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Farrar's Island

Coordinates: 37°21′58″N 77°22′30″W / 37.366°N 77.375°W / 37.366; -77.375
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Farrar's Island
Reconstruction of early 17th-century house at Henricus Historical Park on Farrar's Island.
Reconstruction of early 17th-century house at Henricus Historical Park on Farrar's Island.
Farrar's Island is located in Virginia
Farrar's Island
Location in Virginia
Farrar's Island is located in the United States
Farrar's Island
Farrar's Island (the United States)
Coordinates: 37°21′58″N 77°22′30″W / 37.366°N 77.375°W / 37.366; -77.375
LocationChesterfield County, Virginia
Elevation6 m

Farrar's Island is a peninsula now on the west side of the James River in Chesterfield County, Virginia. The county operates the Dutch Gap Conservation Area and Boat Landing and as well as a living history museum, the Henricus Historical Park. Originally, Farrar's Island was formed by a meander loop in the James River and lay on the east side of the James River. At its smallest point, the neck of the peninsula was less than 400 feet (120 metres) wide. At that time, Farrar's Island was slightly less than 700 acres (280 hectares) and lay about 15 miles (24 km) south of the James River fall line at Richmond, Virginia.

Due to its strategic location on the river, the peninsula's neck became the site of the earliest English settlements in Virginia, Henricus, founded by Sir Thomas Dale in 1611, but basically abandoned by 1622. Farrar's Island acquired its name after 1637 when William Farrar obtained ownership as part of the headright due him for importing indentured servants to the colony. Farrar was a lawyer who also served on the Virginia governor's council and as a magistrate in the Crown Colony of Virginia. The Farrar family owned the peninsula until 1737 when a descendant sold it to Thomas Randolph.

During the last year of the American Civil War, Farrar's Island played a minor role in the Bermuda Hundred campaign. The James River along the peninsula anchored the left flank of Union General Benjamin Butler's defensive line. The area around Farrar's Island had river defenses by both Union and Confederate forces, each seeking to deny its enemy the use of the James River. The James River around Farrar's Island was also the site of one of the last major naval engagements of the war, the Battle of Trent's Reach. During the war, Farrar's Island became a true island when General Butler's troops built the Dutch Gap Canal, across the neck of the peninsula.

In the 1870s, the Dutch Gap Canal was expanded and become the main channel of the James River, which allowed shipping to bypass the meander loop around Farrar's Island. Construction of the canal put Farrar's Island on the west side of the James River, and it evolved into its present form as a tidal lagoon surrounded by woods and wetlands.

Colonial history

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Historical Marker, Farrar's Island

In the colonial era, Farrar's Island was technically a peninsula (a neck of land). However, in 17th century Virginia when the land was acquired by the Farrar family, a neck of land mainly surrounded by a river could also be known as an island.[1] At its most narrow point, the neck was less than 200 yards wide[2] and its elevation above the James River varied from 3 feet to about 49 feet.[3] In the original patent that gave the land to William Farrar, the peninsula was called an island; though in the will of his namesake son, the land was called a neck.[4] By the time of the American Civil War, the peninsula had acquired its common name of Farrar's Island.

At the time of English-Native American contact period starting around 1607, the area around Farrar's Island was associated with the Arrohattoc,[5][6] a tribe within the Powhatan Confederacy.[7] The tribe's village of Arrohateck is depicted in John Smith and William Holes's map of 1607 Virginia as located approximately on the east side of the James River approximately 5 leagues (15 miles) south of the river's fall line.[8] However, Arrohateck village was apparently deserted by the time the English began settling in the area.[9]

The first English settlement on Farrar's Island was Henricus, which Sir Thomas Dale, the deputy-governor of the Virginia Colony established in 1611. The settlement was located on the neck of the peninsula, near the former village of Arrohateck.[10]: 27  The Virginia Company of London had ordered Dale to find a healthy location to secure the navigable portion of the upstream James River and to provide a place of retreat in case of an attack by the Spanish.[11] Intending the new settlement to become the colony's principal seat,[12] Dale rapidly made Henricus a well-built, strongly-fortified settlement.[10]: 30–31  The new fortifications included a ditch with a palisade behind that ran across the peninsula's neck.[13] Historian Robert Hunt Land suggests that at this time the peninsula's neck got the name "Dale's Dutch Gap",[11]: 466–467  since Dale had served as a long-time soldier of fortune with the United Provinces of the Netherlands.[14] However, the settlement did not thrive. By the time Dale returned to England in 1616, Henricus was already dilapidated, consisting of few houses and the ruins of a never-completed church.[15]: 25: 32: 35 Though Henricus was incorporated into the City of Henrico, what was left of it was abandoned after the Powhatan attack of 1622, as the settlement was not listed as one of the fortified strongholds that the Virginia Company ordered survivors to move to.[16]

In 1637, Farrar's Island became the property of William Farrar Jr., the namesake son of prominent councillor, William Farrar. Before he died, the elder William Farrar acquired a 2000-acre patent from Governor John Harvey based on headrights Farrar Sr. received for financing the transport of 40 persons from England to the Virginia Colony.[17]

Farrar descendants continued to own Farrar's Island until it was sold to Thomas Randolph in 1727.[18] In May 1771, twelve days of heavy rain in the mountains west of Richmond caused a deluge known as "The Great Fresh of 1771", which inundated the settlements and plantations along James River.[19] (a possibly similar flood hit upriver Lovingston, Virginia in modern times) Because it was almost entirely surrounded by the James, Farrar's Island was particularly hard hit. All the property of the then owner, Thomas Mann Randolph was carried off by the flood,[20] and the land's economic value was also severely reduced as 80 acres of arable topsoil washed away, leaving a pavement of stones.[21]

Civil War history

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1864 depiction of Farrar's Island (on the right) with Union boom reaching to Trent's Reach (on distant left)
1864 Naval Scout drawing of James River and Farrar's Island with depiction of Confederate battery positions and Union boom across the James at Trent's Reach

By the time of the Civil War, Henry Cox of Farmer's Rest, who had substantial landholdings on the James River, owned Farrar's Island, which was sometimes referred to as Cox's Island[22][23]

In May 1864, Union General Benjamin Butler initiated the Bermuda Hundred campaign by landing the Army of the James at Bermuda Hundred and occupied the east side of the James River between Bermuda Hundred and Farrar's Island. After Butler gave up on his maneuver towards Richmond following his defeat at the Battle of Proctor's Creek, the Army of the James retreated to a line on the Bermuda Hundred Peninsula stretching from a bluff on the south bank of the James river overlooking Farrar's Island (which was called Trent's Reach), to the mouth of the Appomattox River. The Confederates then entrenched their forces on the Howlett Line, which was approximately parallel to the Union defenses. These fortified lines were held with only minor changes until after the end of the Siege of Petersburg in April 1865.[24]

During this time, Farrar's Island became the front line in the struggle to control James River maritime traffic. In June 1864, General Ulysses S. Grant ordered the Union navy under Admiral Samuel Phillips Lee to sink five ships,[25] which were then used to create an obstructive boom across the James River stretching between Farrar's Island and Trent's Reach.[26]: 734 The barrier was to prevent Confederate warships from going downstream and attacking Grant's headquarters and depot during the Petersburg Campaign, which were located at City Point.[27] The Confederates prevented Union warships from moving north by posting artillery batteries on the Howlett Line, as well as additional batteries on the east side of the James River north of Farrar's Island. These batteries provided a field of fire over almost all of the five-mile loop of the James that encircled Farrar's Island.[28]

To bypass the loop around Farrar's Island, General Butler began excavating a canal across the peninsula's neck which became known as the Dutch Gap Canal.[27] Work began in August 1864 and by January 1865 the canal completely cut the neck.[29] However, the explosion that removed the bulkhead at the canal's north end to open it up threw so much debris into the canal that armed vessels could not use it, so dredging continued until April 1865, when the war ended.[30] Completion of the canal made Farrar's Island a true island, though the canal was too shallow for navigation.

Also in January 1865, the James River around Farrar's Island became the site of one of the Civil War's last major naval battles, the Battle of Trent's Reach. In this battle, a Confederate flotilla of three ironclads and eight other warships failed to cross through the Union boom between Farrar's Island and Trent's Reach.[26]: 738–742

Post-Civil War history

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Soldiers of the 313th Field Artillery Regiment practicing at the Dutch Gap Artillery Range in 1918.

Immediately after the Civil War, Dutch Gap Canal remained unusable because Henry Cox, who still owned Farrar's Island, had filled in the northern end of the canal with a causeway to access the island. However, in 1870 a flood washed away the causeway and opened the canal to development.[31] Improvements to the canal were not made until after 1871,[32] and ongoing deepening and widening under the guidance of the Army Corps of Engineers continued at least through the decade's end.[33] Richard Friend, who inherited the property from Cox in 1888, filed suit against the United States Government to recover his claimed losses due to the improvement of the canal, but lost his case.[34]

In 1918, during World War I, Farrar's Island became part of the Dutch Gap artillery range.[35] The 80th Division's artillery regiments, who were stationed in Fort Lee, used the island for gunnery training before heading to France and fighting in the Meuse-Argonne offensive.[36]

Between 1920 and 1940, approximately 300 acres of Farrar Island became a tidal lagoon surrounded by wetland when the Richmond Sand and Gravel Company mined the area, creating a large pit that was subsequently connected to the old James River channel for barges to load the sand and gravel.[37] In 1983, another 103 acres of Farrar's Island was transformed into an ash pond for the nearby Dominion Chesterfield Power Station located on the Dutch Gap Cutoff on the James River. Facing environmental criticism in 2016, Dominion planned to move toxic coal ash from the pond on Farrar's Island to a lined landfill at the Chester Power Station.[38][39] Completion of the transfer is expected in 15 to 20 years.[40]

Farrar's Island today

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Farrar's Island as it appears today

Today, Farrar's Island is part of the Dutch Gap Conservation Area and is the location of Henricus Historical Park.[41] Farrar's Island has once more become a peninsula as a section of the old river on the north side of the island has been filled in over time. However, this peninsula now lies on the east bank of the James River.

References

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  1. ^ McJimsey, George Davis (1940). "Topographical Terms in Virginia (III)". American Speech. 15 (3): 276. doi:10.2307/486968. JSTOR 486968. Limited access icon(registration required)
  2. ^ "General Butler's Canal at Dutch Gap". Scientific American. 11 (21): 323. November 1864. JSTOR 24971621. Free access icon
  3. ^ Michie, Peter S. (1865). "Account of the Dutch Gap Canal as Prepared by P. S. Michie, Engineer in Charge of the Work". In Leslie, Frank (ed.). Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Vol. IV. New York, NY: Century Co. p. 575. Free access icon
  4. ^ Stanard, William G. (1900). "The Farrar Family (Continued)". The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 8 (1): 97–98. JSTOR 4242320.
  5. ^ Smith, John (1866) [1608]. A True Relation of Such Occurrences and Accidents of Note as has happened in Virginia Since the First Planting of that Colony, Which is Now Resident in the South Part Thereof, Till the Last Return from Thence. Boston, MA: Wiggin and Lunt. p. 6. Free access icon
  6. ^ Deane, Charles (1864). "Remarks of Charles Deane". Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society. Boston, MA: Wiggin and Lunt. p. 6. Free access icon
  7. ^ Rountree, Helen (1996). Pocahontas's People: The Powhatan Indians of Virginia Through Four Centuries. Normal, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. p. 59. ISBN 9780806128498.
  8. ^ Smith, John; Hole, William (1624). Virginia (Map). London.
  9. ^ Rountree, Helen C. "Ashuaquid (fl. 1607)". Encyclopedia Virginia. Archived from the original on 31 August 2016. Retrieved 17 February 2020. Free access icon
  10. ^ a b Hamor, Ralph (1957) [1626]. A True Discourse of the Present State of Virginia. Richmond, VA: Virginia State Library. pp. 27–28. Free access icon
  11. ^ a b Land, Robert Hunt (1938). "Henrico and Its College". William and Mary Quarterly. 18 (4): 453–498. doi:10.2307/1922981. JSTOR 1922981. Limited access icon (registration required)
  12. ^ Pickett, Margaret F.; Pickett, Dwayne W. (2011). The European Struggle to Settle North America:Colonizing Attempts by England, France and Spain, 1521-1608. Jefferson, NC: McFarlan. p. 205. ISBN 9780786462216.
  13. ^ Stith, William (1912) [1747]. The History of the First Discovery and Settlement of Virginia: Being an Essay towards a General History of this Colony. Richmond, VA: Virginia State Library. p. 124. Free access icon
  14. ^ Rutman, Darrett B. (1960). "The historian and the marshal: A note on the background of Sir Thomas Dale". Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 68 (3): 284–294. JSTOR 4246671. Limited access icon (registration required)
  15. ^ McIlwaine, H. R., ed. (1915). "A brief declaration of the plantation of Virginia during the first twelve years, when Sir Thomas Smith was governor of the company, and down to this present time. By the Ancient Planters now remaining alive in Virginia". Minutes of the Council and General Court of Colonial Virginia 1619-1658/59. Richmond, VA: Virginia State Library. pp. 25–37. Free access icon
  16. ^ Kingsbury, Susan Myra, ed. (1933). Records of the Virginia Company of London. Vol. 3. Washington DC: Government Printing Office. p. 612. Free access icon
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  18. ^ Stanard, William G. (1901). "Farrar Family". Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 9 (2): 203. JSTOR 4242430.
  19. ^ Murphy, Kathleen S. (2015). "Virginia's Great Fresh of 1771 and the Politics of Disaster Relief". Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 123 (4): 298–323. JSTOR 26322538. Limited access icon (registration required)
  20. ^ Purdie, Alexander; Dixon, John, eds. (30 May 1771). "Williamsburg, May 30". The Virginia Gazette. No. 1035. p. 2. Free access icon
  21. ^ "Affairs in North America". The Scots Magazine. 33: 381. July 1771. Free access icon
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  23. ^ "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form for Farmer's Rest, Virginia" (PDF). Virginia Department of Historical Resources. p. 14. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 November 2014. Retrieved 22 Feb 2020. Free access icon
  24. ^ Hess, Earl J. (2007). "Bermuda Hundred". Trench Warfare under Grant and Lee: Field Fortifications in the Overland Campaign. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. pp. 99–102. doi:10.5149/9780807882382_hess. ISBN 9780807831540.
  25. ^ Lee, Samuel Phillips (1900). "Telegram from Flagship Agawam at Farrar's Island, June 15, 1864 11 p. m.". In Long, J. D.; Rawson, E. K.; Stewart, C. W. (eds.). Official Records of the Union and Confederate Navies in the War of the Rebellion, Series I-Volume 10. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office. p. 149. Free access icon
  26. ^ a b Scharf, J. Thomas (1887). "Virginia Waters (Continued)". History of the Confederate States Navy from Its Organization to the Surrender of Its Last Vessel. New York, NY: Rogers & Sherwood. Free access icon
  27. ^ a b Alden, Henry Mills, ed. (17 September 1864). "General Grant's campaign". Harper's Weekly. VIII (410): 598. Free access icon
  28. ^ Miller, Francis Trevalyn; Lanier, Robert S., eds. (1911). The Photographic History of The Civil War: in ten volumes, Thousands of Scenes Photographed 1861-65, with Text by many Special Authorities, Volume 1: The Opening Battles. New York, NY: Review of Reviews. p. 119. Free access icon
  29. ^ Alden, Henry Mills, ed. (21 January 1865). "The Dutch Gap Canal". Harper's Weekly. IX (421): 38. Free access icon
  30. ^ Miller, Francis Trevalyn; Lanier, Robert S.; Hunt, O. E., eds. (1911). The Photographic History of The Civil War: in ten volumes, Thousands of Scenes Photographed 1861-65, with Text by many Special Authorities, Volume 5: Forts and Artillery. New York, NY: Review of Reviews. p. 243,245. Free access icon}
  31. ^ Annual Report of the Chief of Engineers, United States Army to the Secretary of War, for the Year 1892, Volume II. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office. 1892. p. 1018. Free access icon
  32. ^ Report of The Secretary of War, Being Part of the Message and Documents Communicated to the Two Houses of Congress, Part II. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office. 1871. p. 604. Free access icon
  33. ^ Report of The Secretary of War, Being Part of the Message and Documents Communicated to the Two Houses of Congress, Volume II, Part I. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office. 1879. p. 513. Free access icon
  34. ^ Nott, Charles C.; Hopkins, Archibald (1895). "Robert C. Friend v. The United States". Cases Decided in the Courts of Claims of the United States at the Term of 1894-1895. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office. p. 95. Free access icon
  35. ^ Ackerman, David G. (1920). "Fort Lee". In Crowell, Thomas I. (ed.). A History of the 313th Field Artillery U.S.A. New York:NY: Thomas Y. Crowell. p. 5. Free access icon
  36. ^ Anthony, Les S. (2004). History of the Eightieth Division, A.E.F. in World War I. Roanoke, VA: Descendants of the 80th Division Veterans. p. 110. ISBN 9780975934173.
  37. ^ "Dutch Gap Conservation Area:Lagoon Water Trail" (PDF). Experience Chesterfield. August 2015. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 March 2020.
  38. ^ "Groundwater Monitoring Plan: Chesterfield Power Station, Upper Ash Pond, Chesterfield County, Virginia" (PDF). Virginia Department of Environmental Quality. February 2016. p. 2. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 February 2017.
  39. ^ https://www.southernenvironment.org/news/public-park-toxic-coal-ash-side-by-side-at-dominions-chesterfield-plant/
  40. ^ "Dominion to fund new road to Dutch Gap: Conservation area, Henricus to remain open during coal ash excavation". Chesterfield Observer. 4 September 2019. Archived from the original on 21 September 2019. Free access icon
  41. ^ "Henricus Park/Dutch Gap Conservation Area". Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries. Retrieved November 27, 2018.
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