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Charlotte County, Virginia, USA

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Profiles

  • Otelia Maria Cuningham (1868 - 1934)
    Otelia Maria Cuningham (Carrington) Find A Grave Memorial ID # 68728635 President of North Carolina Equal Suffrage League, 1917-1920; member at large for North Carolina at Democratic Convention, 1...
  • Hon. Wood Bouldin (1811 - 1876)
    Judge Wood Bouldin Judge Wood's Wikipedia Page Find A Grave Memorial ID # 111649882 Bouldin was a prominent attorney, member of the Convention of 1861, and a judge of the Virginia Supreme Cou...
  • Surgeon (CSA), William Fontaine Carrington (1822 - 1883)
    Dr. Carrington was the second son of William Allen & Sarah Scott Carrington. The death of his father in 1829 while he and his siblings were young and the decision by his mother to continue managing the...
  • Paul Sydenham Carrington, III (1798 - 1866)
    Paul S. Carrington, son of Paul Carrington Jr. and Mildred H. Coles Carrington of "Sylvan Hill" was married to Emma Catherine Cabell 5/9/1826 in Richmond. She was the daughter of Gov. William H. Cabell...
  • Lt. (CSA), Abram Cabell Carrington (1830 - 1862)
    . Abram Carrington was born and raised on Ridgeway Plantation, Charlotte County, Virginia. He was the son of Paul Sydenham Carrington and Emma Catherine Cabell Carrington. He was killed near Richmond J...

European settlement of the future county began in the early 18th century, and early settlers included mostly English people, with some French Huguenots, and Scotch-Irish., and a modest population of Germans. After approximately fifty years of European settlement, the House of Burgesses established and incorporated Charlotte County in 1764 from part of Lunenburg County. The new county was named in honor of Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, the Queen and wife of King George III of Great Britain. The county residents later became staunch supporters of independence and the American Revolution, and Founding Father Patrick Henry was one of its most famous residents. His grave and the national memorial dedicated to him are located in Charlotte County. Residents of Charlotte County were heavily involved in the American Revolution. County delegates supported resolutions against the Stamp Act of 1765, and the county government was the second governing body to declare independence from English rule. In addition, Charlotte militia units fought under General Robert Lawson during the Yorktown campaign, which effectively led to the end of the American War of Independence. Finally, the final resting place and national memorial to revolutionary hero Patrick Henry is at Red Hill Plantation.

Charlotte County has also played a role in other wars on American soil. An artillery company from Charlotte played a key role in the Battle of Craney Island during the War of 1812. Also, a significant battle in the American Civil War occurred in Charlotte and Halifax counties during the Battle of Staunton River Bridge, which resulted in a victory for the Confederacy.

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This project is a table of contents for all projects relating to this County of Virginia. Please feel free to add profiles of anyone who was born, lived or died in this county.