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Historical Markers and War Memorials in Petersburg VA 23803

 
The Plantaton Landscape Marker image, Touch for more information
By Don Morfe, September 15, 2013
The Plantaton Landscape Marker
101 Virginia, Dinwiddie County, Petersburg — The Plantaton LandscapePamplin Historical Park
Life was a lot simpler back then…or was it? You are standing near the center of a once successful and productive mid-19th century farm. To your right is the main house, Tudor Hall, built in two stages before the Civil War. When the armies arrived . . . Map (db m69928) HM
102 Virginia, Dinwiddie County, Petersburg — Tobacco BarnTudor Hall Plantation
Nineteenth-century farmers cut tobacco plants and placed them on sticks to be cured in tobacco barns like this one. Curing, a four-week process, preserves plants by removing moisture, and brings out the aroma and flavor. Farmers in Dinwiddie County . . . Map (db m15449) HM
103 Virginia, Dinwiddie County, Petersburg — Tudor HallTudor Hall Plantation
William Boisseau, a tobacco farmer, constructed Tudor Hall around 1812. Originally two rooms wide and one room deep, this style of house was popular in Dinwiddie County during the late 1700s and early 1800s. In the 1850s Joseph G. Boisseau, . . . Map (db m15441) HM
104 Virginia, Dinwiddie County, Petersburg — Tudor Hall BarnTudor Hall Plantation
This building is a reproduction of a nineteenth-century barn located in Isle of Wright County, Virginia. Tidewater and Piedmont farmers constructed numerous small, inexpensive barns to support their work. Virginia’s mild climate made it unnecessary . . . Map (db m15442) HM
105 Virginia, Dinwiddie County, Petersburg — Tudor Hall Field QuarterTudor Hall Plantation — Pamplin Historical Park —
The environment in front of you recreates elements of a plantation Field Quarter of the 1800s. The slaves who provided agricultural labor on farms like Tudor Hall lived in areas like this in the years before the Civil War. The first slave dwelling . . . Map (db m15456) HM
106 Virginia, Dinwiddie County, Petersburg — S-49 — Where Hill Fell
In the field a short distance north of this road, the confederate General A.P. Hill was killed, April 2, 1865. Hill, not knowing that Lee's lines had been broken, rode into a party of Union soldiers advancing on Petersburg.Map (db m3594) HM
107 Virginia, Dinwiddie County, Petersburg — S-52 — White Oak Road
The extreme right of Lee’s line rested on this road, which was entrenched. General Warren, advancing against Lee’s works here, March 31, 1865, was driven back. Reinforced, Warren advanced again, forcing the Confederates to retire to the road. On . . . Map (db m180607) HM
108 Virginia, Dinwiddie County, Petersburg — S-81 — White Oak Road Engagement31 March 1865
Union forces belonging to the V Corps, under Maj. Gen. Gouverneur K. Warren, sought to seize the White Oak Road and sever the Confederate line of communication with Maj. Gen. George E. Pickett’s detachment near Five Forks, four miles west. From here . . . Map (db m14792) HM
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109 Virginia, Petersburg — “A Stupendous Failure”Petersburg National Battlefield — National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior —
“It is agreed that the thing was a perfect success, except that it did not succeed.” - Major Charles F. Adams, Jr., USA The explosion cleared the Union path to Petersburg. But instead of pushing through, the first waves of . . . Map (db m7061) HM
110 Virginia, Petersburg — 1864-1865: The Bombardment of Petersburg
A Unique History A local historian once wrote that "during its siege Petersburg endured an ordeal of shelling which was extraordinary in the history of the world." It was estimated that more than 800 buildings were struck during the . . . Map (db m149588) HM
111 Virginia, Petersburg — A Fatal Error — Petersburg National Battlefield —
A division of African-American troops in Burnside’s Ninth Corps was to have led the attack that followed the explosion of the mine. But just hours before the assault, Union army commander George G. Meade changed the plan. The result: chaos and . . . Map (db m231206) HM
112 Virginia, Petersburg — A Final EffortPetersburg National Battlefield
Desperate to relieve the Union noose strangling Petersburg, on March 25, 1865, General Lee used pre-dawn darkness and stealth to pierce the Union Line here at Fort Stedman. “We were very much elated at first, as we thought we had won a . . . Map (db m180684) HM
113 Virginia, Petersburg — African-Americans in Petersburg
The Petersburg area has an extraordinarily rich African-American heritage. In 1625, most of the Africans in Virginia were servants at Flowerdew Hundred, nearby in Prince George County. In the 18th century, tens of thousands of newly enslaved . . . Map (db m57366) HM
114 Virginia, Petersburg — Appomattox River Heritage Trail
Trail Sites 1. Pocahontas: In 1784, four small towns at the convergence of three counties (Pocahontas in Chesterfield, Blandford in Prince George, and Petersburg and Ravenscroft in Dinwiddie) were combined and incorporated as . . . Map (db m66952) HM
115 Virginia, Petersburg — Architectural Heritage
Petersburg’s architectural heritage has a long and rich history, reflecting centuries of occupation by Native Americans and over 300 years of European settlement. Beginning as a frontier trading post with the Virginia Indians, Fort Henry was . . . Map (db m175053) HM
116 Virginia, Petersburg — Arts & Recreation
Petersburg is in the midst of a downtown renaissance, fueled by the arts and driven by the creative spirit of the community. Historically a center of culture and trade for the region, Petersburg’s abundant natural resources and rich history are . . . Map (db m57369) HM
117 Virginia, Petersburg — QA-9 — Battersea
Battersea was the home of Colonel John Banister, a member of the House of Burgesses, the Revolutionary conventions, and the Continental Congress, as well as a framer of the Articles of Confederation and the first mayor of Petersburg. The elegant but . . . Map (db m17624) HM
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118 Virginia, Petersburg — Battery 45
Salient of Confederate Line Siege of Petersburg ---------- Erected Apr. 2, 1914 By A.P. Hill Camp S.C.V.Map (db m184262) HM
119 Virginia, Petersburg — Battle of Petersburg
From Blandford Heights to Pocahontas Bridge April 25, 1781 Here was fought the opening engagement of the decisive campaign of the revolution. 1000 American militia under Steuben, Muhlenberg, Dick and House opposed 2500 British under Phillips, . . . Map (db m6543) HM
120 Virginia, Petersburg — QA-12 — Battle of Petersburg
Here was fought the Battle of Petersburg, April 25, 1781. The Southside Militia, 1000 strong and commanded by Baron Steuben and General Muhlenberg, made a brave resistance to 2500 British Regulars under Phillips and Arnold.Map (db m6540) HM
121 Virginia, Petersburg — QA-20 — Battle of Petersburg25 April 1781 — Artillery Position —
On 25 Apr. 1781, Maj. Gen. Friedrich von Steuben’s 1,000 Virginia militiamen, driven from the eastern edge of Blandford, established a strong defensive line along the western summit (now Madison Street) above Lieutenant Run valley. Maj. Gen. William . . . Map (db m14546) HM
122 Virginia, Petersburg — QA-22 — Battle of Petersburg25 April 1781 — East Hill —
To the west stood East Hill (Bollingbrook), home of the widow Mary Marshall Tabb Bolling. After the 25 Apr. 1781 Battle of Petersburg, British Maj. Gen. William Phillips and Brig. Gen. Benedict Arnold located their headquarters at the house. The . . . Map (db m17633) HM
123 Virginia, Petersburg — QA-23 — Battle of Petersburg25 April 1781 — First Line Of Defense —
On 25 Apr. 1781, American Brig. Gen. Peter Muhlenberg formed his first line of 500 Virginia militia here to meet the British. The line extended along East Street from the Appomattox River to present-day Washington Street and consisted of two . . . Map (db m17634) HM
124 Virginia, Petersburg — QA-25 — Battle of Petersburg25 April 1781 — Second Line Of Defense —
On 25 Apr. 1781, American Brig. Gen. Peter Muhlenberg’s Virginia militia fell back west from Blandford, under heavy British fire, to a prepared line of defense here along the crest of this hill. This second line of Virginia militia, consisting of . . . Map (db m17635) HM
125 Virginia, Petersburg — QA-21 — Battle of Petersburg, 25 April 1781British Line of Attack
On 24 Apr. 1781, Maj. Gen. William Phillips’s force of 2,500 British regulars landed at City Point, 12 miles to the east on the James River, as part of a major campaign to disrupt the American force’s main line of communication through Virginia. The . . . Map (db m14552) HM
126 Virginia, Petersburg — QA-24 — Battle of Petersburg, 25 April 1781Flanking Movement
About midday on 25 April 1781, Maj. Gen. William Phillips discovered that the right flank of the American militia, on the edge of Blandford was vulnerable to attack from the south and rear. He ordered Lt. Col. John Simcoe’s Queen’s Rangers and a . . . Map (db m14558) HM
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127 Virginia, Petersburg — Battle of the Crater - Covered Way
At this place located by participants in the Battle of the Crater, this road, known as the Jerusalem Plank Road, was crossed by a covered way leading eastwardly to the ravine in rear of the Confederate breastworks which run northwardly from . . . Map (db m180611) HM
128 Virginia, Petersburg — PB4 — Bishop Payne Divinity SchoolPetersburg, Virginia
Founded in 1878 as the first seminary for the theological education of African Americans, this school was associated with St. Stephen's Normal and Industrial School in Petersburg, which was overseen by the Rev. Thomas Spencer. In 1884, the . . . Map (db m180090) HM
129 Virginia, Petersburg — QA-31 — Bishop Payne Divinity School
The Bishop Payne Divinity School began here in 1878 at the St. Stephen's Episcopal Church Normal and Industrial School. For 71 years it prepared black men for the ministry in the church. Giles B. Cooke (1838-1937) headed the vocational school and . . . Map (db m196938) HM
130 Virginia, Petersburg — Blandford ChurchIn Harm’s Way
This church, built circa 1737, was in ruins at the time of the Civil War. Nonetheless, located behind Gracie’s, Colquitt’s and Elliott’s Salients in the Confederate defense lines, the structure served as a temporary field hospital during the . . . Map (db m175101) HM
131 Virginia, Petersburg — QA-11 — Blandford Church and Cemetery
The brick church on Well’s Hill, now known as Old Blandford Church, was built between 1734 and 1737, the British General Phillips was buried in the churchyard in 1781. In the cemetery is a monument to Captain McRae and the Petersburg Volunteers, who . . . Map (db m6538) HM
132 Virginia, Petersburg — QA-8 — Bollingbrook Hotel
After a fire destroyed John Niblo's tavern in 1827, Niblo assembled a group of investors who constructed on this site in 1828 the three-story Bollingbrook Hotel, attributed to Otis Manson. The hotel became known as "one of the best taverns in the . . . Map (db m209207) HM
133 Virginia, Petersburg — Campbell's BridgeVital Crossing — Lee's Retreat — Reported missing
When General Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia began its retreat from Petersburg and Richmond on the evening of April 2, 1865, part of the army crossed the Appomattox River at Campbell's Bridge here. Other columns crossed the river on three . . . Map (db m14593) HM
134 Virginia, Petersburg — QA 38 — Charles Stewart(ca. 1808-After 1884)
Charles Stewart, horseman, was born into slavery near Petersburg and spent part of his childhood on Pocahontas Island. At or about age 12 he was sold to William R. Johnson, one of the foremost figures in horse racing, the America’s most popular . . . Map (db m130190) HM
135 Virginia, Petersburg — City Sights Reported damaged
Petersburg. Appamattuck Indian Fish Traps, Appomattox River near Old Town. Considered to be the largest and most intact fish dams in Virginia, these sturgeon dams are made of loose stones forming a series of v-shaped tunnels by . . . Map (db m57324) HM
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136 Virginia, Petersburg — Colquitt’s Salient
On June 18 1864 the Confederates on this hill repulsed the charge of the First Maine Regiment On March 25 1865 from this salient General John B. Gordon led a body of picked men to surprise and capture Fort SteadmanMap (db m37414) HM
137 Virginia, Petersburg — Colquitt’s Salient Trail Reported permanently removed
The Colquitt’s Salient Trail is paved with moderate slopes. The Colquitt’s Salient loop trail will lead you over ground involved with two of the most dramatic events of the Siege of Petersburg. On the walk to Colquitt’s . . . Map (db m184281) HM
138 Virginia, Petersburg — Colquitt's SalientPetersburg National Battlefield
On the moonlit night of June 17, 1864, Confederate infantrymen pulled back to this ridge and started digging. The next day, Union attacks against Colquitt's Salient ended in a bloody disaster for the Federals. For the next nine months, the . . . Map (db m218413) HM
139 Virginia, Petersburg — Concrete Bunker
This monument stone sits on a 10’ deep concrete bunker that was discovered during construction, together with portions of an abandoned railroad track. The bunker was used to store coal for the furnaces in the large buildings which once stood on the . . . Map (db m48485) HM
140 Virginia, Petersburg — Confederate Counterattack
“I counted 21 Union flags flying from the Crater and these works. The sight gave me no hope of ever getting away alive.” - Capt. James E. Phillips, 12th Virginia Infantry Union disorganization gave the Confederates the time they needed to . . . Map (db m185018) HM
141 Virginia, Petersburg — Confederate Countermine Reported unreadable
Suspecting a Union mine, the Confederates dug two listening galleries here. They narrowly missed striking the Union tunnel, which was deeper. The depressions you see were caused by the cave-in of these galleries.Map (db m184975) HM
142 Virginia, Petersburg — Confederate Hospital
This marks the spot in Poplar Lawn where stood the Confederate Hospital 1863 - 1865Map (db m149582) HM WM
143 Virginia, Petersburg — QA-26 — Corling's Corner
By the 1820s, Petersburg was developing into a major industrial city. The backbone of the city's workforce was enslaved labor. At this highly visible downtown intersection known as Corling's Corner, local manufacturers, railroad companies, building . . . Map (db m17640) HM
144 Virginia, Petersburg — Courthouse
This Greek Revival building was constructed between 1838 and 1840 and designed by New York architect Calvin Pollard as the city’s Husting’s Courthouse. The term “hustings” derives from a British form of court system loosely in place in . . . Map (db m17656) HM
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145 Virginia, Petersburg — Crater of Mine
Excavated by The 48th Regt. Penn. Vet. Vol. Inf. Burnside's 9th Corps, July 30, 1864.Map (db m37416) HM
146 Virginia, Petersburg — Dash into the Crater4:45 a.m. - 6:00 a.m. — Petersburg National Battlefield — Reported missing
On the morning of July 30th, 1864, the Union high command became anxious as to why the mine under the Confederate position, had not been sprung. While General Meade was sending dispatches to General Burnside asking when the mine would detonate, at . . . Map (db m184403) HM
147 Virginia, Petersburg — Defending Fort Haskell
Daylight on March 25, 1865, brought furious fighting to Fort Haskell. “Our thin line mounted the banquette – the wounded and sick loading the muskets, while those with sound hands stood to the parapets and blazed away.” . . . Map (db m7032) HM
148 Virginia, Petersburg — Digging the Mine — Petersburg National Battlefield —
“We could blow that damn fort out of existence if we could run a mine shaft under it.” - A private of the 48th Pennsylvania June 23, 1864
Spurred by the offhand suggestion of a former coal miner, on . . . Map (db m179886) HM
149 Virginia, Petersburg — Dividing Point
Twice during the Siege of Petersburg, Harrison’s Creek became a dividing point between contending armies. June 15, 1864 After being driven out of the Dimmock Line, the outnumbered Confederate defenders of Petersburg formed a new line on . . . Map (db m7030) HM
150 Virginia, Petersburg — Drilling Ground
Drilling ground of soldiers, War 1812.Map (db m149583) HM WM
151 Virginia, Petersburg — 12 — Earliest Known Public High School for African Americans in VirginiaPetersburg, Virginia Reported permanently removed
Petersburg established a public school system in 1868, two years before the state’s mandate. Colored Elementary School #1 was conducted in the old church building of the African Baptist Church, which stood to your left. The building had been . . . Map (db m26011) HM
152 Virginia, Petersburg — PB1 — Earliest Known Public High School for African Americans in VirginiaPetersburg, Virginia
Petersburg established a public school system in 1868, two years before the state's mandate. Colored Elementary School #1 (as it was called) was conducted in the old church building of the African Baptist Church, which stood to your left. The . . . Map (db m180100) HM
153 Virginia, Petersburg — S-76 — Early English Exploration
In 1650 Fort Henry, now Petersburg, marked the western and southern extent of English settlement in, and knowledge of, Virginia. On 27 Aug. 1650, Edward Bland, merchant and land speculator, and Abraham Wood, frontier militia commander, left Fort . . . Map (db m1994) HM
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154 Virginia, Petersburg — QA-13 — East Hill
On the hilltop to the south is the site of East Hill, also known as Bollingbrook. There the British General Phillips, Benedict Arnold and Lord Cornwallis stayed in April and May, 1781. The house was bombarded by Lafayette, May 10, 1781. There . . . Map (db m14565) HM
155 Virginia, Petersburg — Exchange Building15 West Bank Street
. . . Map (db m149604) HM
156 Virginia, Petersburg — Farmers Market Reported damaged
The octagonal building stands on land given to the Town of Petersburg in 1876 by Robert Bolling, an affluent early merchant, in trust always to be used as a market site. Erected in 1878-1879, the present market building is the fourth to have been . . . Map (db m149589) HM
157 Virginia, Petersburg — First Baptist Church
Birthplace of The Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge of Virginia F.&A.M. December 15, 1875Map (db m180113) HM
158 Virginia, Petersburg — QA-40 — First Baptist Church
First Baptist Church, one of the nation's oldest African American congregations, traces its origins to 1756, when worshipers known as New Lights began meeting outside Petersburg. The congregation moved to the city about 1820 and opened a sanctuary . . . Map (db m149855) HM
159 Virginia, Petersburg — First Battle of PetersburgKautz’s Effort Stopped Here — Lee vs. Grant – The 1864 Campaign — Reported damaged
In May 1864, Gen. Ulysses S. Grant launched attacks on Confederate armies across the South. He accompanied Gen. George G. Meade’s Army of the Potomac as it fought Gen. Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia from the Wilderness to Cold Harbor. . . . Map (db m14569) HM
160 Virginia, Petersburg — First Maine Heavy Artillery Monument
(front) Maine. First Heavy Artillery in memory of 604 brave members who fell charging here June 18, 1864 Union Maine - Virginia Peace (rear) Members of the First Maine Heavy Artillery who were . . . Map (db m37412) HM
161 Virginia, Petersburg — QA-1 — Folly Castle
This house was the town home of Peter Jones, who built it in 1763. It was called "Folly Castle" because it was a large house for a childless man, but Jones later had offspring. Major Erasmus Gill, Revolutionary soldier, also lived here. . . . Map (db m17613) HM
162 Virginia, Petersburg — QA-15 — Formation of the Southern Methodist Church
One block west stood the Union Street Methodist Church, completed in 1820. There was held the first general conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church South, May 1-23, 1846. At this meeting the Southern Methodist Church, which had separated from . . . Map (db m17626) HM
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163 Virginia, Petersburg — QA-6 — Fort Henry
Four blocks north is the traditional site of Fort Henry, established under the Act of 1645. In 1646 the fort was leased by Abraham Wood. From it, in 1650, Wood and Edmund Bland set out on an exploring expedition; and, in 1671, Batts and Fallam on . . . Map (db m17623) HM
164 Virginia, Petersburg — Fort StedmanPetersburg National Battlefield
It is quite interesting to see a fort going up. The men work in the manner of bees. The mass throw the earth; the engineer soldiers do the ‘rivetting,’ that is, the interior facing the logs. The engineer sergeants run about with tapes and . . . Map (db m180683) HM
165 Virginia, Petersburg — Fort Stedman
In the last grand offensive movement of Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia, Fort Stedman, with adjacent works, was captured at 4:30 A.M., March 25, 1865, by a well selected body of Confederates, under the command of General John B. Gordon. An advance . . . Map (db m180685) HM
166 Virginia, Petersburg — QA-7 — General Lee's Headquarters
Three blocks north and a half a block west is the Beasley House where General Robert E. Lee had his second headquarters in 1864 during the siege of Petersburg. He moved thence to Edge Hill to be in closer touch with his right wing.Map (db m17544) HM
167 Virginia, Petersburg — QA-2 — Golden Ball Tavern
Here stood a dwelling house, constructed about 1764 by prosperous tobacco merchant, Richard Hanson, who, as a fervent Loyalist, fled Virginia in 1776. During the latter part of the Revolution, the structure became known as the Golden Ball Tavern. . . . Map (db m17618) HM
168 Virginia, Petersburg — QA-19 — Grace Episcopal Church
The third home of Grace Church, a brick Gothic Revival-style building, stood on this site from 1859 to 1960. The congregation was founded in 1841 by Dr. Churchhill Jones Gibson, rector until 1892. In 1928 a majority of the members, led by the . . . Map (db m17632) HM
169 Virginia, Petersburg — Gracie’s Salient
This salient named for Brig.-Genl. Archibald Gracie of Alabama, faced the Federal Forts Stedman and Haskell and was successfully held by the Confederates during the entire siege of Petersburg.Map (db m37415) HM
170 Virginia, Petersburg — QA-17 — Graham Road
Upon this site, on June 9, 1864, Captain Edward Graham, commanding two guns of the Petersburg Artillery, repulsed the attack of Kautz's cavalry, 1300 men. And by this gallant defense the city was saved. Later the Union forces were driven to retreat . . . Map (db m17628) HM
171 Virginia, Petersburg — Hare House Site Reported permanently removed
About this house swirled the tide of battle on June 18, 1864, and during “Lee’s Last Grand Offensive,” March 25, 1865. (caption) Sketch by A.R. WaudMap (db m184280) HM
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172 Virginia, Petersburg — Headquarters of Gen. R. E. Lee Reported unreadable
Nov. 1, to 26, 1864.Map (db m209204) WM
173 Virginia, Petersburg — QA-36 — Joseph Cotten(1905-1994)
Joseph Cotten, actor, was born in Petersburg. At school he excelled in football and on the stage. He appeared in several Broadway productions during the 1930s and joined Orson Welles’s Mercury Theater company. Cotten made his film debut in 1941 . . . Map (db m102266) HM
174 Virginia, Petersburg — Joseph Jenkins Roberts
[Southwest face:] Resident of Petersburg 1815-1829 First President of the Republic of Liberia 1848-1855 + 1871-1876 [Northeast face:] Joseph Jenkins Roberts worked on Union Street, about 100 yards northwest of here. . . . Map (db m16004) HM
175 Virginia, Petersburg — QA-33 — Joshua L. Chamberlain Promoted “On The Spot”
In this vicinity on 18 June 1864 Col. Joshua L. Chamberlain received a near-fatal wound while leading a Union brigade in a charge against Confederate works defending Petersburg. Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant promoted him to Brig. Gen. of Vols. “on . . . Map (db m79063) HM
176 Virginia, Petersburg — Ladies Confederate Hospital
Original building of the Ladies Confederate Hospital 1862—1865Map (db m48466) HM
177 Virginia, Petersburg — Lee's Last Offensive — Petersburg National Battlefield —
“The cool frosty morning made every sound distinct and clear, and the only sound heard was the tramp! Tramp! Of the men, and the cries of the Federal picket as he ran with all speed into the fort shouting, “The Rebels are coming! The . . . Map (db m218409) HM
178 Virginia, Petersburg — Lincoln In PetersburgLast Meeting
After Union forces secured Petersburg on April 3, 1865, Gen. Ulysses S. Grant established his headquarters here at the Thomas Wallace House. He sent word to President Abraham Lincoln at City Point that Petersburg had fallen and invited Lincoln to . . . Map (db m48442) HM
179 Virginia, Petersburg — Lincoln In PetersburgPresidential Visit to Centre Hill
At noon on April 7, 1865, President Abraham Lincoln and his party left City Point for Petersburg in a special train on the newly repaired City Point Railroad, arriving in the city half an hour later. His wife, Mary Todd Lincoln, and their young son, . . . Map (db m48656) HM
180 Virginia, Petersburg — QA 39 — Lt. Col. Howard Baugh, Tuskegee Airman
Howard Baugh (1920-2008) was born and raised in Petersburg. He graduated from what is now Virginia State University in 1941, joined the U.S. Army Air Corps, and completed pilot training at Tuskegee Army Air Field in 1942. Deployed to Sicily with the . . . Map (db m130185) HM WM
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181 Virginia, Petersburg — Mahone
To the memory of William Mahone Major General C.S.A. A distinguished Confederate commander, whose valor and strategy at the Battle of the Crater, July 30, 1864 won for himself and his gallant brigade undying fame. A citizen of Petersburg, . . . Map (db m6752) HM
182 Virginia, Petersburg — Mahone’s Brigade
This stone marks the approximately the extreme right of Mahone’s Brigade Virginia Volunteers when it captured the Confederate Breastworks on the 30th of July, 1864. Placed by the Petersburg Chapter U.D.C. November 1910.Map (db m7034) HM
183 Virginia, Petersburg — Major Peter Jones
Site of Trading Station of Major Peter Jones. About 1675. Owner of Peters Point. Afterwards Petersburg. Frances Bland Randolph Chapter D.A.R. 1909.Map (db m17641) HM
184 Virginia, Petersburg — Massachusetts
(Front):In memory of the soldiers and sailors from Massachusetts who lost their lives in the armies of the Potomac and James in various battles in Virginia 1861 - 1865 This monument erected by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts (Back): . . . Map (db m14619) HM
185 Virginia, Petersburg — MayfieldCirca 1750
Mayfield, a classic example of Colonial Virginia architecture and the oldest standing brick house in Dinwiddie County, was once the manor house of a 1400-acre plantation. The probable builder and first owner was Robert Ruffin, friend of George . . . Map (db m208553) HM
186 Virginia, Petersburg — McKenney House
The McKenney House was originally constructed as a residence for Mayor John Dodson in 1859. It was the residence of Confederate General William Mahone after the Civil War. The property was purchased by William R. McKenney in early 1911. The McKenney . . . Map (db m17652) HM
187 Virginia, Petersburg — McKenney House250 South Sycamore Street
McKenney House has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places by the United States Department of the Interior Circa 1890 [Additional plaques below:] Historic Building Petersburg Virginia . . . Map (db m149584) HM
188 Virginia, Petersburg — 13 — McKenney LibraryPetersburg, Virginia Reported permanently removed
Petersburg's main public library, the William R. McKenney Library, is housed in a fine dwelling constructed in 1859 by John Dodson, a prominent lawyer and mayor of Petersburg. After the Civil War, the Confederate General and railroad magnate . . . Map (db m20609) HM
189 Virginia, Petersburg — PB2 — McKenney LibraryPetersburg, Virginia
Petersburg's main public library, the William R. McKenney Library, is housed in a dwelling constructed in 1859 by John Dodson, a prominent lawyer and a former mayor of Petersburg. After the Civil War, the Confederate general and railroad . . . Map (db m180105) HM
190 Virginia, Petersburg — K-125 — Newmarket Racecourse
Newmarket Racecourse, a one-mile oval built just north of here by 1793, was among the foremost tracks in the nation when horse racing was America's most popular sport. Races were significant social events that attracted competitors and spectators . . . Map (db m149851) HM
191 Virginia, Petersburg — North Carolina Confederate Hospital
Site of the Confederate Hospital for soldiers from North Carolina 1861-1865Map (db m48468) HM
192 Virginia, Petersburg — Old Market Square Reported damaged
Appomattox Point & the Indian Trade In the 1600s, just north of the present day market, the Appomattox River took a sharp turn around a horn of land known as Appomattox Point. The Quaker Indian traders Robert Hix and John Evans set up a . . . Map (db m57327) HM
193 Virginia, Petersburg — Old U.S. Customs House & Post Office
Built of Petersburg granite and constructed between 1856 and 1860, the U.S. Customs House and Post Office was designed by Ammi B. Young, architect of the U.S. Treasury Department building in Washington D.C. The decision to add the third story was . . . Map (db m17653) HM
194 Virginia, Petersburg — Pamplin Historical Park
Pamplin Historical Park & The National Museum of the Civil War Soldier “Walk along these fortifications, take the time to learn something about the story of what happened here, use the museum to understand who these men were, and the . . . Map (db m57351) HM
195 Virginia, Petersburg — QA-27 — Peabody High School(1870-1970)
Peabody High School, originally the Colored High School, was established in 1870 in the old First Baptist Church located on Harrison Street. The second school was built here on this site facing Filmore Street. The current site of the school is on . . . Map (db m65662) HM
196 Virginia, Petersburg — QA 34 — People's Memorial Cemetery
Twenty eight members of Petersburg's large community of free African Americans purchased a one-acre tract to serve as a burial ground in 1840. Subsequent acquisitions of adjacent land created a cemetery complex later known as People's Memorial. . . . Map (db m149854) HM
197 Virginia, Petersburg — Peter Jones Trading Station
Of rubble stone construction, this building appears to have been built sometime between 1650 and 1750. Its type of construction is unique to the Fall Zone where stone can be quarried from the building site’s environs. Between 1785 and 1791 the . . . Map (db m48483) HM
198 Virginia, Petersburg — Peter Jones Trading Station
The building before you was built as part of a trading station set up during the middle of the 17th century by Peter Jones I and his father-in-law Major General Abraham Wood. The building is known variously as Peter Jones Trading Station, Peter . . . Map (db m48484) HM
199 Virginia, Petersburg — Peter Jones Trading Station
You are looking into the bowels of this building from near the attic downward to the second, first, and basement levels. You see a massive, rubble-stone structure with stone walls approximately 2’8” thick at the basement level which taper . . . Map (db m48488) HM
200 Virginia, Petersburg — Petersburg Museums
Blandford Church Blandford Church was built in 1735 as the seat of worship for colonists who were members of the Anglican Church. The church building was abandoned in 1806 when membership in its congregation dwindled as a result of the . . . Map (db m57352) HM

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Apr. 25, 2024