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235 entries match your criteria. Entries 201 through 235 are listed here. ⊲ Previous 100
 
 

Historical Markers and War Memorials in Petersburg

 
Clickable Map of Petersburg, Virginia and Immediately Adjacent Jurisdictions image/svg+xml 2019-10-06 U.S. Census Bureau, Abe.suleiman; Lokal_Profil; HMdb.org; J.J.Prats/dc:title> https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Usa_counties_large.svg Petersburg Ind. City, VA (156) Chesterfield County, VA (212) Colonial Heights Ind. City, VA (19) Dinwiddie County, VA (128) Prince George County, VA (32)  Petersburg(156) Petersburg (156)  ChesterfieldCounty(212) Chesterfield County (212)  ColonialHeights(19) Colonial Heights (19)  DinwiddieCounty(128) Dinwiddie County (128)  PrinceGeorgeCounty(32) Prince George County (32)
Petersburg and Vicinity
    Petersburg (156)
    Chesterfield County (212)
    Colonial Heights (19)
    Dinwiddie County (128)
    Prince George County (32)
 
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GEOGRAPHIC SORT
201Virginia, Petersburg — Prelude to the Crater
“The mine is all finished, the powder in, the fuse all ready. I hope that the attack will be successful, for if it is, we shall have Petersburg in our possession.” - Col. Stephen M. Weld, 50th Massachusetts July 28, 1864 The . . . — Map (db m7054) HM
202Virginia, Petersburg — Prince George Court House Road
This trail follows the old road which ran between Petersburg and Prince George Court House. It was used by both armies to move men and supplies. — Map (db m7093) HM
203Virginia, Petersburg — Prince George Court House Road
This old road was used by both Confederate and Union Armies in the fighting around Petersburg. — Map (db m37409) HM
204Virginia, Petersburg — QA-37 — Prince Hall Masons in Virginia
In March 1775, a Masonic lodge attached to the British army initiated Prince Hall and 14 other free black men as Freemasons in Massachusetts. Meeting provisionally as African Lodge No. 1, the black Freemasons gained full privileges in 1787 when they . . . — Map (db m103874) HM
205Virginia, Petersburg — Rock Garden
The disastrous fire of 1980 destroyed the roof and interior wood components of the building which caused the huge stone walls to collapse mostly into the interior. Approximately 4,700 cubic feet of stone waIls were a part of the rubble. A view of . . . — Map (db m48487) HM
206Virginia, Petersburg — Rohoic Dam
Erected by Genl. R.E. Lee Aug. 1864 — Map (db m65663) HM
207Virginia, Petersburg — Second Pennsylvania Veteran Heavy Artillery
The Advance Position 2nd Pa. Vet. Heavy Art. July 30, 1864. Went into action July 30, 1864, 780 men - answered roll call. After battle 286 men; Lost killed and wounded 494 men, including 8 officers. — Map (db m37418) HM
208Virginia, Petersburg — Siege of Petersburg—Grant's Fourth OffensiveAugust 18-21, 1864 Battle of Weldon Railroad
Union General Ulysses S. Grant pursued a strategy of two-pronged attacks on Petersburg and the Confederate capital at Richmond. Grant first attacked Lee's positions around Richmond and struck again south of Petersburg. By the end of Grant's fourth . . . — Map (db m78098) HM
209Virginia, Petersburg — Siege of Petersburg—Lee Strikes BackMarch 25, 1865 Battle of Fort Stedman to Battle of Jones Farm
By March 1865 Confederate General Robert E. Lee had suffered through nearly nine months of fighting, had repulsed seven Union offensives, and had his men spread along a 37-mile-long front. Knowing that it was only a matter of time before his lines . . . — Map (db m85861) HM
210Virginia, Petersburg — South Carolina
On this hill for one month South Carolina troops guarded the entrance to Petersburg and here July 30, 1864, suffered death from a mine exploded by the Federals. Here the surviving Carolinians under the command of Stephen Elliott by their valor . . . — Map (db m6751) HM
211Virginia, Petersburg — South Side StationThe Retreat Begins
Begin the 26-stop auto driving tour of Gen. Robert E. Lee’s Retreat from Petersburg to Appomattox at this point. The tour covers over 100 miles and takes approximately four to five hours to complete. A map can be obtained at the nearby Visitors . . . — Map (db m3592) HM
212Virginia, Petersburg — South Side StationBeginning of the End — Lee vs. Grant - The 1864 Campaign —
This original South Side Railroad station, the oldest such building in the state, was built around 1854 when the line was completed from Petersburg westward to Lynchburg, a distance of 123 miles. An express train could run this distance in five . . . — Map (db m3593) HM
213Virginia, Petersburg — South Side StationBeginning of the End — Lee vs. Grant – The 1864 Campaign —
This original South Side Railroad Station, the oldest such building in the state, was built around 1854 when the line was completed from Petersburg westward to Lynchburg, a distance of 123 miles. An express train could run this distance in five . . . — Map (db m149603) HM
214Virginia, Petersburg — QA-10 — St. Paul's Church
St. Paul's Church was built in 1856. Here Robert E. Lee and his staff worshipped during the siege of Petersburg, 1864-65. Lee attended the wedding of his son, W.H.F. Lee, in this church in 1867. Virginia Conservation & Development . . . — Map (db m17625) HM
215Virginia, Petersburg — Tavern Park
You are standing within Lot Number One of the Old town of Petersburg, as laid out for Abraham Jones, Jr., in December of 1783. The first owner was William Byrd II of Westover. William Pride purchased the lot in 1745, and, entrepreneur that he was, . . . — Map (db m48486) HM
216Virginia, Petersburg — The Battle at the BridgeThe Revolutionary War
25 April 1781 In the late afternoon and evening of 24 April 1781, Virginia militia regiments of Brigadier General Peter Muhlenberg’s Corps of about 1,000 men marched into Petersburg in order to counter an expected attack by the invading . . . — Map (db m26829) HM
217Virginia, Petersburg — The Crater
“There was utmost consternation. Some men scampered out of the lines; some, paralyzed with fear, vaguely scratched at the counterscarp as if trying to escape. Smoke and dust filled the air.” - Col. William McMaster, 17th South . . . — Map (db m7058) HM
218Virginia, Petersburg — QA-18 — The First Methodist Meeting House
The first Methodist Meeting House in Petersburg was a theatre on West Old Street near the river rented by Gressett Davis. Robert Williams, a follower of John Wesley, came to Petersburg to preach in 1773 at the invitation of Davis and Nathaniel . . . — Map (db m26014) HM
219Virginia, Petersburg — The McIlwaine House
The McIlwaine House is listed in the National Register of Historic Places by the United States Department of the Interior — Map (db m149590) HM
220Virginia, Petersburg — 14 — The Peabody-Williams SchoolPetersburg, Virginia
Disrupted by the convulsions of the First World War, efforts to replace the increasingly inadequate Peabody School on Fillmore Street stretched out from 1913 until 1920, when the new Peabody-Williams School opened on Jones Street. Charles . . . — Map (db m26012) HM
221Virginia, Petersburg — The Petersburg Campaign1864-1865 — Petersburg National Battlefield —
In 1864, the Union Army’s plan was to press relentlessly and destroy Lee’s Army. On May 4, Grant crossed the Rapidan and started south. Unable to accomplish his objective at the Wilderness, Spotsylvania and Cold Harbor, he nevertheless succeeded in . . . — Map (db m100716) HM
222Virginia, Petersburg — The Revolutionary War in Petersburg
On April 25, 1871, a British army force of 2,500 soldiers under the command of Genera! William PhilIips attacked Petersburg, hoping to capture the American military supplies here and eventually link up with General Cornwallis’ army coming to . . . — Map (db m57368) HM
223Virginia, Petersburg — The Siege of Petersburg
"I would not believe before I came here that man was capable of enduring so much." -Lawrence Bradley, 1st Mass. Heavy Artillery If Petersburg fell, the Confederate capital at Richmond would fall too. Grant knew it; Lee knew it. And for nine . . . — Map (db m155217) HM
224Virginia, Petersburg — Touring Old Towne
Today, Old Towne Petersburg is alive with reminders of four centuries of American history and thousands of years of Native American habitation. With a growing mix of residential, commercial, and industrial uses, new life is being infused into the . . . — Map (db m57325) HM
225Virginia, Petersburg — QA-14 — Two Noted Homes
Half a block south is the home of Major General William Mahone, famed for his gallant conduct at the Battle of the Crater, July 30, 1864. Two blocks south is the Wallace Home, where Abraham Lincoln conferred with General Grant, April 3, 1865, . . . — Map (db m17553) HM
226Virginia, Petersburg — U.S. Colored Troops
In memory of the valorous service of Regiments and Companies of the U.S. Colored Troops Army of the James and Army of the Potomac Siege of Petersburg 1864 – 65 — Map (db m7081) HM
227Virginia, Petersburg — QA 28 — Undine Smith Moore(1904-1989)
Undine Smith Moore, educator and composer, was born in Jarratt and raised in Petersburg. Best known for her choral compositions, she was also a pianist and arranger. Her work often drew on African American sources such as spirituals. Moore's . . . — Map (db m149852) HM
228Virginia, Petersburg — Uprooted by War
“Every tree, stump, and fence has disappeared… What was once verdant is now a wasteland of dust and dirt.” - John Haley, 17th Maine Infantry January 26, 1865 The gentle depression in front of you is the only vestige of the . . . — Map (db m155219) HM
229Virginia, Petersburg — Ventilation Shaft
“Regular Army wiseacres said it was not feasible – that I could not carry the ventilation that distance without digging a hole to the surface… But I have succeeded.” - Lt. Col. Henry Pleasants, 48th Pennsylvania July 23, . . . — Map (db m7068) HM
230Virginia, Petersburg — QA 29 — Virginia Voters League
The Virginia Voters League, founded in 1941 and headquartered in this neighborhood of Petersburg, was a federation of local organizations that advocated for African American voters. Professor Luther P. Jackson (of what is now Virginia State . . . — Map (db m149853) HM
231Virginia, Petersburg — Waiting Their TurnPetersburg National Battlefield
By 6:00 am on July 30, 1864 the trenches before you were filled with black Union soldiers waiting to enter the Battle of the Crater. Ahead of them in line were white Union troops struggling to advance because of Confederate fire and the . . . — Map (db m102265) HM
232Virginia, Petersburg — Wasted Valor
On the plain below you, the 1st Maine Heavy Artillery enacted one of the tragic dramas of the Civil War. “The field became a burning, seething, crashing, hissing hell, in which human courage, flesh and bone were struggling with an . . . — Map (db m37413) HM
233Virginia, Petersburg — QA-30 — Weddell-McCabe-Chisholm House
Scottish emigrant James Weddell (1807-1865) built this Greek Revival house about 1845 and lived there until his death. In 1865, Capt. W. Gordon McCabe (1841-1920) bought the house. Over the second half of the 19th century, he published many works on . . . — Map (db m65661) HM
234Virginia (Prince George County), Petersburg — Prelude to Petersburg1864 Overland Campaign
On May 4, 1864, the Federal Army crossed the Rapidan River twenty miles west of Fredericksburg. The next day, Confederate General Robert E. Lee's forces struck the Union army in the Wilderness, opening a month-long campaign of nearly nonstop . . . — Map (db m155055) HM
235Virginia (Prince George County), Petersburg — Siege of Petersburg — Grant's First OffensiveJune 1864 Initial Assaults
Union General Ulysses S. Grant wanted to capture Richmond—capital of the Confederacy. Grant knew that the key to Richmond was Petersburg which was lightly defended by Confederate forces. Failing to take Richmond by approaching from the north, . . . — Map (db m155051) HM

235 entries matched your criteria. Entries 201 through 235 are listed above. ⊲ Previous 100
 
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Nov. 25, 2020