Fast Facts
Interesting bits of information
about Henrico County
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Three Chopt Road began as an Indian trail marked
by three notches carved in trees located at intervals
along the ancient path.
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One of the three villages that
Indian Chief Powhatan called home was in
present-day Henrico County.
The village of Powhatan (an Indian
word meaning “falls
in a current”) was located
on a hill opposite three islands
just
below
the falls of the James
River.
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“Powhatan’s River,” named by
Virginia’s Indians to honor their chief,
was renamed the James River, or the “King’s
River,” by 17th century English
settlers to honor King James I.
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Sir Thomas Dale founded the Citie
of Henricus in 1611 on “seven English acres of ground.” It
was the second successful English
settlement in America.
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Early settlers named Henrico County in honor of
Henry Frederick, the Prince of Wales and son of
King James I of England.
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The English colonies first mined coal and iron
in Henrico County. Settlers mined coal at the Richmond
Coal Basin (located in Henrico). Gayton Road derived
its name from the Gayton coalmines, originally
owned by DuVal Coal interests.
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John Rolfe introduced tobacco as the first successful
cash crop in the New World at Henricus in 1612.
That same year, John Rolfe imported a mild strain
of tobacco from Trinidad that helped make the Virginia
colony prosper.
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The Varina magisterial district is named for a
mild variety of tobacco from Spain, similar to
the strain that helped make the colony profitable.
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By 1616, liberal property ownership
laws caused the Citie of Henricus to shrink
from a town of
more than 300 to only 38 “men
and boys.”
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One of the oldest political subdivisions
in Virginia, Henrico County was established
in 1634 as one of
the colony’s eight
original shires, and included
all or part
of 10 modern
Virginia counties as well
as the cities of Richmond,
Charlottesville and Colonial
Heights.
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After her capture by English settlers
and subsequent marriage to John Rolfe
in 1614, Pocahontas lived
part of her life in what
is currently Henrico’s
Varina district. Her image
today graces the Henrico seal and flag.
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Pocahontas’ marriage to John Rolfe helped
usher a period of peace between the English settlers
and Virginia’s Powhatan Indians.
The peace was broken on Good Friday
1622 during a coordinated
Indian attack on English settlements
in Virginia.
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Rev. Alexander Whitaker, “the Apostle of
Virginia,” was minister of
a Henrico Church and lived at its
parsonage, Rock
Hall, near present
day Dutch Gap. The Rev. Whitaker
converted Pocahontas to Christianity
and presided
over her marriage
to John Rolfe in 1614.
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Pocahontas’ name after her
conversion to Christianity was Rebecca.
She and John Rolfe had
a son, Thomas.
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After growing up in England with his paternal
grandparents, Thomas returned to Virginia, where
he became a militia officer and commanded a frontier
fort in western Henrico.
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At the end of a trip to England in 1617, Pocahontas
fell ill and died at Gravesend, England, where
she is buried.
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In 1619, Thomas Dowse and John
Polentine were Henrico County’s
first representatives to the Virginia
House of
Burgesses, precursor
to the Virginia General Assembly.
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Varina was the first seat of county government
in Henrico.
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Brookfield Plantation in Henrico County, where
slave insurrection leader Gabriel Prosser lived,
was located in an area bordered by modern-day Brook
and Chamberlayne roads to the east and west, and
Wilkinson Road to the north. Gabriel led an ill-fated
1800 slave revolt.
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Henrico and Dinwiddie counties are tied for the
greatest number of Civil War battlefields in the
United States.
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In 1862, the 1862 battle of Glendale—a 7,800-acre
Henrico County site—saw some
of the Civil War's worst hand-to-hand
combat,
and suffered 6,500
casualties as Union soldiers retreated.
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More African-American troops were awarded the
Medal of Honor after the Civil War battle of New
Market Heights in eastern Henrico County than any
other Civil War battle; 14 men received this highest
military honor for bravery.
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Railroad artillery was deployed
for the first time in the history of
warfare at the Civil War
battle of Savage’s
Station. Union troops quickly
adopted this
Confederate
innovation.
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Dabbs House, named for one-time owner, Josiah
Dabbs, served as a headquarters for General Robert
E. Lee during the Civil War. In 1883, Henrico County
purchased the home for use as a poor house and
later as a police station.
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Pioneer African-American educator and humanitarian
Virginia Randolph founded the first public school
vocational education program in the nation in Henrico
County.
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Broad Street Road received its
name because of its unusual width at the time
it was built. The
metro-Richmond area was the site
of the first streetcar system in the United States,
and
as a result, travelers
needed a broad street to keep their
horses as far from the streetcars as possible.
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During the Revolutionary War, Continental
Army troops kept horses in a large pen in Henrico
County. The
road leading to the pen took the
name Horsepen Road.
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Horseracing was among the most
popular pastimes in colonial Virginia, and Henrico
County boasted a
number of popular racecourses.
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Short Pump Tavern, a stagecoach
stop on the road to Virginia’s western
settlements, had a well in the yard
with an unusually short
pump handle.
The name Short Pump now applies
to a considerable area in the western
end of the county.
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Old Osborne Turnpike in Varina
derives it name from Thomas Osborne, an early
colonist and landowner. The road is among the first
divided
highways in
the country.
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Henrico is one of just two counties
in Virginia that maintains its own
road system. Henrico’s
Department of Public Works
maintains more than 1,250 miles of roadway.
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The USS Henrico (APA-45) carried
elements of the “Big
Red One” US Army 1st Division
to the D-Day assault on Omaha
Beach during
the World War II
invasion of Normandy, France.
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More than 20,000 businesses call
Henrico County home—SIX are Fortune
1000 companies. There are 63 foreign-affiliated
firms representing
14
counties in Henrico.
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Henrico County maintains the lowest
real estate property tax in urban Virginia, and
a cost of living index consistently below the national
average.
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Henrico is one of only 22 counties
nationwide to hold triple-A bond ratings
from all three major
bond rating firms: Moody’s Investor Service,
Standard & Poor’s Corp.
and Fitch Investors Service L.P.
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Contact Information
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Public Relations & Media Services
P.O. Box 90775
Henrico, VA 23273-0775
Phone: (804) 501-4257
Fax: (804) 501-5500
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