You searched for City|State: midlothian, va
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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVKS_salisbury_Midlothian-VA.html
On this site stood Salisbury, built in the eighteenth century as a hunting lodge. Here Patrick Henry lived during his fourth and fifth term as Governor of Virginia. The Confederate General Edward Johnson lived here in his later years and died here.
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVKR_the-heath-gravity-railroad_Midlothian-VA.html
Some 500 feet beyond this point along both sides of Salisbury Road, roadbed remains of the Heath Gravity Railroad are visible. The railroad ran through this area from 1838 until approximately 1850. It was used to transport coal mined from the Midl…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMR6H_bellona-foundry_Midlothian-VA.html
Gun and gun mold recovered by C. Merle Luck from the James River on August 18, 1962 having been put there during Col. Dahlgren's Raid during the Civil War.
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMO21_winfree-memorial-baptist-church_Midlothian-VA.html
Winfree Memorial Baptist Church, constituted in 1852 as Jerusalem Baptist Church, originally stood to the west on Buckingham Pike. In September 1881, to better serve the coal mining community, the frame structure was rolled here on logs. On 3 Feb.…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMO20_eleazar-clay_Midlothian-VA.html
Eleazar Clay (1744-1836) led the establishment of the first Baptist church in Chesterfield County, known as Chesterfield (Baptist) Church, Rehoboth Meeting House, or Clay's Church, in 1773. He also supported the Baptist preachers imprisoned for br…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HML3Q_mid-lothian-mines-and-rail-roads_Midlothian-VA.html
Coal Mining Chronology in Chesterfield
1835 Mid-Lothian Coal Mining Company is chartered.1836 The Company organizes with 3,000 shares valued at $100 each with 1,000 shares being sold to raise $100,000 capital. The Wooldridge family contributes …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HML3P_mid-lothian-mines-and-rail-roads_Midlothian-VA.html
The Mid-Lothian African Church
Near the Grove Shaft, 54 free blacks, slaves and six white males at the Mid-Lothian Coal Mining Company started the Mid-Lothian African Church on February 8, 1846. Assisted by the company the 60 member congregatio…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HML3O_mid-lothian-mines-and-rail-roads_Midlothian-VA.html
Early History of the Grove Shaft1836-61
The Grove Shaft plunged 625 feet and took workmen three years to dig. The Wooldridges employed 150 men and boys. Twenty-five mules stabled underground pulled coal carts on an underground railroad. Workmen…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HML3N_mid-lothian-mines-and-rail-roads_Midlothian-VA.html
Local Coal Mining in the 18th and 19th Centuries
Outcroppings of coal along the south bank of the James River in what is now Powhatan County were discovered circa 1700. A hunter from the nearby Huguenot settlement, Manakintown, dislodged lumps …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HML3H_mid-lothian-mines-and-rail-roads_Midlothian-VA.html
Welcome to the Mid-Lothian Mines Park
The Mid-Lothian Mines Park is in the heart of Midlothian's coal mining past and is encompassed by the Richmond Coal Basin. Mining in the Midlothian area of the Basin represents the first attempt at commerci…