Updated Road To Revolution Trail Brochure
Updated Road To Revolution Trail Brochure
Updated Road To Revolution Trail Brochure
HERITAGE TRAIL
FAIRFAX
66 17 29
Road to
WASHINGTON, D.C.
ALEXANDRIA
LORTON WARRENTON
17 1
Mount Vernon
Mount Vernon
522
Gunston Hall
CULPEPER
17
95
POTO M
Montpelier
29 15
AC
Stratford Hall
RI
VE
33
Ferry Farm
20
Scotchtown
522
FREDERICKSBURG
301 17
205
COLONIAL BEACH
Montpelier
5
Ash LawnHighland
81 20
ORANGE
3
3
Hall
250 250 64
33
CHARLOTTESVILLE
Hanover Courthouse
3 738
Monticello
6 7
Ash LawnHighland
53 20 250
Rural Plains
95
HANOVER ASHLAND
54
Scotchtown
15
301
Hanover Tavern
17
Hanover Tavern
33
54
HANOVER
10
1
Enlargement at right
360 33 295
301
ASHLAND
522 64 295 29
12
12
11 13
11
95
Rural Plains
250
Polegreen Church
60 288 60 60
16
RICHMOND
15 14
MECHANICSVILLE
360 64
MECHANICSVILLE
295
Wilton
16
RICHMOND
15
Hampden-Sydney College
360
295
1
Bell Tower
64
95
460
FARMVILLE
95
JA
ME S
YO
R I V ER
19
460
Colonial Williamsburg
PETERSBURG
301 460 460
17
RI
VE
R
Yorktown
Red Hill
Hampden-Sydney College
18
17 64
501
15
360
1 60
BROOKNEAL
20
40
Red Hill
Wilton
95 85
HAMPTON
17
Visit these sites to learn more about the Virginia leaders and events essential to establishing American independence and liberty. For more details, including directions and hours, use the contact information provided.
Colonial Williamsburg
11 1
Monticello Charlottesville
www.monticello.org (434) 984-9800 A self-taught architect, Thomas Jefferson took 40 years (from 1768 to 1809) to complete his home, built on a leveled mountaintop. Jefferson designed two Monticellos: the first, a tripartite Palladian villa, was not quite finished when he demolished part of it in the 1790s and began the second, a much larger mansion reflecting Palladian, Roman, and French architectural ideals. Jefferson died at Monticello in 1826, and he and members of his family are buried in the on-site graveyard.
16
wilton Richmond
www.wiltonhousemuseum.org (804) 282-5936 At the original site in eastern Henrico County, Marquis de Lafayette camped and drilled his troops for two weeks in May 1781, a few months before the Battle of Yorktown. Both George Washington and Thomas Jefferson visited Wilton. When threatened with demolition in 1933, the ca. 1753 house was relocated to its current site. The National Society of The Colonial Dames of America in the Commonwealth of Virginia operates Wilton.
12
a sH l awnHiGHland Charlottesville
www.ashlawnhighland.org (434) 293-8000 James Monroe purchased his Highland property in 1793 at the urging of his friend and mentor Thomas Jefferson, who lived nearby. Monroe and his wife resided on the property between 1799 and 1823. They sold the house and land in 1826. After the Monroes tenure, the property was known as Ash Lawn and was in private hands until it was bequeathed to the College of William and Mary, its current owner, in 1974.
13
yorktown Yorktown
www.nps.gov/yonb (757) 898-2410 www.historyisfun.org (888) 593-4682 The National Park Service interprets Yorktown National Battlefield, where, on October 19, 1781, Lord Cornwallis surrendered to General George Washington. The nearby Yorktown Victory Center, operated by the Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation, chronicles Americas evolution to nationhood. The town of Yorktown, adjacent to the battlefield, features many 18th-century structures for viewing or touring.
14
15
r ed Hill Brookneal
www.redhill.org (800) 514-7463 Patrick Henry retired to Red Hill after 25 years in Virginias legislature and five years as governor. Henry died on June 6, 1799, and was buried here. The main house has been reconstructed on its original site, and seven historic buildings, including his law office, remain standing. The house also includes a substantial collection of Patrick Henry memorabilia.
Revolution
HERITAGE TRAIL
Richmond Metropolitan Convention and Visitors Bureau 401 N. 3rd Street Richmond, VA 23219 (804) 783-7450
Road to
www.VisitRichmondVa.com
2013 Road to ReVoLutIon HeRItage tRaIL BRoCHuRe desIgn By CommunICatIon desIgn InC., RICHmond, Va.
www.virginia.org
RICHMOND
www.roadtorevolution.com
Road to
independence
Virginia Tourism Corporation 901 E. Byrd Street Richmond, VA 23219 (800) VISITVA
ThE RoAD To AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE was a long one, built on determination and sacrifice. The ideals of the American Revolutionembodied in the Declaration of Independencecontinued to evolve even after the nations birth. The foundations of religious liberty were laid early, beginning with the First Great Awakening in the 1720s and stretching to the passage of the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom in 1786, followed by adoption of the First Amendment five years later. Personal liberties and political equality, both cornerstones of the Revolution, did not spread to all citizens for years. Women and individuals of African descent, for example, did not begin fully benefiting from the promise of the Declaration of Independence until as late as the 20th century. The fight to uphold these ideals resurfaces still today. The path to political independencethe struggle to separate the colonies from the British Empirebegan long before the first shots were fired at Lexington and Concord on April 19, 1775. As John Adams later wrote: The revolution was effected before the War for Independence commenced. The revolution was in the minds and Patrick Henry (standing, foreground) delivering his Give hearts of the people. Adams believed the seeds me liberty or give me death! speech at the Second Virginia of revolution were planted at least a decade before, Convention at St. Johns Church, Richmond, March 23, 1775. as issues of security, taxation, representation, and political authority stirred American opposition. Independenceproclaimed on July 4, 1776, and completed in 1783came only after significant sacrifice in blood and suffering. Thus, the road to the American Revolution, and the accompanying revolution inside the people, was protracted and arduous, extending into the modern era. This brochure will guide you as you walk this road and encounter its many Patrick Henrys spectacles can be found at the Virginia Historical Society in Richmond. signs and footmarks around Virginia.
political independence
Even as residents of the colonies began to oppose the British policies that affected them, these colonists at first carefully avoided challenging King George III directly, instead accusing his ministers and Parliament of injustice. Eventually, however, the king himself became the focus of dissent as the colonies marched slowly toward separation from Britain. Several Virginians played major roles in the progression from opposition to revolution.
patrick Henry, Orator of the Revolution and a Virginia governor, spurred Virginia to prepare a defense against the Crown with his Liberty or Death speech at St. Johns Church in Richmond on March 23, 1775. You can visit 10 sites related to Henrys life, including Red Hill, his home in Charlotte County. tHoMas Jefferson, third president of the United States, authored both the Declaration of Independence and the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom. A self-taught architect, Jefferson designed his beloved home, Monticello, as well as nearby University of Virginia.
JaMes M adison, Father of the Constitution and fourth U.S. president, was the author of the Virginia Plan and the best-prepared delegate at the Constitutional Convention. He secured the Constitutions ratification by explaining its underlying political theory, enumerated in the Federalist Papers, and by introducing a Bill of Rights in the first Congress. As president, Madison successfully led the country through the War of 1812, a major test of national sovereignty and executive power.
Gunston Hall
GeorGe M ason, a Virginia leader of the Revolution, was a delegate to the Constitutional Convention in 1787 but refused to sign the document because, in his opinion, it lacked sufficient guarantees to secure the rights and freedom of individual citizens. After ratification, the first 10 constitutional amendments (the Bill of Rights) were adopted. These were based on Masons Virginia Declaration of Rights, which he drafted in 1776. Masons home, Gunston Hall, is in Northern Virginias Fairfax County. r icHard Henry lee and francis liGHtfoot lee, whose boyhood home, Stratford Hall, stands in the states Northern Neck, were the only two brothers to sign the Declaration of Independence. A cousin, Revolutionary War hero Henry Light-Horse Harry Lee, also lived at Stratford Hall, and his son, Confederate General Robert E. Lee, was born there. JaMes Monroe, a soldier in the Revolutionary War and the fifth U.S. president, is best known for the doctrine that bears his name. The Monroe Doctrine of 1823, often described as the cornerstone of U.S. foreign policy, declared that the Americas should be free from further European colonization and influence. Monroes Charlottesville home, Ash LawnHighland, is within three miles of that of his friend and legal mentor, Thomas Jefferson.
GeorGe wasHinGton, the first U.S. president, commanded the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War, and he continued to lead and train the American army despite repeated defeats in New York and New Jersey. Eventually, his and his troops perseverance wore down British resolve. The scene of his greatest triumph, Yorktown, as well as his home, Mount Vernon, are both in Virginia, along with a National Park Service monument marking his birthplace (in the Northern Neck) and his childhood home, Ferry Farm (in Fredericksburg). M arquis de l afayette and coMte de rocHaMBeau, two of the many Frenchmen who joined the fight for American independence, served in Virginia toward the end of the war. Lafayette fought at several sites, including Petersburg and Yorktown, and camped with his troops for two weeks at Wilton, Lafayette southeast of Richmond. On the way to Yorktown, Rochambeau and his army marched through Hanover Court House, where a trace of the original road that he used is still visible.
JoHn M arsHall, a Revolutionary War veteran, was the chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court from 1801 until his death in 1835. Known as the Definer of the Constitution, he established and defended the independence of the judiciary. His home, the John Marshall House, is in Richmond.
Monticello
Road to
libeRty
personal liBerty
The ideals of the Revolution, embodied in the Declarations ringing phrase all men are created equal, prompted some to question whether the new country could live up to these principles. Could a person believe in personal liberty yet hold other human beings in involuntary bondage? Could the rights guaranteed to all men be denied to women? These and other questions tore at the consciences of citizens for the next century and beyond. a nna M aria l ane, a New Englander who followed her husband into the Continental Army, fought as a soldier and was wounded at the Battle of Germantown, Pennsylvania, on October 3, 1777. She and her husband eventually settled in Richmond, where he served in the Public Guard based in the Bell Tower in Capitol Square. She served as a nurse, and when she became too feeble to continue her duties, the Commonwealth awarded her a pension. Today, a state highway marker just off the Squarewhere the Bell Tower still standstells Lanes story.
r eliGious liBerty
The struggle for religious liberty traces back to the earliest settlements in the northern British colonies in the 17th century. Dissenters from the Church of Englandincluding Methodists, Baptists, Quakers, and Presbyteriansalso settled in Virginia and fought to exercise their beliefs in the face of official opposition, even imprisonment. They finally succeeded in 1786, when the General Assembly passed Thomas Jeffersons Statute for Religious Freedom, later constituting one of the five freedoms enunciated in the First Amendment of the Bill of Rights.
saMuel daVies, though not the only fearless advocate of religious liberty before the Revolution, epitomized this ideal. A traveling Presbyterian minister based at Polegreen Church in Hanover County (north of Richmond) between 1748 and 1759, he sought to educate slaves so that they might read as well as listen to Scripture, advocated for the separation of church and state, and spoke out for freedom of conscience. He also served as president of present-day Princeton University from 1759 to 1761.
Polegreen Church ghost frame outlines the church atop its original foundation.
JaMes l afayette was born as James, the slave of Revolutionary official William Armistead. He volunteered to spy on the British in Yorktown for Marquis de Lafayette. After the war, Marquis de Lafayette wrote a testimonial to his spys service. When James was freed by an act of the General Assembly, the former slave took Lafayette as his surname. In 1824, when the French Lafayette returned to the United States for a grand tour, the two Lafayettes were reunited at Yorktown. James Lafayettes story is told both on a state highway marker at the New Kent County Courthouse east of Richmond (near his birthplace) and at Yorktown, the scene of his spying.
Bell Tower, Capitol Square