during the Civil War. At the time of its dedication in April, 1864, General Thomas L. Rosser's Cavalry Brigade was camped here. The first burial in the present cemetery was that of John Grigsby of Fruit Hill (1720-1794). — Map (db m23807) HM |
| Virginia (Rockbridge County), Lexington — Jane Todd Crawford |
| | Jane Todd, pioneer heroine of abdominal surgery, was born 12-23-1763 just west of here across Whistle Creek near Todd’s Mill. She married Thomas Crawford in 1794. In 1809 she rode 60 Mi. on horseback to the home of Dr. Ephraim McDowell in Danville, Kentucky., where she underwent the worlds first ovariotomy. The ordeal lasted 25-min., without anesthesia. She recovered, lived 32 more years and died near Graysville, Indiana. The restored McDowell home is a surgical shrine.
Erected 1974 . . . — Map (db m32137) HM |
| Virginia (Rockbridge County), Lexington — A 44 — Liberty Hall Academy |
| | This school, which was founded in 1777 and finally grew into Washington and Lee University, stood a short distance to the southwest of this point. — Map (db m32083) HM |
| Virginia (Rockbridge County), Lexington — L 8 — New Monmouth Church and Morrison's Birthplace |
| | This is the site of the first church, built 1746. Just northeast was the birthplace of William McCutchan Morrison, born, 1867, died, 1918. A missionary to the Belgian Congo, he translated the Bible into native languages and exposed conditions there. Buried at Luebo, Congo. — Map (db m32112) HM |
| Virginia (Rockbridge County), Lexington — Q 11-a — Stonewall Jackson House |
| | Future Confederate Lt. Gen. Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson and his second wife, Mary Anna Morrison, owned a house on Washington Street from 1859 to 1861, while he taught at the Virginia Military Institute. It is the only house he ever owned. A typical Valley I-house built for Cornelius Dorman in 1801, its facade was altered and a stone addition erected before Jackson bought it. In 1907 the Stonewall Jackson Memorial Hospital opened in the house, and it became a museum in 1954. In the 1970s the . . . — Map (db m32099) HM |
| Virginia (Rockbridge County), Lexington — A 46 — Timber Ridge Church |
| | This Presbyterian Church was built in 1756, nineteen years after the first settlement in Rockbridge County. — Map (db m32084) HM |