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7 entries match your criteria.  

 
 

Historical Markers in Remington, Virginia

 
Clickable Map of Culpeper County, 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 Culpeper County, VA (167) Fauquier County, VA (119) Madison County, VA (50) Orange County, VA (160) Rappahannock County, VA (74) Spotsylvania County, VA (407) Stafford County, VA (213)  CulpeperCounty(167) Culpeper County (167)  FauquierCounty(119) Fauquier County (119)  MadisonCounty(50) Madison County (50)  OrangeCounty(160) Orange County (160)  RappahannockCounty(74) Rappahannock County (74)  SpotsylvaniaCounty(407) Spotsylvania County (407)  StaffordCounty(213) Stafford County (213)
Culpeper is the county seat for Culpeper County
Remington is in Culpeper County
      Culpeper County (167)  
ADJACENT TO CULPEPER COUNTY
      Fauquier County (119)  
      Madison County (50)  
      Orange County (160)  
      Rappahannock County (74)  
      Spotsylvania County (407)  
      Stafford County (213)  
 
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1 Virginia, Culpeper County, Remington — Z-187 — Fauquier County / Culpeper County
Fauquier County. Area 686 Square Miles. Formed in 1759 from Prince William, and named for Francis Fauquier, Governor of Virginia, 1758-1768. Chief Justice John Marshall was born in this County. Culpeper County. Area . . . Map (db m2209) HM
2 Virginia, Culpeper County, Remington — Francis Hume
Capt Continental Line Indian Wars Rev War 1730 1813Map (db m2529) HM
3 Virginia, Fauquier County, Remington — "Chestnut Lawn"(3.6 Mi. S.E. of Remington, Va.)
So named for a grove of some of the largest chestnut trees in America, formerly located in these fields and around the house. They were killed by the blight of 1910 - 1930. This land was originally patented with adjoining lands, by one Allen in the . . . Map (db m12901) HM
4 Virginia, Fauquier County, Remington — Kelly’s FordCavalry and Coffee
Pickets of the opposing armies frequently exchanged gunfire over the Rappahannock River and occasionally swapped Yankee coffee for Rebel tobacco. On St. Patrick’s Day, 1863, they did both here at Kelly’s Ford, about 100 yards downstream from the . . . Map (db m108466) HM
5 Virginia, Fauquier County, Remington — Rappahannock StationA Rare Night Attack on the River — Mosby’s Confederacy — Reported damaged
The hamlet of Mill View, present-day Remington, became known as Rappahannock Station to the Civil War armies which campaigned in this area. Here the vital Orange & Alexandria railroad (to your left) crossed the Rappahannock River just behind the . . . Map (db m2525) HM
6 Virginia, Fauquier County, Remington — The Battle of Brandy StationThe Crossing at Kelly's Ford
Civil War cavalry battles could be huge, shifting, sprawling engagements, spread across miles of countryside. For instance, the Battle of Brandy Station, named for a railroad town eight miles away, began at historic Kelly’s Ford in front of you. . . . Map (db m203004) HM
7 Virginia, Fauquier County, Remington — The Battle of Kelly's Ford
Near this spot, at dawn on March 17, 1863, Brig. Gen. William W. Averill and his 2,100-man division closed on Kelly's Ford. Included in Averill's column was 22 year-old Sgt. Truman Reeves of Orwell, Ohio. Alerted to the Federals' approach, 130 . . . Map (db m108465) HM
 
 
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Apr. 24, 2024