Green Springs National Historic Landmark District

Coordinates: 38°1′23″N 78°9′55″W / 38.02306°N 78.16528°W / 38.02306; -78.16528
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Green Springs Historic District
"Bracketts," located in the Green Springs District
Green Springs National Historic Landmark District is located in Virginia
Green Springs National Historic Landmark District
LocationLouisa County, Virginia, USA
Nearest cityZion Crossroads, Virginia
Coordinates38°1′23″N 78°9′55″W / 38.02306°N 78.16528°W / 38.02306; -78.16528
Area14,004 acres (5,667 ha)
5,766.04 federal easements

56.67 km2
ArchitectMultiple
Architectural styleGreek Revival, Italianate, Federal
NRHP reference No.73002036[1]
VLR No.054-0111
Significant dates
Added to NRHPMarch 07, 1973
Designated VLRFebruary 20, 1973[2]

Green Springs National Historic Landmark District is a national

historic district in Louisa County, Virginia noted for its concentration of fine rural manor houses and related buildings in an intact agricultural landscape. Admitted to the National Register of Historic Places in 1974, it became the first rural National Landmark Historic district.[3] Named for one of the historic manor houses (itself named for a spring known to Thomas Jefferson who grew up and lived in Albemarle County
nearby), the district comprises 14,000 acres (5,700 ha) of fertile land, contrasting with the more typical poor soil and scrub pinelands surrounding it.

Description

The district is located 1.5 miles (2 km) north of Interstate 64 from exit No. 136, "Zion Crossroads." The district is roughly bounded by U.S. Route 15 and Virginia Routes 22 and 613. The area is named for a natural spring noted by Thomas Jefferson as possessing "some medicinal virtue." The district features a mixture of wooded and farmed lands. About 600 million years ago, when most of what became the eastern United States (including Virginia) was covered by a shallow sea, volcanic activity left a basin-like topographic feature which contains the only mineral deposit of consequence in the area, vermiculite.[4] That volcanic feature led to a heavy clay soil that retains plant nutrients and moisture, creating an open landscape suitable for farming. The area is noted for its park-like views, particularly from U.S. Route 15.[5]

Preservation

The district was preserved following attempts in the early 1970s by then Governor Linwood Holton, a Republican, and the Commonwealth of Virginia's Department of Welfare and Institutions, to build a diagnostic and detention center on 200 acres owned by Richard Purcell, brother of longtime politician turned Circuit Judge Harold Purcell.[6] While early plans suggested that payroll alone at the site would add $2 million annually to the local economy, opponents circulated drawings showing that the cellblocks surrounded by a 30 foot security fence and guarded by a 60-foot control tower would become an environmental eyesore, quite unlike the historic Rotunda at the University of Virginia a half hour's drive away and shown dwarfed in the corner as a scale model.[7] Opponents, who ultimately incorporated as Historic Green Springs Inc., noted the district had many historic homes which represented nearly a century and a half of architectural development, as well as vistas showing land "enhanced rather than despoiled" by human presence.[8] They ultimately used litigation citing the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 and the National Environmental Policy Act of 1970, together with favorable reports from the Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission and the National Trust for Historic Preservation, and an unfavorable report from the National Clearinghouse for Criminal Justice Planning and Architecture at the University of Illinois.[9]

Initially, Governor Holton planned to use revenue-sharing funds promoted by fellow Republicans in the Nixon Administration, specifically newly available federal block grants distributed through the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration, as authorized under the Safe Streets Act.

Simon E. Sobeloff, which overruled Judge Merhige's pro-development ruling,[11] Holton changed plans. Now Virginia would forego the million dollar grant and self-fund the center's construction, despite cost estimates having doubled in the interim.[12]

Initially, only one building in Green Springs,

Rogers C.B. Morton (a Kentucky-born former Maryland congressman and chairman of the Republican National Committee) wrote the term-limited Governor Holton criticizing the proposed prison's location.[17] The Richmond Mercury published a cartoon entitled "Holton's Vietnam" (showing the governor opening his shirt LBJ-style to display an outline of Louisa County with the prison location starred), echoing a Washington Post editorial.[18]

In December 1972,

cat litter, among other uses.[19] Although a combination of negative publicity and legal liability for other toxic mining techniques would propel Grace into bankruptcy in 2001,[20] it ultimately did not construct the vermiculite mine in Louisa County, instead holding that clay mix as reserves until ultimately deeding the parcel to Historic Green Springs in 1993, as the Secretary of Interior had suggested in 1976.[21][22]

The vermiculite strip mine was constructed, albeit on a smaller scale, in 1979 by Virginia Vermiculite Inc., a company founded a few years earlier by Air Force veteran and former EPA official Robert Sansom, who had become a development advocate in central Virginia. In 1977, Sansom filed a lawsuit challenging Historic Green Springs's listing, and U.S. District Judge

James H. Michael Jr. dismissed the lawsuit in 1995, and ultimately in 2000 issued a summary judgment against Virginia Vermiculite, which the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld (that appellate court having reversed the earlier dismissal, but the U.S. Supreme Court denied certiorari in 2003).[24] Asbestos was also found in the Louisa vermiculite/clay mix, as residents had feared.[25]

Many significant houses and lands continue to be preserved and excluded from the development that is transforming areas around the historic district, especially near the

Monacan Nation, which Captain John Smith had noticed in 1612), and thus warned against using the site for the pumping station. However, Colonial Pipeline proceeded with site work, and in 2016 its bulldozers unearthed artifacts and human remains, more than a year before notifying the Monacans (who with three other Virginia tribes finally achieved federal recognition in 2018). The Army Corps required consultation with Preservation Virginia as well as the Monacans and the state historic preservation board. In 2020, Rassawek was listed among the 11 most endangered historic sites in Virginia, and ultimately, the pumping station was constructed at another site.[28][29]

National Register properties

Significant places listed individually on the National Register of Historic Places include:

  • Boswell's Tavern, an important meeting place during the American Revolution and a well-preserved example of a Colonial-era tavern.[30]
  • Italianate villa built in 1861 by the Morris family, later home of Rear Admiral David W. Taylor and his wife Imogene Morris Taylor.[31]
  • Green Springs, a late 18th-century house built by the Morris family near the springs that lent their name to the district.[32]
  • Italianate villa designed by prominent New York architect Alexander Jackson Davis for Richard Overton Morris, completed in 1855, gutted by fire in 1982.[33][34]
  • Ionia, a late 18th-century 1+12-story frame house, original seat of the Watson family[35]
  • Westend, a temple-fronted plantation house with extant dependencies, built by the Morris family.[36]

Major historic properties

Major historic properties in the district include:

  • Barton House is an early 19th-century 1+12-story frame house built by the Barton family.
  • Belle Monte is a Federal style two-story house built in the early 18th** century and enlarged in both the 19th and 20th century. (**The Historic American Buildings Survey listed the house built in the 19th century but pulled that data from a National Historic Register Nomination Form filled out in error) There are multiple historic references to the original builder of the house and family being born at the residence prior to the 1790s as well as land transfers predating the 1780s and a reference to Belle Monte in a letter from Thomas Jefferson. Lafayette stayed at and used the house as a recuperative hospital for his soldiers. There is definite precedence that places the original structure in the early to mid-1700s. Belle Monte is in close proximity to Boswell's Tavern and built in the same era.
  • Berea Baptist Church is an 1857 Gothic Revival church established in 1795.
  • Bracketts is a two-story frame house built about 1800.
  • Corduroy is a circa 1850 two-story frame house with a hipped roof and a single-story entrance portico.
  • Eastern View is a two-story frame house with a hipped roof and Moorish-style porches, built in 1856.
  • Galway is a two-story frame house with a hipped roof and a balustraded Tuscan porch. Its eaves feature a scalloped cornice.
  • Kenmuir is a 2+12-story frame house built about 1855. The house shows
    Gothic Revival
    influence with its lancet windows in the gables.
  • Oakleigh is a two-story late 19th century frame house with a bracketed cornice and a full-width veranda on the front featuring sawn detailing.
  • Prospect Hill is an 18th-century house that was progressively enlarged in the 19th and 20th centuries. The two-story frame house features a two-level porch on two sides, along with dependent structures.
  • Quaker Hill is a small one-story frame house dating to circa 1820.
  • St. John's Chapel surrounded by a historic graveyard, is located at the intersection of Route 640 (East Jack Jouett Road) and Route 617 (East Green Springs Road) in Louisa County. The chapel was completed in 1888, but today is used for scheduled religious services twice yearly.
  • Sylvania was built in 1746 by the Morris family. The two-story frame house has a hipped roof with a cross gable, with wings to either side and an ell to the rear. Sylvania was extensively damaged by a tornado on October 13, 2011, which blew the roof off the house.[5][37]
  • Westlands is an Italianate two-story brick house, built around 1856.[5]

Other properties

Other historic properties include:

  • Ashleigh is a 1900 frame house of two stories with a large veranda.
  • Aspen Hill is a two-story late-19th century frame house with a lancet gable window.
  • Fair Oaks is a two-story frame house built about 1900 with an Ionic Classical Revival veranda.
  • Green "K" Acres (Oakleigh) is a late 19th-century two-story frame house with a veranda.
  • Hard Bargain is a
    Stick Style
    two-story frame house with an irregular plan and a veranda.
  • Hill House is a 1918 two-story frame house.
  • Midloch is a circa 1900 two-story frame house with paneled chimneys and a large veranda.
  • Mill View is a 1+12-story frame house dating to the late 18th century, with a two-story addition.
  • Peers House is an 1857 two-story frame house with a hipped roof and a cross gable. A second Peers House was built in the late 19th century with sawn ornament on its two-story porch.
  • Sunny Banks is an 1888 two-story Queen Anne Victorian frame house featuring foundation to roof front bay windows.
  • Sunny View was built about 1900. It is a two-story frame house with a large veranda.[5]

The district also includes the village of Poindexter at the intersection of Virginia Routes 613 and 640.[5]

Status

On May 30, 1974, the district was declared a National Historic Landmark.[38] On December 12, 1977, the United States Secretary of the Interior agreed to accept preservation easements for nearly half of the 14,004 acres (57 km2) in the district. These allow the NPS to own development rights to the land, and to ensure its continuing rural and agricultural nature. The district is an affiliated area of Shenandoah National Park. The National Park Service does not provide any facilities in the district.

See also

References

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  2. ^ "Virginia Landmarks Register". Virginia Department of Historic Resources. Retrieved June 5, 2013.
  3. .
  4. ^ Balogh p. 125
  5. ^ a b c d e Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission Staff (February 1973). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory - Nomination Form: Green Springs Historic District" (PDF). Retrieved October 19, 2011.
  6. ^ Balogh p. 18 et seq.
  7. ^ Balogh pp. 20,
  8. ^ Balogh p. 79
  9. ^ Balogh pp. 20, 73, 77-80, 101-103
  10. ^ Balogh pp. 73,
  11. ^ Ely v. Velde, 451 F.2d 1130(1971)
  12. ^ Balogh pp. 89-91
  13. ^ Balogh pp. 78-79, 134
  14. ^ Balogh pp. 111-121
  15. ^ Balogh pp. 120-121
  16. ^ Balogh pp. 131-132
  17. ^ Balogh pp. 149-150
  18. ^ Balogh pp. 144-145
  19. .
  20. ^ Balogh p. 204
  21. ^ Balogh pp. 256-266
  22. ^ https://energy.virginia.gov/geology/Vermiculite.shtml
  23. ^ Balogh pp.227-238
  24. ^ Balogh pp. 267-284
  25. ^ https://files.gao.gov/special.pubs/gao-09-7sp/file52.html
  26. ^ waters run deep - Style Weekly
  27. ^ Balogh pp. 286-288
  28. ^ Balogh pp. 295-299
  29. ^ https://preservationvirginia.org/our-work/savingrassawek/
  30. ^ Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission Staff (April 28, 1969). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory - Nomination Form: Boswell's Tavern" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved October 20, 2011.
  31. ^ Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission Staff (December 1972). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory - Nomination Form: Grassdale" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved October 20, 2011.
  32. ^ Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission Staff (May 1972). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory - Nomination Form: Green Springs" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved October 20, 2011.
  33. ^ Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission Staff (July 16, 1970). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory - Nomination Form: Hawkwood" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved October 19, 2011.
  34. ^ "Hawkwood". Journey Through Hallowed Ground. National Park Service.
  35. ^ Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission Staff (May 1972). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory - Nomination Form: Ionia" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved October 19, 2011.
  36. ^ Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission Staff (July 17, 1970). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory - Nomination Form: Westend" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved October 19, 2011.
  37. ^ "Suspected twister damages historic home in Va. county that was epicenter of August earthquake". Washington Post (via AP). October 13, 2011. Retrieved October 19, 2011.[dead link]
  38. ^ "Green Springs Historic District". National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Archived from the original on December 29, 2007. Retrieved June 26, 2008.