Young Martha Dandridge Custis

Young Martha Dandridge Custis

Sunday, May 30, 2021

Richmond National Cemetery lies some 15 miles east of New Kent . . .

 



 At the close of the Civil War, the remains of Union soldiers who died during the numerous battles in and around Richmond, including the 1862 Peninsula Campaign, the 1864 Overland Campaign, and the Sieges of Petersburg and Richmond, were scattered among the city’s cemeteries and battlefield burial grounds.  When the Richmond National Cemetery opened in 1866, most of the first burials were reinterments of Union soldiers from other sites in the area.  The reburied soldiers include 3,200 from Oakwood Cemetery in Richmond, 388 from Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond, 210 from the cemetery at the Belle Island Confederate Prison, and hundreds more from the battlefields of Cold Harbor, Seven Pines, and more than 70 additional sites within a 25-mile radius.


From Roll of Honor: Names of Soldiers who Died in Defence of the American Union, Interred in the National  Cemeteries and Other Burial Places ... Vols 16-17

Union Soldiers Interred in Richmond National Cemetery, VA
Division: F
Section: 1
No. 5621
(76 to 148)    73 unknown
These bodies were interred in an triangular enclosure, at Bottom's Bridge, where the New Kent road crosses the Chickahominy river. No. 76 was No. 1 grave on the southwest corner of the triangle and the rows followed the hypotenuse.


Friday, May 14, 2021

Roads, Good Government, and Sabbath Fishing- 1922

                       New Kent Organizes Against Sunday Fishing 

                     [Special to The Times-Dispatch.] 

WEST POINT, VA., March 9. The people in this section have not ceased to deplore the fact that the central route was selected for the highway from Richmond to the coast.* The route selected, it is alleged, for the convenience of the sporting fraternity, will not open up a large section of the country. 

The people in New Kent have organized a Good Government League and assert that there will be no more fishing in the Chickahominy River on the Sabbath by visitors from the city.


-Richmond Times-Dispatch, 10 March 1922


*The central route talked about is the first paved road down the Peninsula to Newport News. Know even then as the Pocahontas Trail, it would become the original Rt. 60 (the first, two lane, version).