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A visit to Charles
City County is like a journey back in time.
Algonquian-speaking Native Americans migrated here from the north at least 800
years before the first Europeans arrived, taking up land that had been occupied
by other tribes as early as 10,000 years before.
Six years after
the 1607 landing, the Europeans planted a settlement at West and Shirley Hundred
on the north side of the James River. In quick succession, settlers planted
seven more settlements along the same shore. The native inhabitants were
scattered, but in diminished numbers they clung to the land.
From the early seeds of
European settlement, great tobacco plantations grew and with them the need for
labor. During the late 1600s and early 1700s, the labor of enslaved Africans
quickly replaced that of English indentured servants. During the 1800s the Civil
War brought emancipation to these slaves and other changes in the way residents
earned their livelihood.
Logging, fishing and
small-scale farming became the primary way of life for Charles City residents
well into the 1900s. Today, only a small number of county residents continue to
draw their livelihood from the forests, the water and the land. Yet, Charles
City residents remain tied to this land, a setting so timeless ?The New World,?
starring Colin Farrell, chose several locations in the county for filming.
As Virginia
invites the nation to come home to its birthplace in 2007, Charles City County
invites you to take a short drive from Jamestown to discover in one community
four centuries that made a nation.
Charles City
County is a living museum of history, architecture and man?s stewardship of the
land.
Her residents have witnessed every major event in American history and given
their lives in the making of a nation. Its world-renowned plantation homes and
other historic sites are vessels of our nation?s history. They are the homes and
workplaces of patriots and presidents, agricultural pioneers, merchants,
millers, Native Americans and African Americans; but, they are above all ?
timeless treasures in a timeless setting.
Her people are a
braid, woven of strands whose roots run back to the nape of America.
Charles City was home to the Chickahominy, Paspahegh and Weyanock Native
Americans when the Susan Constant, the Godspeed and the Discovery entered the
mouth of the Chesapeake Bay in 1607 and sailed up the James River. Those English
settlers planted a new settlement at West and Shirley Hundred in 1613.
Governor Yeardley
traded with a Dutch vessel for her cargo of ?20 and odd? Captive Africans in
1618 and almost half of them were brought to the Borough of Charles City and
settled across the James River at Flowerdew Hundred, a European settlement on
Weyanock lands. Thus, Charles City became one of the first meeting grounds of
three cultures ? three cultures that have moved over the course of four
centuries from confrontation to community.
When we extend the
invitation to ?come home to Charles City County? we extend the invitation to
millions of Americans whose blood lines run back to this land where three
cultures formed a union.
When the first
English explorers ventured up the James and Chickahominy Rivers the fish, fowl
and wildlife they observed appeared marvelous and fantastical to them.
One-hundred-foot tall Loblolly Pines towered from banks
above the river, giant sturgeon swam in the waters and great flocks of Passenger
Pigeons blotted out the sun. In the forests the Englishmen found wild turkeys
weighing 30 to 60 pounds and traveling in flocks of 40 or more. In the waters
Capt. John Smith reported catching Sturgeon measuring up to 9 feet in length.
In Charles City
today, as in the rest of North America, the old growth forests and Passenger
Pigeons are gone, but countless other bird, wildlife and plant species that
inhabited this place when the English arrived still inhabit the land, the skies
and the waters. Since the first quarter of the eighteenth century the county has
comprised an area of 204 square miles bounded by the James River on the south,
by the Chickahominy River on the east and north, and by Turkey Island Creek on
the west. The county ironically has no ?city,? indeed it has no stoplight. It is
a rural oasis between burgeoning metropolitan areas to the east and west. But,
what the county lacks in population it makes up for in natural beauty.
Come home to
Virginia and out to the country where you can take a hike, ride your bike,
paddle a canoe, catch a fish, watch for birds, hunt for deer, or stroll through
the garden of an historic home in this land embraced by two rivers.
The idea that
people should be represented by their government is the idea that made America ?
an idea born at Jamestown and in Charles City in 1619.
Charles City County is one of the oldest governmental units in America. Named
after the son of King James who later became King Charles I of England, it was
one of four "boroughs" or "incorporations" created by the Virginia Company in
1619. The first Charles City County courthouses were located along the James
River at Westover and City Point. It was to those courthouses that the Virginia
Colonists came to cast their ballots for representatives in the House of
Burgesses, applying that extraordinary notion, that people should be represented
by their government.
Charles City?s
colonial-era courthouse was constructed in the 1750's and is one of only five
courthouses in America that have been in continuous use for judicial purposes
since before the Revolutionary War. Its walls have heard the voices of men like
Benjamin Harrison V, a Signer of the Declaration of Independence, and John
Tyler, the 10th President of the United States. Its walls also have heard the
voices of voters casting their ballots ? voters who for more than three decades
have filled a majority of the county?s elective offices with persons of color.
What better place
to visit than Charles City County for living proof America is a nation founded
not upon an estate, but upon an idea?
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