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| History |
The Chesapeake Bay was formed during the last Ice Age.Native
Americans began hunting, farming and fishing along the shores
of its tributaries around 1,000 BC. It was the Nimcocks who first
settled what would come to be known as Urbanna. Nimcock means
“Indians who live in towns.” The Nimcocks lived in huts in fenced
villages designed to thwart attack.
Jamestown was established a few millennia later in 1607. Captain John Smith
set out from there to explore the Chesapeake Bay watershed, which he called “a
place where heaven and earth never agreed better to frame man's habitation.”
The first “come heres” soon followed him.
In 1649, Ralph Wormeley patented 3,200 acres on the Rappahannock, including the
lands the Nimcocks had cleared for their settlement and crops, forcing the tribe
upriver. Landowners like Wormeley established plantations on Virginia’s
navigable rivers, which they used as private ports, shipping tobacco directly
to market without the inconvenience and expense of going through an official
port of entry.
The 1680 Acts of Assembly at Jamestown changed all that.
They ordered local officials to establish 20, 50-acre port towns, at a
cost of 10,000 pounds of tobacco each, through which all trade would take place:
Varina, Charles City, Surry, Jamestown, Patesfield, Nansemond and Warwick along
with plantations in Elizabeth City, Norfolk, Yorktown, New Kent, Gloucester,
Tappahannock, Stafford, Accomac, Northampton, Lancaster, Northumberland—and the
small part of Ralph Wormeley’s Rosegill that would, in 1705, be named Burgh of
Urbanna, “City of Anne.” The town was named in honor of England’s Queen Anne.
Seven buildings around town have been in continuous use since the colonial period.
Four of them are on the National Register of Historic Places.
The Old Tobacco Warehouse, which now serves as the town’s Visitor’s Center,
is where planters exchanged tobacco for immediate cash and credit to purchase
imported goods for sale. Next door is the Gressitt House, where Urbanna’s Harbormaster
once lived. Across the street is Little Sandwich, believed to have been the port
town’s Customs House.
Up the hill you’ll find Middlesex County’s original courthouse. It’s one of only
11 colonial courthouses still standing in Virginia today. The handsome Georgian
mansion next door to the Post Office is Lansdowne, home of Arthur Lee, one of
the storied Lees of Virginia. Along with Benjamin Franklin and Silas Deane, Lee
represented the Continental Congress at France’s Court of Versailles.
Colonial travelers spent the night at The Tavern on Prince George Street for
five pounds of tobacco or six pence. Legend has it that Patrick Henry once addressed
townspeople from its steps. The clapboard Wormeley-Lee-Montague Cottage is believed
to be the oldest surviving house in Urbanna.
On either side of town are two National Historic Register colonial plantations:
Ralph Wormeley’s Rosegill and Hewick. Christopher Robinson, who built Hewick
in 1678, was a member of the Governor’s Council, Secretary of State of the colony
and an original trustee of the College of William & Mary. Wormeley
and Robinson were among the most influential men in colonial Virginia.
As the international sailing vessels of the colonial tobacco trade yielded to
Chesapeake Bay schooners, then steamboats, then crab and oyster workboats and
the pleasure boats of today, one thing has remained constant: Urbanna’s history
and fortunes have been and always will be one with the Bay. |
| Want to learn moreabout Urbanna’s
history? |
- Pick up a brochure in town and take a self-guided
walking tour.
- Visit the Virginia history collection at the
Urbanna Branch of the Middlesex County Library
- Stop by the Old Tobacco Warehouse Visitor
Center.
- Go buy the book: Urbanna: A
Port Town in Virginia 1680-1980 is a handsome, hardcover
volume published to commemorate the town’s tricentennial.
You can get your copy at the Town Office, local shops and
the Visitor’s Center.
- Buy the DVD: Working the Water is the
Urbanna Oyster Festival’s one-hour DVD commemorating the rich,
cultural heritage of of Virginia’s watermen. Buy it online
from the Oyster
Festival Foundation.
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