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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMMPZ_zion-poplars-baptist-church_Gloucester-Courthouse-VA.html
Zion Poplars Baptist Church houses one of the oldest independent African-American congregations in Gloucester County. It is named for seven united poplar trees under which the founding members first met for worship in 1866. The church was erected …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMK4P_walter-reed-birthplace_Gloucester-Courthouse-VA.html
Dr. Walter ReedConqueror of Yellow Feverborn here 1851given byThe Medical Society of Virginiain 1968 toAssociation forThe Preservation of Virginia Antiquities.
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMK3S_governor-john-page_Gloucester-Courthouse-VA.html
John Page, planter, scholar, and Revolutionary patriot, was born in 1743 at Rosewell, three miles west of here. He attended the College of William and Mary with Thomas Jefferson. The two men developed a lifelong friendship and shared an interest i…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMK3R_gloucester-training-school_Gloucester-Courthouse-VA.html
Built on this site in 1921 the Gloucester Training School became the first public high school for African Americans in Gloucester County. Thomas Calhoun Walker, Jr. and others constructed a wooden building with gifts from the Rosenwald Fund and ot…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMK3O_to-gwynns-island_Gloucester-Courthouse-VA.html
Two miles east is Toddsbury, home of the Todd family, built in 1722. Farther east, in Mathews County, are the old homes, Green Plains, Auburn, and Midlothian. Some miles beyond them is Gwynn's Island, where General Andrew Lewis drove the last roya…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMK3N_ware-church_Gloucester-Courthouse-VA.html
A mile east is Ware Church, built about 1693. Near by is Church Hill, another relic of colonial days. Not far distant is White Hall, a colonial mansion built by the Willis family.
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMK3K_zion-poplars-baptist-church_Gloucester-Courthouse-VA.html
Zion Poplars Baptist Church houses one of the oldest independent African-American congregations in Gloucester County. It is named for seven united poplar trees under which the founding members first met for worship in 1866. The church was erected …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMK3J_cappahosic_Gloucester-Courthouse-VA.html
Here is Cappahosic, where a ferry was established early in the eighteenth century. On the old charts, this Indian district lay between Werowocomoco and Timberneck Creek. Powhatan is said to have offered it to Capt. John Smith for "two great guns a…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMK3H_gloucester-agricultural-and-industrial-school_Gloucester-Courthouse-VA.html
On this site stood the Gloucester Agricultural and Industrial School, commonly known as Capahosic Academy, a private high school built for African Americans before public high schools were available to them. Founded in 1888 by local alumni of Hamp…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMK3B_bethel-baptist-church_Gloucester-Courthouse-VA.html
Bethel Baptist Church is one of the oldest African American congregations in Gloucester County. Founded nearby in 1867, it was originally known as the Old Sassafras Stage Church. Members of the congregation built a wooden structure here in 1889, w…