INTRODUCTION
The James River Plantations
of Charles City County, Virginia (organized 1993) and Virginia’s James River
Plantations (organized 2000) proudly invite you to discover Virginia’s James
River Plantations. The 430-mile long river, which begins west of the
Blue Ridge Mountains near the western Virginia border and joins the
Chesapeake Bay at Hampton Roads, was first known as Powhatan Flu by
the English colonists that settled at Jamestown in 1607. The colonists
renamed the river for King James (1566-1625). Major tributaries of the
James River include the Appomattox River, Chickahominy River,
Nansemond River, Pagan River, Rivanna River and Warwick River. Smaller
tributaries of the James River include Herring Creek, Kittiewan Creek,
Powhatan Creek and Tuckahoe Creek. Today the James River region, from
Williamsburg and the Hampton Roads Area to the headwaters above
Covington,
contains an unparalleled collection of historic plantation sites that
possess significant histories, as well as architectural treasurers,
ranging from diminutive log structures, such as Piney Grove, to
grand brick homes, such as Carter’s Grove.
Virginia’s establishment as a
commercial enterprise of the Virginia Company was influential in
establishing the rural settlement pattern that emerged in the
seventeenth century and dominated along the James River corridor for
the next three centuries. Despite the failures of the Virginia Company
in administering the Colony during the first quarter of the
seventeenth century, Virginia did embrace an agricultural economy. As
the seventeenth century progressed, tobacco cultivation became very
lucrative and the plantation emerged as the essential unit of
production.
The term "plantation"
originally referred to a settlement in a new country or region,
although in Virginia the term became associated with a place that was
planted or under cultivation and usually worked by resident labor. It
is important to note that some planters owned many plantations and
that plantations did not necessarily include a residence for the
owner. Plantation homes, such as Margaret Mitchell’s Tara, are
representative of the larger nineteenth-century residences of the Deep
South and not of the James River region during any period.
Initially, the agricultural labor
for Virginia’s plantations was provided by indentured servants.
Poorer Englishmen traded several years of work to colonial planters in
return for being provided passage to Virginia. By 1705, the
racially-based hereditary system of bondage known as slavery was
codified into law, thus providing plantation owners with a labor force
for Virginia’s labor intensive tobacco crop. Slave quarters at
several of the James River Plantations survive to illustrate the
unique building form that developed to provide housing for plantation
laborers.
Archaeological evidence, such as the
seventeenth-century sites excavated at Kingsmill, suggest that
earth-fast construction, utilizing vertical framing members set into
the ground, predominated along the James River during the seventeenth
century. Bacon’s Castle, Nathaniel Bacon’s impressive
two-and-a-half story, brick home, is a notable exception to the
earth-fast dwellings found on most plantations of that period. Bacon’s
Castle and archeological sites, such as Mathews Manor and Richneck,
also illustrate the post-medieval architectural traditions that
Virginians utilized in the first homes. During the late seventeenth
century and early eighteenth century the construction of impressive
frame homes and modest brick residences, such as the Belle Air,
the Matthew Jones House and Tuckahoe, utilized Georgian
design elements and illustrate that frontier society was being
replaced with new institutions and cultural traditions based on
English precedent, but modified for use in Virginia.
During the seventeenth century many
of the small outpost settlements were first known as
"hundreds", although today only Flowerdew Hundred
remains. Consolidation and re-establishment of the original
settlements continued through the seventeenth century and culminated
with the creation of large plantations on which grand brick homes were
built during the eighteenth century. Berkeley, Brandon, Shirley, Wilton and
Westover provide examples that illustrate
both the development and diversity of the Georgian-style as employed
by Virginia’s plantation elite along the banks of the James River
and its tributaries. These plantation owners, the Harrisons, Carters,
Byrds and Randolphs, represented the social and economic leaders of
Colonial Virginia and some even provided leadership for the new United
States, as illustrated by presidents William Henry Harrison and
Benjamin Harrison. Battersea, Powhatan and Weston
Manor illustrate examples of substantial homes that drew their
inspiration from the largest residences. Examples of more modest
plantation residences illustrating the influence of the Georgian style
on the vernacular building traditions include Appomattox Manor, Eppington,
Mayfield, and Smith’s Fort.
During the late eighteenth and early
nineteenth century Thomas Jefferson introduced classical design to the
James River region in numerous residences and public buildings.
Jefferson’s homes at Monticello and Poplar Forest
included sophisticated classical design elements and aspects of
Palladian design not previously employed in Virginia. Neo-classical
design did appear elsewhere along the James River and throughout
Virginia, as evidenced by Point of Honor, Magnolia Grange
and Violet Bank. The conservative nature of the architecture of
the James River region during the nineteenth century can also be seen
in other new homes, such as Four Square , Ashlawn-Highland, High
Meadows and Warwickton, as well as in enlarged homes, such as
President John Tyler’s Sherwood Forest and Oak Ridge.
In the two decades before the Civil War the latest stylistic detailing
was combined with the vernacular architectural traditions in the
designs of the plantation homes of the area. North Bend
incorporated Greek Revival treatments, Edgewood and Milton Hall included Gothic
Revival design elements, and Italianate influences were introduced at Chippokes
and Lee Hall.
During the Civil War many homes,
such as Kittiewan and Upper Weyanoke, were the sites of
Union and Confederate encampments. Few plantations experienced
destruction of their homes or agricultural buildings, however,
plantation owners did lose their crops, equipment and slave labor. The
aftermath of the war had a devastating effect on the agricultural
economy of the James River region. During Reconstruction and the early
twentieth century the James River region was re-established as an
active agricultural community, although the period of creating elegant
country seats had come to an end. One rare example of post-war estate
building was seen with the construction of Evelynton in 1937. W.
Duncan Lee’s design for Evelynton and restoration of Carter’s
Grove illustrates the interest in the Colonial Revival style, as well
as the emergence of the historic preservation effort that continues to
thrive along the banks of the James River and its tributaries. Today
the plantation sites throughout the James River region survive as a
remarkable legacy of Virginia’s rich historical record.
LEARN MORE
Barrow, John A. and Thomas Tileston
Waterman. Domestic Architecture of Tidewater Virginia. New
York, NY: DaCapo Press, 1968.
Billings, Warren M. (ed.). The
Old Dominion in the Seventeenth Century – A Documentary History of
Virginia, 1609-1689. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina
Press, 1975.
Carmody, John M. A Guide to
Prince George and Hopewell. Hopewell, VA: The Hopewell News, 1939.
Coski, John M. and James P.
Whittenburg (eds.). Charles City County, Virginia – An Official
History. Salem, WV: Don Mills, Inc., 1989.
Dowdey, Clifford and Louis H.
Manarin. The History of Henrico County. Charlottesville, VA:
University of Virginia Press, 1984
Issac, Rhys. The Transformation
of Virginia, 1740-1790. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North
Carolina Press, 1982.
Kornwolf, James D. The Surry
County, Virginia 1776 Bicentennial Committee Guide to the buildings of
Surry County and the American Revolution. Surry, VA: Surry County
Bicentennial Committee, 1976.
Loth, Calder (ed.). The Virginia
Landmarks Register. Charlottesville, VA: University of Virginia
Press, 1999.
McCartney, Martha W. James City
County – Keystone of the Commonwealth. Virginia Beach, VA:
Donning Company, Publishers, 1997.
McCary, Ben C. Indians
Seventeenth-Century Virginia. Charlottesville, VA: University of
Virginia Press, 1957.
O’Dell, Jeffrey Marshall. Inventory
of Early Architecture and Historic Sites – County of Henrico,
Virginia. Richmond, VA: County of Henrico, 1978.
Roberts, Bruce. Plantation Homes
of the James River. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina
Press, 1990.
Waterman, Thomas Tileston. The
Mansions of Virginia, 1706-1776. Chapel Hill, NC: University of
North Carolina Press, 1946.
FOR CHILDREN
Kalman, Bobbie. Colonial
Craftsmen. New York, NY: Crabtree Publishing Co., 1992.
Kalman, Bobbie. Colonial Life.
New York, NY: Crabtree Publishing Co., 1992.
Kalman, Bobbie. Eighteenth
Century Clothes. New York, NY: Crabtree Publishing Co., 1993.
Kalman, Bobbie. Life on a
Plantation. New York, NY: Crabtree Publishing Co., 1997.