On Mary Ball Road (Virginia Route 3) just east of Pinckardsville Road (County Route 605), on the right when traveling east.
This church, founded in 1792, was the mother church of Methodism in the Northern Neck of Virginia. The first camp meeting in this section was held here. Bishops Enoch George and David S. Doggett were members of this church. Bishop Joshua Soule, . . . — — Map (db m24175) HM
On Mary Ball Road (Virginia Route 3) just west of River Road (Virginia Route 354), on the left when traveling east.
Lancaster County. Area 130 square miles. Formed in 1652, and named for Lancaster, England. Ancient Christ Church and Epping Forest, birthplace of Washington’s Mother, are in this county.
Richmond County. Area 204 . . . — — Map (db m23607) HM
On Irvington Road (Virginia Route 200) at King Carter Drive, on the right when traveling south on Irvington Road.
To our departed comrades who served their country during the Great World War
Fred D. Mason
Died in Germany
Aug. 20, 1921
Robert H. Barker
Died in Service
Nov. 14, 1918
A separate bronze plaque reads:
Rebuilt in May 1988 . . . — — Map (db m39948) WM
On Jessie Dupont Memorial Highway (Virginia Route 200) just south of Ditchley Road (County Route 607), on the right when traveling north.
Ditchley, five miles northeast, was patented in 1651 by Colonel Richard Lee. The first house dated from 1687, the present house was built by Kendall Lee in 1752.
Cobbs Hall, near by, was acquired by Richard Lee, probably before 1651. A house . . . — — Map (db m24475) HM
On Mary Ball Road (Virginia Route 3) at Virginia Route 651, on the right when traveling south on Mary Ball Road.
Dr. Morgan E. Norris, a Lancaster native and the Northern Neck’s first black physician, practiced medicine at this site 1917-1964. He opened to all races specialty surgical clinics, bringing enhanced medical care to the lower Northern Neck. In 1928 . . . — — Map (db m97210) HM
On East Church Street (Virginia Route 200) near South Main Street (Virginia Route 3), on the left when traveling north.
Here was born, October 28, 1817, Henrietta Hall (daughter of Colonel Addison Hall), first American woman missionary to China. She married Rev. J. Lewis Shuck, and was sent with him to China by the Baptist Board of Foreign Missions, arriving there in . . . — — Map (db m24248) HM
Hughlett Point Natural Area Preserve is situated on a small peninsula on the western shore of the Chesapeake Bay. The preserve contains tidal and non-tidal wetlands, and exemplary undeveloped beach and low dunes, and upland forest communities. It is . . . — — Map (db m97241) HM
Near Balls Neck Road (Virginia Route 605) 1.1 miles south of Harding Wharf Drive (Virginia Route 670), on the left when traveling south.
Well known for her contributions to this area of Virginia, Jessie Ball duPont (nee Jessie Dew Ball) was born on Ball family property about one mile north of Hughlett Point.
Schoolteacher
She was the first teacher at Shiloh School in . . . — — Map (db m97240) HM
On Main Street (Virginia Route 3) at East Church Street (Virginia Route 200), on the right when traveling east on Main Street.
Kilmarnock was called “the Crossroads” about 1664, because multiple thoroughfares crossed here. By the middle of the 18th century, the community was named Steptoe’s Ordinary for a storehouse and tavern owned by William Steptoe I. About . . . — — Map (db m24218) HM
Near North Main Street (Virginia Route 3) just north of Cralle Street, on the right when traveling north.
This garden is a living tribute to all of America's veterans and their families. In silence and respect, this is a place to remember why millions of Americans have fought and died for our liberty and our freedom. Here we renew our promise to fulfill . . . — — Map (db m176061) WM
Located one mile south on land lying between the eastern and western branches of the Corotoman River. It is the site of Barford, the dwelling of Captain Thomas Carter who was living there by 1674. A gift from his father-in-law, Edward Dale, the . . . — — Map (db m130231) HM
On Mary Ball Road (Virginia Route 3) just east of Morattico Road (County Route 622), on the right.
Seven tenths mile west is Epping Forest. The land was patented by Colonel Joseph Ball, who died there in 1711. His daughter, Mary Ball, mother of George Washington, was born there in 1707/8. The house incorporates parts of the original structure. — — Map (db m23764) HM
On Oak Hill Road (Virginia Route 610) 0.3 miles south of Yankee Point Road (Virginia Route 730), on the right when traveling south.
Major Edward and his wife, Diana Skipwith Dale, were among the earliest settlers in Lancaster County. They lived nearby on surrounding land, as part of a 350-acre plantation purchased from William and Jane Clappam in Dec. 1664. Between 1653 and . . . — — Map (db m97204) HM
On River Road (Virginia Route 354) at White Chapel Road (Virginia Route 201), on the left when traveling north on River Road.
Welcome to St. Mary’s Whitechapel Episcopal Church.
By the time of the American Revolution, this church had already served its parish of Virginia colonists for over a century. The parish was founded under the supervision of the House of . . . — — Map (db m23821) HM
Near Belle Isle Road, 0.5 miles south of Creek Landing Road, on the right when traveling south.
(panel 1)
Trade Routes
Virginia Indians at the time of Captain Smith’s explorations were part of a vast commerce and communications network that extended to the Gulf Coast, New England, and the Great Lakes.
Native people on . . . — — Map (db m97199) HM
On Mary Ball Road (Virginia Route 3) just west of White Chapel Road (Virginia Route 201), on the right when traveling east.
Three miles southwest, a church was built there in 1669, and the tablets are of that date. The present church was built in 1741 and was later remodeled. St. Mary’s White Chapel Parish was united with Christ Church Parish in 1752. The tombs of the . . . — — Map (db m60739) HM
On Mary White Chapel Road (Virginia Route 201) at River Road (U.S. 354), on the right when traveling south on Mary White Chapel Road.
Seven miles southeast on Town Creek near the
mouth of the Corrotoman River is the site of
Queenstown. The town was created in 1692
in accordance with the Act of Ports passed
that year by the Virginia General Assembly
to establish in each county . . . — — Map (db m24049) HM
On River Road (Virginia Route 354) at Morattico Road (County Route 622) on River Road.
About three miles southeast, on the north bank of the Rappahannock River, Bewdley was one of the most unusual houses in Virginia, with two rows of dormer windows. It was built by Major James Ball, cousin of Washington’s mother, about 1750. The first . . . — — Map (db m24021) HM
On Christ Church Road (County Route 646) just south of Weems Road (Virginia Route 222), on the right when traveling south.
John Carter had the first church built on this site; it was completed in 1670 after his death. In 1730, his son Robert “King” Carter, colonial Virginia’s most powerful planter, proposed to build a brick church here at his own expense, . . . — — Map (db m24266) HM
Near Gaskin Road (County Route 709) at Christ Church Road (County Route 646).
Christ Church Lancaster, a singular example of colonial church architecture, was completed circa 1735. This is Robert “King” Carter’s legacy to the community. Its simplicity stands as a witness to the importance of the Christian faith to . . . — — Map (db m24280) HM
On Christ Church Road (County Route 646) just south of Weems Road (Virginia Route 222), on the left when traveling north.
This place was three miles south. Little remains of the house. John Carter obtained patents for a large grant here before 1654, but the place is better known as the home of his son, Robert (“King”) Carter. In April 1814, the British, . . . — — Map (db m24261) HM
Near Christ Church Road (Virginia Route 646) at Gaskins Road (Virginia Route 709), on the right when traveling south.
This west wall donated by
Ennolls A. Stephens
First President
Foundation for
Historic Christ Church, Inc.
1958 - 1962
To honor the first officers who did so much to assist in getting the foundation underway
Richard T. Herndon . . . — — Map (db m176466) HM
Near Christ Church Road, 0.1 miles south of Gaskins Road (Virginia Route 709), on the right when traveling south.
This site was discovered in the fall of 1979 during the excavation for the foundation of the new Volunteer Room, and was identified by archaeologists as the location where the bricks were fired for the building of Christ Church. The clay for the . . . — — Map (db m176467) HM
Near Christ Church Road (Virginia Route 646) at Gaskins Road (Virginia Route 709), on the right when traveling south.
Virginia founders, Revolutionary War patriots and War of 1812 veterans memorialized in this church and cemetery
Founders residing in America during the first 50 years after the founding of Jamestown
John Carter •
David . . . — — Map (db m176464) HM WM
On Mary Ball Road (Virginia Route 3) north of the Norris Bridge, on the left when traveling east.
About 2,400 enslaved African Americans in Virginia escaped to the British during the War of 1812, encouraged in part by a proclamation issued on 2 Apr. 1814 offering them freedom and resettlement in “His Majesty’s Colonies.” Three . . . — — Map (db m99412) HM
On James Wharf Road (County Route 637) just west of Mary Ball Road (Virginia Route 3), on the left when traveling west.
Albert Terry Wright (1871–1944) was born in
Hanover County, Virginia. He taught in the
black schools of Richmond and, by 1908, at
White Stone in Lancaster County. By 1921
Wright was principal of the county’s first
high school for blacks, . . . — — Map (db m24640) HM
On James Wharf Road (County Route 637) just west of Mary Ball Road (Virginia Route 3), on the left when traveling west.
Professor Albert Terry Wright was born in Hanover County, Virginia. Early in his career, he taught in the black schools of Richmond, Va. In 1901, he began teaching in Lancaster County, Virginia. Between 1905 and 1910, he built the Lancaster County . . . — — Map (db m24639) HM
On Windmill Point Road (County Route 695) 7.4 miles White Stone (Virginia Route 3), on the right when traveling east.
Henry Fleete was born about 1602 in Kent, England, and moved to Jamestown, Virginia, in 1621. Fleete was seized by the Anacostan Indians during a trading expedition and held for five years. He learned their language and after his release in 1627 . . . — — Map (db m24638) HM
On Mary Ball Road (Virginia Route 3) just north of the Robert O. Norris Jr. Bridge, on the right when traveling north.
The War of 1812. Impressment of Americans into British service and the violation of American ships were among the causes of America's War of 1812 with the British which lasted until 1815. Virginians suffered from a British naval blockade of . . . — — Map (db m74649) HM
On Windmill Point Road (County Route 695) 7.4 miles east of White Stone (Virginia Route 3), on the right when traveling east.
During the War of 1812, the British blockaded the Chesapeake Bay and sent raiding vessels up the rivers and creeks to plunder and destroy property. The lookout at Windmill Point (about a mile east) on Fleet’s Island reported that on 23 April 1814, . . . — — Map (db m24484) HM