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Visiting Richmond cont… Yorktown, and Williamsburg

September 28, 2014 by shelley

Visiting Richmond cont… Yorktown, and Williamsburg

Still no baby…so our frantic sightseeing continued.  We headed to Yorktown battlefield:

Yorktown is the last major battlefield of the Revolutionary War.  At Yorktown, in the fall of 1781, General George Washington, with allied American and French forces, besieged General Charles Lord Cornwallis’s British army.  On October 19, Cornwallis surrendered, effectively ending the war and ensuring independence.

Yorktown battlefield

Yorktown battlefield

Yorktown battlefield

Yorktown battlefield

Yorktown battlefield

Yorktown battlefield

Yorktown battlefield

Yorktown battlefield

Surrender field-Yorktown battlefield

Surrender field-Yorktown battlefield

Yorktown battlefield

Yorktown battlefield-Visitor’s center in background

Yorktown battlefield

Yorktown battlefield

Moore house-Yorktown battlefield

Moore house-Yorktown battlefield

Yorktown battlefield

Yorktown battlefield

Yorktown battlefield

Yorktown battlefield

Yorktown battlefield

Surrender field, Yorktown battlefield

Next stop Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Williamsburg was the thriving capital of Virginia when the dream of American freedom and independence was taking shape and the colony was a rich and powerful land stretching west to the Mississippi River and north to the Great Lakes. For 81 formative years, from 1699 to 1780, Williamsburg was the political, cultural, and educational center of what was then the largest, most populous, and most influential of the American colonies. It was here that the fundamental concepts of our republic — responsible leadership, a sense of public service, self-government, and individual liberty — were nurtured under the leadership of patriots such as George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, George Mason, and Peyton Randolph.

Near the end of the Revolutionary War and through the influence of Thomas Jefferson, the seat of government of Virginia was moved up the peninsula to the safer and more centrally located city of Richmond. For nearly a century and a half afterward, Williamsburg was a simple, quiet college town, home of the College of William and Mary.

Reverend Dr W.A.R. Goodwin

Restoration begins

In 1926, the Reverend Dr. W.A.R. Goodwin, rector of Bruton Parish Church, shared his dream of preserving the city’s historic buildings with philanthropist John D. Rockefeller Jr., and the restoration began.

Dr. Goodwin feared that scores of structures that had figured in the life of the colony and the founding of the nation would soon disappear forever. Rockefeller and Goodwin began a modest project to preserve a few of the more important buildings. Eventually, the work progressed and expanded to include a major portion of the colonial town, encompassing approximately 85 percent of the 18th-century capital’s original area.

Mr. Rockefeller gave the project his personal leadership until his death in 1960, and it was his quiet generosity of spirit and uncompromising ethic of excellence that guided and still dominates its development. He funded the preservation of more than 80 of the original structures, the reconstruction of many buildings, and also the construction of extensive facilities to accommodate the visiting public.

In the preservation of the setting of Virginia’s 18th-century capital, Mr. Rockefeller and Dr. Goodwin saw an opportunity to ensure that the courageous ideals of the patriots who helped create the American democratic system live on for future generations.

Map of Colonial Williamsburg:

Map Colonial Williamsburg, VA

Map Colonial Williamsburg, VA

Map Colonial Williamsburg, VA

Knarly tree, Williamsburg Virginia

Knarly tree, Williamsburg Virginia

I had visited Williamsburg before, but this was Bob’s first visit.

Bob and Becca, Colonial Williamsburg, VA

Bob and Becca, Colonial Williamsburg, VA

Magazine, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Magazine, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Magazine, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Magazine, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Magazine, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Magazine, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Magazine, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Magazine, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Outside the Capitol, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Outside the Capitol, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Outside the Capitol, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Outside the Capitol, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Outside the Capitol, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Outside the Capitol, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Reading of the Declaration of Independence, Outside the Capitol, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Reading of the Declaration of Independence, Outside the Capitol, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Outside the capitol building, Colonial Williamsburg, VA

Outside the capitol building, Colonial Williamsburg, VA

Inside the capitol building, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Inside the capitol building, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Inside the capitol building, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Inside the capitol building, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Inside the capitol building, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Inside the capitol building, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Inside the capitol building, "the bar" Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Inside the capitol building, “the bar” Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Mock trial, Courthouse, Colonial Williamsburg, VA

Mock trial, Courthouse, Colonial Williamsburg, VA

Horse and carriage, Colonial Williamsburg VA

Horse and carriage, Colonial Williamsburg VA

Cabinet maker, Colonial Williamsburg VA

Cabinet maker, Colonial Williamsburg VA

Colonial Williamsburg, VA

Colonial Williamsburg, VA

"George Washington", Colonial Williamsburg VA

“George Washington”, Colonial Williamsburg VA

Ready for troop review, Colonial Williamsburg VA

Ready for troop review, Colonial Williamsburg VA

Fife and drum corp, Colonial Williamsburg, VA

Firing of Cannons, Colonial Williamsburg, VA

More pictures of Williamsburg.

More Richmond, Virginia Sightseeing:

Agecroft Hall

Agecroft Hall is truly an incredible story of historic restoration.

Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

On the rolling banks of the James River stands a remarkable Tudor estate. And by Tudor, we’re not simply referring to an architectural style. This manor house was actually built in Lancashire, England in the late 15th Century.

For hundreds of years, Agecroft Hall was the distinguished home of England’s Langley and Dauntesey families. At the end of the 19th century, however, Agecroft fell into disrepair, and in 1925 it was sold at auction.
Hearing of this tremendous opportunity, Richmonder Thomas C. Williams, Jr. purchased the structure, and had it dismantled, crated, and shipped across the Atlantic, and then painstakingly reassembled in a Richmond neighborhood known as Windsor Farms.
Today, Agecroft Hall stands beautifully re-created, in a setting reminiscent of its original site on Lancashire’s Irwell River.

View of James River from Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

View of James River from Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

View of James River from Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

View of James River from Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

Agecroft Hall, Richmond VA

We then visited  Tuckahoe Plantation

Tuckahoe Plantation boyhood home of Thomas Jefferson

History

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Tuckahoe Plantation, boyhood home of Thomas Jefferson, is a National Historic Landmark and is protected in perpetuity by a preservation easement donated by the owners. It is considered by architectural historians to be among the finest early 18th century plantation homes in America.

A guest at Tuckahoe in the late 1700s commented that the house seemed “to be built solely to answer the purpose of hospitality”. Built between 1730 and 1740, this unique Randolph family plantation home and its outbuildings have persisted through a rich American history. Almost three centuries have passed, and Tuckahoe still fits the description of southern hospitality.

The Randolphs of Tuckahoe

Tuckahoe was built by the Randolph family between 1730 and 1740. The Randolph family had an enormous influence in shaping the habits customs and politics of both the colony and the nation. Tuckahoe is the only early Randolph home still standing on its original site.The mansion was built in the era of great plantations in Virginia, during the 17th and 18th centuries. There were few towns or cities in the colony, therefore, plantations developed as economically and geographically independent entities. At its height, Tuckahoe consisted of 25,000 acres that farmed tobacco, livestock, and wheat with three mills on the property.
The Tuckahoe house was constructed in two sections. The North end of the house was built first in 1733, and the center hall and south wing followed by about 1740 giving Tuckahoe its unique H-frame construction. Original outbuildings along Plantation Street make Tuckahoe one of the most complete early 18th century plantation layouts in North America.“Thomas of Tuckahoe”, one of the sons of William and Mary Randolph of Turkey Island, first settled Tuckahoe’s site in 1714. It was Thomas’s son, William, who is credited with building the mansion as we know it today.

The Jeffersons’ time at Tuckahoe

William Randolph and Maria Judith Page started their family at Tuckahoe in the 1730’s. By 1745 their three children were orphaned at Tuckahoe after the untimely death of both parents.Before his death in 1745 William ensured that his children would be cared for and educated at home should he die. In his will, he named his good friend, Peter Jefferson and cousin Jane Randolph Jefferson, guardians of his children.
After William Randolph’s death, Peter and Jane Jefferson moved to Tuckahoe with their children, including two-year-old Thomas, to care for the plantation and the Randolph children and stayed until 1752 when the young Thomas Mann Randolph came of age.Thus it was that Thomas Jefferson spent his youth at Tuckahoe and received his first education in the small one-room school house that still stands today. It is interesting to note the architectural features of Tuckahoe, including elaborate cornices, alcoves, grand staircases, and domed ceilings that may have influenced Jefferson’s thoughts on architecture.
Tuckahoe Plantation
Tuckahoe Plantation
Tuckahoe Plantation
Tuckahoe Plantation
Tuckahoe Plantation
Tuckahoe Plantation
Tuckahoe Plantation
Tuckahoe Plantation
Tuckahoe Plantation
Tuckahoe Plantation
Tuckahoe Plantation
Tuckahoe Plantation
Tuckahoe Plantation
Tuckahoe Plantation
Segway Tour of Richmond, Virginia
Segway Of Richmond VA
Segway Of Richmond VA
IMG_5248 IMG_5251 IMG_5252
St. Pauls Episcopal Church Richmond VA
Another Richmond landmark church. This one is famous for its Tiffany windows, so if you are a stained glass or Tiffany fan, this is the place to see. As Paul M noted in his review, this church is also famous as being the place where Jefferson Davis learned the he had lost the Civil War from Robert E. Lee.
 The church is also famous for being built by legendary Greek Revival Architect Thomas S Stewart and was completed in 1845. . A massive entrance portico of eight columns with ornate Corinthian capitals dominates the exterior of the building. An octagonal dome replaced the original 225 foot-high spire, long since removed due to fear of its instability. This church is an excellent example of Greek Revival church architecture.
On Sunday April 2nThis Church is where President of the Confederacy Jefferson Davis got the message from Robert E. Lee that the South had lost the Civil War.d 1865, whilst attending this Church, Jefferson Davis got a message from Lee stating that he was withdrawing from Petersburg – that the 10 month siege was over – and thus he could no longer defend Richmond. General Grant and the Union army were on their way. Davis evacuated the Confederate Government from the city and then Lee surrendered at Appomattox exactly one week later.
 Can you imagine this? You can sit in the same pew that Davis sat in when he was given that message. 10 months earlier Lee had been thwarting Grant, Sherman was getting stuck in Tennessee and Lincoln’s re-election looked impossible. For a few horrible months it actually looked as if the South would win.
 But then Atlanta falls, Lincoln is re-elected, Lee gives in at Petersburg and the nation’s long nightmare has ended.
And in this Church, in a pew near the front, is where they finally realized that it was over.
St. Pauls Episcopal Church

St. Pauls Episcopal Church

St. Pauls Episcopal Church

St. Pauls Episcopal Church

St. Pauls Episcopal Church

St. Pauls Episcopal Church

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IMG_5254

IMG_5257 IMG_5258 IMG_5259

Freedmans Bank Richmond VA

Freedmans Bank Richmond VA

Freedmans Bank Richmond VA

Freedmans Bank Richmond VA

George Washington Statue by Capitol Building Richmond VA

George Washington Statue by Capitol Building Richmond VA

Capitol Building Richmond VA

Capitol Building Richmond VA

Capitol Building Richmond VA

Capitol Building Richmond VA

In front of Capitol Building Richmond VA

In front of Capitol Building Richmond VA

Canal Richmond VA

Canal Richmond VA

More fun sights in Richmond VA

Street Art Richmond VA

Street Art Richmond VA

Street Art Richmond VA

Street Art Richmond VA

Street Art Richmond VA

Street Art Richmond VA

Street Art Richmond VA

Street Art Richmond VA

Street Art Richmond VA

Street Art Richmond VA

Street Art Richmond VA

Street Art Richmond VA

Street Art Richmond VA

Street Art Richmond VA

Richmond Virginia

Richmond Virginia

Tobacco Company Restaurant

On the corner of 12th and Cary Street in downtown Richmond was once an old abandoned tobacco warehouse. The four-story building was renovated to embody the spirit of Southern hospitality and charm and is considered by most to be the cornerstone of the Historic Shockoe Slip district.

Tobacco Company Restaurant

Tobacco Company Restaurant

Tobacco Company Restaurant

Tobacco Company Restaurant

Richmond Virginia

Richmond Virginia

Tredegar Iron Works, Richmond Virginia

The American Civil War Center at Historic Tredegar is located on 8.9 acres on the historic James River in downtown Richmond. A National Historic Landmark, the Tredegar site contains five surviving buildings illustrating the Iron Works era. The National Park Service operates the Richmond National Battlefield Park Visitor Center located in the restored Pattern Building.

Tredegar Iron Works Richmond Virginia

Tredegar Iron Works Richmond Virginia

Tredegar Iron Works Richmond Virginia

Tredegar Iron Works Richmond Virginia

Richmond Virginia

Richmond Virginia

Filed Under: Family, Travel Tagged With: Agecroft Hall, Colonial Williamsburg Virginia, Williamsburg, Yorktown battlefield

Playing at a school playground, while watching out for ghosts!

March 17, 2012 by shelley

We decided to take Becca and Henry to play at a playground in Williamsburg and found one at the Matthew Whaley Elementary School. We soon learned it it is suppose to be haunted. It is believed to be haunted by Matthew Whaley the son of Headmistress Mary Page Whaley. In the year 1696, a teacher named Mary Whaley gave birth to a single son and named him Matthew Whaley. Mary taught her child in the backyard of their home, but unfortunately at nine years of age, the little boy died…leaving Mary and the father with no children. Mary Whaley, shortly after her son’s death, opened a school for the poor and it was known throughout the Community of Williamsburg, Virginia as “Mattey’s School”. Following a period of a few years, Mary Whaley lost her husband and he was buried beside Mattey in a church’s cemetery located in Williamsburg. Mary left the country and entrusted her school to the church’s wardens.

Through different buildings being erected and torn down over the past three hundred years, there is now a fairly large brick building used as an Elementary School and named in Matthew Whaley’s memory that stands on Scotland Street. It is said that Mattey’s ghost has been seen on the school grounds, more than once. However, many people claim that because this is not the actual site of the original school, his ghost is actually seen in front of the Governor’s palace in town…at the spot of the original schoolhouse. Others claim that they have experienced sightings of two young black boys, playing in the yard of the Elementary School. Rumors have spread that they are the ghosts of two young black boys who were killed by anti-desegregation assailants in the 1960’s. Still other people say that the ghosts are of Mattey Whaley and a little black slave boy who was his friend while he was still alive.

It is ranked in the top 10 haunted schools.
Whatever one believes, it was fun playing on the playground.
We enjoyed a beautiful day with no ghosts.

Matthew Whaley Elementary School Williamsburg Virginia.



Filed Under: Family, Travel Tagged With: Family, haunted, Matthew Whaley Elementary School, spring break, Travel, Virginia, Williamsburg, Williamsburg Virginia

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I'm Shelley. Mom of three and grandma of eight... living right in the middle of the country, Kansas City! I'm happy to be alive and enjoy sharing exciting goodies that I find and make. Here you will find ideas for LDS Young Women's activities, family updates, and a compilation of all things wonderful.

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