Virginia USA
Destination Guide & Hotel Reservations
Traveling through VIRGINIA , the oldest, largest and wealthiest of the American
colonies and the single most powerful influence on the early United States, is a nonstop
history lesson. Pretty and rural it may be, but it's the past that predominates: wherever
you go you're pointed towards this or that painstakingly restored two-hundred-year-old
building, where something or other happened a long time ago. The more you know about it
all, the more rewarding Virginia is to visit, but the historical plaques get a bit
ridiculous after a while, marking every spot where George Washington slept, Thomas
Jefferson thought, or Robert E. Lee tied his horse to a tree. You can see why Disney chose
northern Virginia as the site of its proposed theme park of American history a few years
back; and you'll also soon realize that Virginia takes itself a bit too seriously to allow
such a project to get off the ground.
Virginia's recorded history began at Jamestown , just off the Chesapeake Bay,
with the establishment in 1607 of the first successful British colony in North America.
Though the first colonists hoped to find gold, it was tobacco that made their
fortunes. The native strain - used for hundreds of years by Virginia's indigenous
population, of whom almost no trace remains - was too strongly flavored for European
tastes. When a smoother, more palatable variety was introduced in 1615 by John Rolfe - the
same man whose shipwreck on Bermuda inspired Shakespeare's The Tempest - tobacco
quickly became the colony's major cash crop. Before long, vast plantations, owned by a
very few aristocratic families, sprang up along the many broad rivers that flow into
Chesapeake Bay. To grow and harvest tobacco required both an immense amount of land - so
the Native Americans had to go - and intensive labor which led to the plantation owners
bringing in slaves from Africa. By the end of the seventeenth century, enslaved
African Americans accounted for nearly half of the colony's 75,000 people; a hundred years
later, they numbered over 300,000. Virginians had an enormous impact on the foundation of
the nascent United States: George Mason, Thomas Jefferson and James Madison wrote the
Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, and four of the first five US presidents
were from Virginia. However, by the mid-1800s the state was in decline, its once fertile
fields depleted by overuse and its agrarian economy increasingly eclipsed by the urban and
industrialized North.
As the confrontation between North and South over slavery and related economic and
political issues grew more divisive, Virginia was caught in the middle. Though this
slaveholding state initially voted against secession from the Union, it joined the
Confederacy when the Civil War broke out, providing its capital, Richmond, and its
military leader, Robert E. Lee, who had previously turned down an offer to lead the Union
army. Four long years later, Virginia was ravaged, its towns and cities wrecked, its
farmlands ruined and most of its youth dead. It has never regained its early prosperity,
or its prominence in national affairs.
Richmond itself was largely destroyed in the war; today it's a small city, with
some good museums, and is the best starting point for seeing Virginia. The bulk of the colonial
sites are concentrated just to the east, in what is known as the Historic Triangle
. Here the remains of Jamestown , the original colony, Williamsburg , the
restored colonial capital, and Yorktown , site of the final battle of the
Revolutionary War, lie within half an hour's drive of each other. Another historic center,
Thomas Jefferson's Charlottesville , sits at the foot of the gorgeous Blue Ridge
Mountains , an hour west of Richmond. An attractive small college town in its own
right, it's also within easy reach of the natural splendors of Shenandoah National Park
and the little towns of the western valleys. Northern Virginia , often visited as a
day-trip from Washington DC, features several posh suburbs and a number of restored
historic homes, the closest colonial architecture to the capital in Alexandria ,
and Manassas , the scene of two important Civil War battles.
Reserve a Hotel Room in Virginia USA
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