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Henrico County, Virginia, USA

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Profiles

  • John ‘Old John’ Burton, Sr. (c.1665 - aft.1754)
    Biography As is discussed at length on the page for Susanna, John Burton and all of his siblings were biologically the children of William Hatcher, Jr. who died young, and his widow remarried to the ...
  • Ralph Jackson, of Dale Parish (aft.1645 - 1708)
    Source places Aberford in Yorkshire, also names father as Patrick Jackson. Biography On 10 Feb 1680 in a deposition in Henrico Co Ralph Jackson stated his age as 30 which means Ralph Jackson was b...
  • Thomas Crispe, of Henrico County (b. - c.1709)
    Not the same as Thomas Crispe & not the son of Henry Crispe, Esq. & Barbara Crispe Biography He married Mary Minnes on 21 Aug 1666 in Collegiate Church of St Katherine by the Tower, London, England....
  • Maj. Robert Thompson (c.1630 - 1697)
    Not a known son of William Thompson, Jr. & Janet Hay Robert, the immigrant, arrived in the US in 1671 from Scotland.
  • Ralph Herman Cosby (1939 - 2020)
    COSBY, Ralph Herman, 80, of Mechanicsville, Va., went to be with the Lord Thursday, March 12, 2020. He was preceded in death by his parents, Edward and Blanch Cosby; and sisters, Rose Tignor, Catherine...

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.


In 1611, Thomas Dale founded the Citie of Henricus on a peninsula in the James River that is now called Farrar's Island. Henricus was named for Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales, but it was destroyed during the Indian massacre of 1622, during which local Native American warriors of the Powhatan confederacy attacked the English settlers to drive them from the area.

In 1634, Henrico Shire was one of the eight original Shires of Virginia established in the Virginia Colony. Since then, 10 counties and three independent cities have been formed from the original territory of Henrico Shire.

In 1776, Richard Adams and Nathaniel Wilkenson participated in the Fifth Virginia Convention, which voted to send delegates to the Continental Congress to propose separation from the British. That proposal led to the Declaration of Independence.During the Revolutionary War, when Benedict Arnold's invading army occupied Richmond in January 1781, the Henrico militia was called to active duty. During the brief British occupation of Richmond, many Henrico court records were destroyed. Three months later when Arnold's men, now part of British forces led by General William Phillips, approached Richmond for a second time, the British were stopped by the sight of local militiamen and American Continental troops led by a young Frenchman, the Marquis de Lafayette. Outnumbered, Lafayette abandoned Richmond when General Charles Cornwallis occupied the town in June 1781. Cornwallis then retired to Williamsburg and later to Yorktown. After being surrounded there by General George Washington and his French allies, Cornwallis surrendered, effectively ending the American Revolution.

Since becoming independent in 1842, the City of Richmond has successfully annexed portions of Henrico five times. Chesterfield County annexed the site of Henricus in 1922.

Henrico was badly hurt in the Civil War. During the Reconstruction era, Virginia Estelle Randolph was a pioneer educator and humanitarian who lived from 1874 to 1958. She opened the old Mountain Road School in 1892 and was named the first Jeanes Supervisor Industrial Teacher in Henrico County Schools in 1908. She conducted the first Arbor Day program in Virginia.

Richmond attempted to completely merge with Henrico in 1961, but 61% of the votes in a referendum in Henrico county voted against the merger. In 1965, Richmond attempted to annex 145 square miles of Henrico County. However, after a lengthy court battle, the city was given permission to annex only 17 square miles. Since the city would have had to reimburse Henrico a hefty $55 million, Richmond opted against annexing the 17 square miles.

In 1981, the Virginia General Assembly placed a moratorium on all annexations throughout the state. Henrico's borders have not changed since Richmond's 1942 annexation.

The original county seat was at Varina, at the Varina Farms plantation across the James River from Henricus. Colonist John Rolfe built this plantation, where he lived with his wife, Pocahontas. Henrico's government was located at Varina from around 1640 until 1752.

In 1752, Henrico relocated its seat to a more central location inside the city of Richmond, between Church Hill and what is now Tobacco Row. The county seat remained at 22nd and Main St in Richmond even after the city's government became fully independent of the county in 1842. It was not until 1974 when the county moved out of the Henrico County Courthouse to a complex in the western portion of the county at the intersection of Parham Road and Hungary Springs Road in Laurel.

In addition to the 1974 complex, in 1988 the county opened its Eastern Government Center to be more convenient to county residents in the eastern portion of the county. It is located on Nine Mile Road.

American Civil War Battle Sites:

During the Civil War, in 1862 Henrico County was the site of numerous battles during the Peninsula Campaign, including:

  • Battle of Seven Pines,
  • Battle of Savage's Station,
  • Battle of Oak Grove,
  • Battle of Garnett's & Golding's Farm,
  • Battle of White Oak Swamp,
  • Battle of Glendale
  • Battle of Malvern Hill.

Additional significant battles took place in 1864 during the Overland Campaign prior to and during the Siege of Petersburg, which led to the fall of Richmond. Confederate General J.E.B. Stuart was mortally wounded in Henrico County at the Battle of Yellow Tavern on May 12, 1864.

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