fbpx
Wikipedia

Tuckahoe (plantation)

Tuckahoe, also known as Tuckahoe Plantation, or Historic Tuckahoe is located in Tuckahoe, Virginia on Route 650 near Manakin Sabot, Virginia, overlapping both Goochland and Henrico counties, six miles from the town of the same name. Built in the first half of the 18th century, it is a well-preserved example of a colonial plantation house and is particularly distinctive as a colonial prodigy house. Thomas Jefferson is also recorded as having spent some of his childhood here. It was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1969.[3][4][5]

Historic Tuckahoe Plantation
Tuckahoe's northern wing
LocationSE of Manakin near jct. of Rtes. 650 and 647, near Manakin, Virginia
Coordinates37°34′13.7″N 77°39′11.4″W / 37.570472°N 77.653167°W / 37.570472; -77.653167
Area568 acres (230 ha)
Built1712 (1712)
ArchitectWilliam Randolph
Architectural styleGeorgian
NRHP reference No.68000049
VLR No.037-0033
Significant dates
Added to NRHPNovember 22, 1968[2]
Designated NHLDAugust 11, 1969[3]
Designated VLRNovember 5, 1968[1]

History edit

Thomas Randolph first settled at Tuckahoe around 1714 and is recorded as contributing to the construction of the local Dover Parish (also known as St James Parish) church in the early 1720s.[6][7] Randolph brought with him enslaved people, sufficient enough in number to be called a workforce, that he inherited from his father William Randolph's estate.[8][a]

Thomas' son William Randolph III built the mansion.[10] He and his wife, Maria Judith Page, had three children (two girls and Thomas Mann Randolph Sr. born 1741). His wife died in 1744,[11] and the following year William died.[12] Randolph had added a codicil to his will asking that Peter Jefferson come to Tuckahoe Plantation and care for his three orphaned children.[13] Peter Jefferson and his wife Jane Randolph Jefferson, Randolph's cousin, moved from Shadwell in Charlottesville to Tuckahoe Plantation with their three daughters and two-year-old son Thomas. The Jeffersons and Randolph children lived together in the H-shaped home until 1752.[14] Peter Jefferson directed the activities of the plantation and its seven overseers, "retaining a connection to the estate" even during his famous expeditions to map the western part of the state and after he returned to his own plantation of Shadwell.[15]

Thomas Jefferson, who spent seven years of his childhood at Tuckahoe, came to formulate his moral viewpoint of slavery there:

The whole commerce between master and slave is a perpetual exercise of the most boisterous passions, the most unremitting despotism on the one part, and degrading submissions on the other. Our children see this, and learn to imitate it…

— Thomas Jefferson, Notes on the State of Virginia[12]

The son of William Randolph III, Thomas Mann Randolph Sr. and his wife Anne Cary had thirteen children and she died in 1789. Shortly afterward, Thomas Mann Randolph Sr. remarried to Gabriella Harvie, the seventeen-year-old daughter of a Richmond attorney. Gabriella made significant changes to Tuckahoe, including painting the wooden paneling in the so-called "White Parlor", and insisted on naming her son (b. 1792) Thomas Mann Randolph Jr. despite the fact that the eldest son of Thomas Mann Randolph and Anne Cary (b. 1768) was already named Thomas Mann Randolph Jr. Thomas Mann Randolph Jr./II (1768-1828) moved to Edge Hill, Albemarle County, Virginia and went on to be a prominent statesman and governor of Virginia from 1819 to 1822. Thomas Mann Randolph Jr./III inherited Tuckahoe, but sold it for debts in 1830.[16]

The house passed through several families in the mid-19th century, but returned to the Randolphs in 1898 when it was sold to Harold Jefferson Coolidge and a consortium of Randolph and Jefferson descendants. In the 20th century, Tuckahoe featured prominently in an early test of the National Historic Preservation Act when the owners challenged Virginia's plan to route Virginia State Route 288 through the property (see Thompson v. Fugate, 347 F. Supp 120, E.D. Va. (1972)).

The house is currently occupied by owner/manager Addison B. Thompson and his wife Susan.

Main house and its exterior edit

 
Tuckahoe's unique H-shape

William Randolph III constructed the current dwelling, now a National Historic Landmark, beginning in the mid-1730s.[10][11] Dendrochronology analysis indicates the timbers in the older (north) wing date to c. 1733 and this is supported by archaeological evidence dating the north porch to c. 1740. The north wing features pine and black walnut paneling with exquisite carvings and moldings. William Randolph then added a center hall and south wing, creating a unique "H" shape which was completed by 1740.[11] The main residence at Tuckahoe plantation is one of the "great plantations" of 18th-century Virginia.[10]

The two-story wood structure sits in its original spot, the only Randolph home to not be relocated. The structure forms an "H," with wings mirroring each other and connected by a central corridor. The entrances to the house are reached by flights of stairs and two porches. The stoop is covered by a projected pediment supported by simple wooden posts and is framed by a wooden railing. To either side of the entrance is a pair of windows as well as a central window over the entrance, each with dark shutters. Each two-sashed window contains 9 panes of glass. The gabled roof rests on a simple cornice line with dentil moldings. A large brick chimney rises from either side of the home.

The grounds edit

Outbuildings edit

 
The former manager’s office in the foreground and slave quarters at Tuckahoe, photographed by Frances Benjamin Johnston

A collection of outbuildings were located on Plantation Street of Tuckahoe.[17][b] The buildings are arranged west of the mansion in a quadrangle. Food management and processing were performed in a storehouse, a smokehouse, and a brick kitchen,[17] which had a swinging crane and a dutch oven.[19] Slave quarters, an office, a toolhouse, and a barn are there.[17][19] There used to be an ice house and weaving room.[19] There were around 100 domestic workers, field hands, and skilled craftsmen who worked at Tuckahoe in the late 1740s.[20] In 1779, there was a stable built specifically for one horse named Shakespeare who was well-fed and pampered. A niche for a bed was constructed so that a black boy could sleep there through the night and ensure the health and comfort of the horse.[21]

Cemeteries of the Randolph, Wight, and current Ball/Thompson families are also on the grounds.

Slave quarters edit

 
Tuckahoe slave quarters, circa 1914

The slave quarters at Tuckahoe were larger than most slave quarters, which could be as small as 12 by 8 feet. They were about 16 by 20 feet, but were divided into two units, which were separated by a central chimney. Each room had an exterior door.[22] Two later slave quarters include overhead lofts.[17]

Plantation life edit

Economy edit

Tuckahoe was 25,000 acres at its height. There were three mills on the property and Tuckahoe grew wheat and tobacco and raised livestock.[10] The main crop was tobacco, which was sent to London in barrels.[20]

Household and farm work edit

Household and farm work was performed by indentured servants and enslaved men, women, and children.[10] Indentured servants, generally brought from England, served as unpaid workers for a specific period of time. Enslaved people were held for their lives, and children of an enslaved woman were also enslaved at birth under partus sequitur ventrem.[23][c]

In 1859, there were 62 bondspeople. A few worked in the house as domestic workers or cooks. One individual was a metalsmith. Most of the people worked in the fields. From the records of that time, children began working in the fields by age 11.[10][d][e] Relying on labor from enslaved people meant that planters and their families lived wealthy and comfortable lives.[20]

Clothing edit

 
Enslaved workers at a tobacco plantation in Virginia, 1670

Tuckahoe had a weaving room,[19] which meant that it was possible that workers on the plantation created fabric for clothing. It is also possible that they grew flax and spun threads to weave the fabric. Garments would have been sewn by designated enslaved people from their woven linen or people may have constructed their own clothing. Some planters, like Thomas Jefferson, provided fabric so that people would sew their own clothing.[27]

Residents edit

 
Mahala Boyd, an enslaved woman who worked in the Tuckahoe residence

A woman named Harriet was among the last known African Americans born on Tuckahoe. She had a "clear recollection" of growing up on the plantation, which she recounted in 1915. Her husband, Wesley, was a ditcher.[10]

Levi Ellis was known to his family as a freed man from the Tuckahoe plantation. He purchased 49 acres in Goochland County, Virginia that he farmed with his wife Martha Jane Ellis. He was a founder of what was later called Ellisville, bordered by the Ellisville Bridge. He was also a founder, deacon, and Sunday School superintendent of the St. James Baptist Church. It was among the first black churches in the county and operated a school.[28][f]

Interaction with other people edit

Bondspeople traveled among other plantations owned by the Jeffersons, Randolphs, and the Lewises, who were family members. Some slaveholders traveled with one or two enslaved people. People who had special skills, like carpentry, would sometimes work at other estates. There were a number of instances in which blacks at Tuckahoe communicated with those at Jefferson family plantations, including when Jeffersons moved to Tuckahoe and then back to Shadwell (following William Randolph's death).[29] In 1790, the Jeffersons visited Tuckahoe with Hemings family members.[30]

Song edit

At Monticello, the enslaved people had a song that mentions Tuckahoe. According to Martha Jefferson Randolph, the song refers to Thomas Mann Randolph Sr.:[31][g]

While old Colonel Tom lived and prospered,
There was nothing but joy at Tuckahoe.
Now that old Colonel Tom is dead and gone,
No more joy for us at Tuckahoe.

Worship edit

Churches were built and operated by white people. Free blacks and enslaved people may have been able to worship in these churches, in separate space for blacks, until blacks established their own churches.[32] There was no church until 1720 when the parish of St. James was established. The Dover Church, closest to Tuckahoe, was built from 1720 to 1724. The first permanent minister in residence was Rev. William Douglass, who began preaching 1750.[33] Dover Mines Baptist Church was established for blacks from a dormant mining building. It is now the First Baptist Church in Manakin, Virginia.[32]

Sale edit

 
Eyre Crowe, Slaves Waiting for Sale - Richmond, Virginia, oil, 20¾ x 31½ inches
 
Lefevre James Cranstone, Slave Auction, Virginia

Portions of the Randolph's Tuckahoe plantation were subdivided into smaller tracts and sold. Upon completion of an anticipated sale in 1842, enslaved people were to be put up for sale.[34]

The nearby city of Richmond was the largest seller of enslaved people in Virginia. When enslaved people were sold, it meant that communities and families were likely dispersed to different places.[35] It was common for people to be separated from their spouses and children, perhaps for the rest of their lives.[35] People were taken from the plantation and put into jails or slave pens of slave traders. They could have been there for weeks and may have been subject to physical inspections. When they were auctioned, it was possible that they were sold to another trader or ultimately sold to work plantations in the Deep South.[35]

Runaways edit

 
Ad for runaway Wallace Smith from Tuckahoe - Richmond Enquirer, Richmond, Virginia, November 23, 1852

A carpenter named Gabriel or Gabe ran away from Tuckahoe on December 10, 1783. An advertisement by Thomas M. Randolph offered a reward of $20 for Gabriel and $5 for the horse that he took for his escape. He was formerly enslaved by Col. Charles Carter of Ludlow.[36] Bob Christian ran away on January 5, 1836. He had a wife in New Kent County, a mother in Richmond, and other relatives in Chickahominy. Tuckahoe's plantation owner E.L. Wight offered $20 for his return.[37] By 1851, M.W. Kemp of Gloucester County sold Wallace Smith to Joseph Allen of Tuckahoe. Smith ran away and was expected to be in Gloucester. A $200 (equivalent to $7,035 in 2022) reward was offered for his return.[38]

Freedom edit

Slavery continued until the passage of the 13th Amendment that abolished slavery in 1865. There were laws enacted and other practices that limited African Americans rights and opportunities after the Emancipation Proclamation.[10]

Some of the people who were emancipated following the American Civil War lived on Tuckahoe into the turn of the 20th century. They were paid a salary and lived in the original quarters on the property.[10]

Others, like Levi Ellis, settled into a community of black people, like New Town in the Three Square area, and, in the eastern part of the county, Ellisville and Gordonstown.[39] Once free, blacks in Virginia competed directly with white people for work in their trades. Many freedmen had a number of customers rather than being tied to one employer, which might recommence a paternalistic relationship.[40]

Legacy edit

In February 2019, three women painted the message "we profit off slavery" in red on a sign and pillar at Tuckahoe. The anonymous group who took responsibility for the message said that it was a reminder of "Virginia's troubled history."[41] It happened during the same period that protestors met at the Virginia State Capitol and outside the Executive Mansion and called on Gov. Northam to resign. A fountain at Capitol Square was vandalized when red dye was poured into the water.[42]

Notes edit

  1. ^ William Randolph, the immigrant, purchased large tracts of land over his lifetime that he then gave to his sons upon his death. The large land holdings were divided up so that the sons had adjoining plantations.[9]
  2. ^ Plantations generally had out-buildings that were used by enslaved people to process food, like henhouses and meat houses. There were also carriage houses and stables for horses.[18]
  3. ^ Africans were first brought to Colonial Virginia in 1619, but laws making the practice legal were not enacted until 1661.[23]
  4. ^ As an example of how children were put to work on a plantation, Thomas Jefferson recorded his strategy in his Farm Book. Until the age of 10, children served as nurses. When the plantation grew tobacco, children were at a good height to remove and kill tobacco worms from the crops.[24] Once he began growing wheat, fewer people were needed to maintain the crops, so Jefferson established manual trades. He stated that children "go into the ground or learn trades" When girls were 16, they began spinning and weaving textiles. Boys made nails from age 10 to 16. In 1794, Jefferson had a dozen boys working at the nailery.[24] While working at the nailery, boys received more food and may have received new clothes if they did a good job. After the nailery, boys became blacksmiths, coopers, carpenters, or house servants.[24]
  5. ^ In Goochland County, most of the residents were black bondspeople, owned by the largest plantations, by 1789. In 1790, there were 4,656 enslaved people and 257 free black people and 4,140 whites. Over time, there was an increase in the percentage of enslaved people, while the population of whites diminished. There were 5,845 slave and 644 free blacks—while the number of whites went down to 3,865 by 1850.[25] By 1850, there were 644 free blacks in Virginia. Those who were freed during the antebellum period built modest homes, similar to those of white people with low income.[26]
  6. ^ In 2008, a historical marker was established at the Ellisville Bridge by the Goochland County Historical Society.[28]
  7. ^ Tuckahoe was intertwined with the lives of the Jeffersons, through the time that Peter Jefferson and his family lived at the plantation when William Randolph’s children were orphaned, and also through the marriage of Martha Jefferson to Thomas Mann Randolph.[31]

References edit

  1. ^ . Virginia Department of Historic Resources. Archived from the original on September 21, 2013. Retrieved March 12, 2013.
  2. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
  3. ^ a b "Tuckahoe". National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Retrieved April 20, 2008.
  4. ^ James Dillon (October 9, 1974), National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Tuckahoe Plantation (pdf), National Park Service and Accompanying 14 photos, aerial and exterior and interior, from 1968, 1972, and 1974 (32 KB)
  5. ^ Charles W. Snell (March 19, 1971), National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Tuckahoe Plantation House (Thomas Jefferson Boyhood Home) / Tuckahoe (PDF), National Park Service
  6. ^ Glenn, Thomas Allen, ed. (1898). "The Randolphs: Randolph Genealogy". Some Colonial Mansions: And Those Who Lived In Them : With Genealogies Of The Various Families Mentioned. Vol. 1. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Henry T. Coates & Company. pp. 430–459.
  7. ^ Tuckahoe Plantation 2010-12-14 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ "Tuckahoe". Thomas Jefferson's Monticello. Retrieved May 4, 2021.
  9. ^ Anderson, Jefferson Randolph (1937). "Tuckahoe and the Tuckahoe Randolphs". Register of the Kentucky State Historical Society. 35 (110): 30–32. ISSN 2328-8183. JSTOR 23371542.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i "The History". Historic Tuckahoe. March 4, 2013. Retrieved May 3, 2021.
  11. ^ a b c Malone, Dumas, Jefferson the Virginian, St. Martin’s Press, 1948, Volume 1, p. 19
  12. ^ a b Meacham, Jon (2012). Thomas Jefferson: The Art of Power. Random House Publishing Group. pp. 6–10. ISBN 978-0-679-64536-8.
  13. ^ Malone, p. 19
  14. ^ Malone, pp. 20, 26
  15. ^ Malone, p. 20, n48
  16. ^ Randolph, Thomas M. (August 28, 1829). "A Valuable and Beautiful Farm for Sale". No. Vol. VI, No. 65. Pleasants, Abbot, & Co. The Constitutional Whig (Richmond, Va.). Retrieved July 12, 2020.
  17. ^ a b c d "Tuckahoe Plantation Nomination Form" (PDF). Virginia Department of Historic Resources. 1974. p. 6. Retrieved May 4, 2021.
  18. ^ Worsham, Gibson (2003). "A Survey of Historic Architecture in Goochland County, Virginia" (PDF). Virginia Department of Historic Resources. p. 79.
  19. ^ a b c d "Estates on James Retain Original Features". The Times Dispatch. April 24, 1949. p. 122. Retrieved May 4, 2021.
  20. ^ a b c Miller, Brandon Marie (September 2011). Thomas Jefferson for Kids. Chicago Review Press. pp. 1, 2. ISBN 978-1-56976-942-3.
  21. ^ "Tuckahoe". Richmond Enquirer. October 28, 1845. p. 4. Retrieved May 4, 2021.
  22. ^ Delle, James A.; Fellows, Kristen R. (2012). "A Plantation Transplanted: Archaeological Investigations of a Piedmont-Style Slave Quarter at Rose Hill, Geneva, New York". Northeast Historical Archaeology. 41 (4): 64. doi:10.22191/neha/vol41/iss1/4 – via The Open Repository @ Binghamton.
  23. ^ a b Rose, Willie Lee Nichols (1999). A Documentary History of Slavery in North America. University of Georgia Press. pp. 15–22, 25. ISBN 978-0-8203-2065-6.
  24. ^ a b c "The Dark Side of Thomas Jefferson". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved May 9, 2021.
  25. ^ Worsham, Gibson (2003). "A Survey of Historic Architecture in Goochland County, Virginia" (PDF). Virginia Department of Historic Resources. pp. 22, 33.
  26. ^ Worsham, Gibson (2003). "A Survey of Historic Architecture in Goochland County, Virginia" (PDF). Virginia Department of Historic Resources. p. 76.
  27. ^ "Slave Clothing and Adornment in Virginia". Encyclopedia Virginia. Retrieved May 5, 2021.
  28. ^ a b Purdue, Sharon (September 2009). "Ellisville Bridge Historic Marker" (PDF). Goochland History. Retrieved May 4, 2021.
  29. ^ Kern, Susan (September 21, 2010). The Jeffersons at Shadwell. Yale University Press. pp. 100, 161, 294 (#9). ISBN 978-0-300-15570-9.
  30. ^ Kierner, Cynthia A. (May 14, 2012). Martha Jefferson Randolph, Daughter of Monticello: Her Life and Times. Univ of North Carolina Press. p. 77. ISBN 978-0-8078-8250-4.
  31. ^ a b Kern, Susan (September 21, 2010). The Jeffersons at Shadwell. Yale University Press. p. 315. ISBN 978-0-300-15570-9.
  32. ^ a b Worsham, Gibson (2003). "A Survey of Historic Architecture in Goochland County, Virginia" (PDF). Virginia Department of Historic Resources. p. 82.
  33. ^ Anderson, Jefferson Randolph (1937). "Tuckahoe and the Tuckahoe Randolphs". Register of the Kentucky State Historical Society. 35 (110): 29–59. ISSN 2328-8183. JSTOR 23371542.
  34. ^ "Extensive and Valuable James River Lands". Richmond Enquirer. September 13, 1842. p. 1. Retrieved May 4, 2021.
  35. ^ a b c "Slave Sales". Encyclopedia Virginia. Retrieved May 4, 2021.
  36. ^ "Clipped From The Virginia Gazette, or, The American Advertiser". The Virginia Gazette, or, The American Advertiser. January 3, 1784. p. 3. Retrieved May 5, 2021.
  37. ^ "Twenty Dollars Reward". Richmond Enquirer. January 23, 1836. p. 1. Retrieved May 5, 2021.
  38. ^ "Two Hundred Dollars Reward". Richmond Enquirer. November 23, 1852. p. 1. Retrieved May 5, 2021.
  39. ^ Worsham, Gibson (2003). "A Survey of Historic Architecture in Goochland County, Virginia" (PDF). Virginia Department of Historic Resources. pp. 88, 91.
  40. ^ Ely, Melvin Patrick (December 1, 2010). Israel on the Appomattox: A Southern Experiment in Black Freedom from the 1790s Through the Civil War. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. pp. 109–110. ISBN 978-0-307-77342-5.
  41. ^ "3 women wanted for painting 'We profit off slavery' at Tuckahoe Plantation". February 19, 2019. Retrieved May 5, 2021.
  42. ^ "Vandals paint 'We profit off slavery' at Tuckahoe Plantation". February 19, 2019. Retrieved May 5, 2021.

Further reading edit

  • Masson, Kathryn and Brooke, Steven (photographer); Historic Houses of Virginia: Great Plantation Houses, Mansions, and Country Places; Rizzoli International Publications; New York City, New York; 2006

External links edit

  •   Media related to Tuckahoe Plantation at Wikimedia Commons
  • Tuckahoe, at National Park Service
  • James River Plantations, a National Park Service Discover Our Shared Heritage Travel Itinerary
  • Tuckahoe, Goochland County, 4 photos at Virginia DHR
  • Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS) No. VA-712, "Tuckahoe Plantation, River Road, Richmond vicinity, Manakin vicinity, Goochland County, VA", 8 measured drawings

tuckahoe, plantation, tuckahoe, also, known, tuckahoe, plantation, historic, tuckahoe, located, tuckahoe, virginia, route, near, manakin, sabot, virginia, overlapping, both, goochland, henrico, counties, miles, from, town, same, name, built, first, half, 18th,. Tuckahoe also known as Tuckahoe Plantation or Historic Tuckahoe is located in Tuckahoe Virginia on Route 650 near Manakin Sabot Virginia overlapping both Goochland and Henrico counties six miles from the town of the same name Built in the first half of the 18th century it is a well preserved example of a colonial plantation house and is particularly distinctive as a colonial prodigy house Thomas Jefferson is also recorded as having spent some of his childhood here It was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1969 3 4 5 Historic Tuckahoe PlantationU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S National Historic Landmark DistrictVirginia Landmarks RegisterTuckahoe s northern wingShow map of VirginiaShow map of the United StatesLocationSE of Manakin near jct of Rtes 650 and 647 near Manakin VirginiaCoordinates37 34 13 7 N 77 39 11 4 W 37 570472 N 77 653167 W 37 570472 77 653167Area568 acres 230 ha Built1712 1712 ArchitectWilliam RandolphArchitectural styleGeorgianNRHP reference No 68000049VLR No 037 0033Significant datesAdded to NRHPNovember 22 1968 2 Designated NHLDAugust 11 1969 3 Designated VLRNovember 5 1968 1 Contents 1 History 2 Main house and its exterior 3 The grounds 3 1 Outbuildings 3 2 Slave quarters 4 Plantation life 4 1 Economy 4 2 Household and farm work 4 3 Clothing 4 4 Residents 4 5 Interaction with other people 4 6 Song 4 7 Worship 4 8 Sale 4 9 Runaways 4 10 Freedom 4 11 Legacy 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory editThomas Randolph first settled at Tuckahoe around 1714 and is recorded as contributing to the construction of the local Dover Parish also known as St James Parish church in the early 1720s 6 7 Randolph brought with him enslaved people sufficient enough in number to be called a workforce that he inherited from his father William Randolph s estate 8 a Thomas son William Randolph III built the mansion 10 He and his wife Maria Judith Page had three children two girls and Thomas Mann Randolph Sr born 1741 His wife died in 1744 11 and the following year William died 12 Randolph had added a codicil to his will asking that Peter Jefferson come to Tuckahoe Plantation and care for his three orphaned children 13 Peter Jefferson and his wife Jane Randolph Jefferson Randolph s cousin moved from Shadwell in Charlottesville to Tuckahoe Plantation with their three daughters and two year old son Thomas The Jeffersons and Randolph children lived together in the H shaped home until 1752 14 Peter Jefferson directed the activities of the plantation and its seven overseers retaining a connection to the estate even during his famous expeditions to map the western part of the state and after he returned to his own plantation of Shadwell 15 Thomas Jefferson who spent seven years of his childhood at Tuckahoe came to formulate his moral viewpoint of slavery there The whole commerce between master and slave is a perpetual exercise of the most boisterous passions the most unremitting despotism on the one part and degrading submissions on the other Our children see this and learn to imitate it Thomas Jefferson Notes on the State of Virginia 12 The son of William Randolph III Thomas Mann Randolph Sr and his wife Anne Cary had thirteen children and she died in 1789 Shortly afterward Thomas Mann Randolph Sr remarried to Gabriella Harvie the seventeen year old daughter of a Richmond attorney Gabriella made significant changes to Tuckahoe including painting the wooden paneling in the so called White Parlor and insisted on naming her son b 1792 Thomas Mann Randolph Jr despite the fact that the eldest son of Thomas Mann Randolph and Anne Cary b 1768 was already named Thomas Mann Randolph Jr Thomas Mann Randolph Jr II 1768 1828 moved to Edge Hill Albemarle County Virginia and went on to be a prominent statesman and governor of Virginia from 1819 to 1822 Thomas Mann Randolph Jr III inherited Tuckahoe but sold it for debts in 1830 16 The house passed through several families in the mid 19th century but returned to the Randolphs in 1898 when it was sold to Harold Jefferson Coolidge and a consortium of Randolph and Jefferson descendants In the 20th century Tuckahoe featured prominently in an early test of the National Historic Preservation Act when the owners challenged Virginia s plan to route Virginia State Route 288 through the property see Thompson v Fugate 347 F Supp 120 E D Va 1972 The house is currently occupied by owner manager Addison B Thompson and his wife Susan Main house and its exterior edit nbsp Tuckahoe s unique H shapeWilliam Randolph III constructed the current dwelling now a National Historic Landmark beginning in the mid 1730s 10 11 Dendrochronology analysis indicates the timbers in the older north wing date to c 1733 and this is supported by archaeological evidence dating the north porch to c 1740 The north wing features pine and black walnut paneling with exquisite carvings and moldings William Randolph then added a center hall and south wing creating a unique H shape which was completed by 1740 11 The main residence at Tuckahoe plantation is one of the great plantations of 18th century Virginia 10 The two story wood structure sits in its original spot the only Randolph home to not be relocated The structure forms an H with wings mirroring each other and connected by a central corridor The entrances to the house are reached by flights of stairs and two porches The stoop is covered by a projected pediment supported by simple wooden posts and is framed by a wooden railing To either side of the entrance is a pair of windows as well as a central window over the entrance each with dark shutters Each two sashed window contains 9 panes of glass The gabled roof rests on a simple cornice line with dentil moldings A large brick chimney rises from either side of the home The grounds editOutbuildings edit nbsp The former manager s office in the foreground and slave quarters at Tuckahoe photographed by Frances Benjamin JohnstonA collection of outbuildings were located on Plantation Street of Tuckahoe 17 b The buildings are arranged west of the mansion in a quadrangle Food management and processing were performed in a storehouse a smokehouse and a brick kitchen 17 which had a swinging crane and a dutch oven 19 Slave quarters an office a toolhouse and a barn are there 17 19 There used to be an ice house and weaving room 19 There were around 100 domestic workers field hands and skilled craftsmen who worked at Tuckahoe in the late 1740s 20 In 1779 there was a stable built specifically for one horse named Shakespeare who was well fed and pampered A niche for a bed was constructed so that a black boy could sleep there through the night and ensure the health and comfort of the horse 21 Cemeteries of the Randolph Wight and current Ball Thompson families are also on the grounds Slave quarters edit nbsp Tuckahoe slave quarters circa 1914The slave quarters at Tuckahoe were larger than most slave quarters which could be as small as 12 by 8 feet They were about 16 by 20 feet but were divided into two units which were separated by a central chimney Each room had an exterior door 22 Two later slave quarters include overhead lofts 17 Plantation life editEconomy edit Tuckahoe was 25 000 acres at its height There were three mills on the property and Tuckahoe grew wheat and tobacco and raised livestock 10 The main crop was tobacco which was sent to London in barrels 20 Household and farm work edit Household and farm work was performed by indentured servants and enslaved men women and children 10 Indentured servants generally brought from England served as unpaid workers for a specific period of time Enslaved people were held for their lives and children of an enslaved woman were also enslaved at birth under partus sequitur ventrem 23 c In 1859 there were 62 bondspeople A few worked in the house as domestic workers or cooks One individual was a metalsmith Most of the people worked in the fields From the records of that time children began working in the fields by age 11 10 d e Relying on labor from enslaved people meant that planters and their families lived wealthy and comfortable lives 20 Clothing edit nbsp Enslaved workers at a tobacco plantation in Virginia 1670Tuckahoe had a weaving room 19 which meant that it was possible that workers on the plantation created fabric for clothing It is also possible that they grew flax and spun threads to weave the fabric Garments would have been sewn by designated enslaved people from their woven linen or people may have constructed their own clothing Some planters like Thomas Jefferson provided fabric so that people would sew their own clothing 27 Further information History of slavery in Virginia Clothing Residents edit nbsp Mahala Boyd an enslaved woman who worked in the Tuckahoe residenceA woman named Harriet was among the last known African Americans born on Tuckahoe She had a clear recollection of growing up on the plantation which she recounted in 1915 Her husband Wesley was a ditcher 10 Levi Ellis was known to his family as a freed man from the Tuckahoe plantation He purchased 49 acres in Goochland County Virginia that he farmed with his wife Martha Jane Ellis He was a founder of what was later called Ellisville bordered by the Ellisville Bridge He was also a founder deacon and Sunday School superintendent of the St James Baptist Church It was among the first black churches in the county and operated a school 28 f Interaction with other people edit Bondspeople traveled among other plantations owned by the Jeffersons Randolphs and the Lewises who were family members Some slaveholders traveled with one or two enslaved people People who had special skills like carpentry would sometimes work at other estates There were a number of instances in which blacks at Tuckahoe communicated with those at Jefferson family plantations including when Jeffersons moved to Tuckahoe and then back to Shadwell following William Randolph s death 29 In 1790 the Jeffersons visited Tuckahoe with Hemings family members 30 Song edit At Monticello the enslaved people had a song that mentions Tuckahoe According to Martha Jefferson Randolph the song refers to Thomas Mann Randolph Sr 31 g While old Colonel Tom lived and prospered There was nothing but joy at Tuckahoe Now that old Colonel Tom is dead and gone No more joy for us at Tuckahoe dd Further information Thomas Mann Randolph Sr Marriages and children and Thomas Mann Randolph Jr Family discord and loss of Edge Hill Worship edit Churches were built and operated by white people Free blacks and enslaved people may have been able to worship in these churches in separate space for blacks until blacks established their own churches 32 There was no church until 1720 when the parish of St James was established The Dover Church closest to Tuckahoe was built from 1720 to 1724 The first permanent minister in residence was Rev William Douglass who began preaching 1750 33 Dover Mines Baptist Church was established for blacks from a dormant mining building It is now the First Baptist Church in Manakin Virginia 32 Sale edit nbsp Eyre Crowe Slaves Waiting for Sale Richmond Virginia oil 20 x 31 inches nbsp Lefevre James Cranstone Slave Auction VirginiaPortions of the Randolph s Tuckahoe plantation were subdivided into smaller tracts and sold Upon completion of an anticipated sale in 1842 enslaved people were to be put up for sale 34 The nearby city of Richmond was the largest seller of enslaved people in Virginia When enslaved people were sold it meant that communities and families were likely dispersed to different places 35 It was common for people to be separated from their spouses and children perhaps for the rest of their lives 35 People were taken from the plantation and put into jails or slave pens of slave traders They could have been there for weeks and may have been subject to physical inspections When they were auctioned it was possible that they were sold to another trader or ultimately sold to work plantations in the Deep South 35 See also Lumpkin s Jail Runaways edit nbsp Ad for runaway Wallace Smith from Tuckahoe Richmond Enquirer Richmond Virginia November 23 1852A carpenter named Gabriel or Gabe ran away from Tuckahoe on December 10 1783 An advertisement by Thomas M Randolph offered a reward of 20 for Gabriel and 5 for the horse that he took for his escape He was formerly enslaved by Col Charles Carter of Ludlow 36 Bob Christian ran away on January 5 1836 He had a wife in New Kent County a mother in Richmond and other relatives in Chickahominy Tuckahoe s plantation owner E L Wight offered 20 for his return 37 By 1851 M W Kemp of Gloucester County sold Wallace Smith to Joseph Allen of Tuckahoe Smith ran away and was expected to be in Gloucester A 200 equivalent to 7 035 in 2022 reward was offered for his return 38 Freedom edit Slavery continued until the passage of the 13th Amendment that abolished slavery in 1865 There were laws enacted and other practices that limited African Americans rights and opportunities after the Emancipation Proclamation 10 Some of the people who were emancipated following the American Civil War lived on Tuckahoe into the turn of the 20th century They were paid a salary and lived in the original quarters on the property 10 Others like Levi Ellis settled into a community of black people like New Town in the Three Square area and in the eastern part of the county Ellisville and Gordonstown 39 Once free blacks in Virginia competed directly with white people for work in their trades Many freedmen had a number of customers rather than being tied to one employer which might recommence a paternalistic relationship 40 Legacy edit In February 2019 three women painted the message we profit off slavery in red on a sign and pillar at Tuckahoe The anonymous group who took responsibility for the message said that it was a reminder of Virginia s troubled history 41 It happened during the same period that protestors met at the Virginia State Capitol and outside the Executive Mansion and called on Gov Northam to resign A fountain at Capitol Square was vandalized when red dye was poured into the water 42 Notes edit William Randolph the immigrant purchased large tracts of land over his lifetime that he then gave to his sons upon his death The large land holdings were divided up so that the sons had adjoining plantations 9 Plantations generally had out buildings that were used by enslaved people to process food like henhouses and meat houses There were also carriage houses and stables for horses 18 Africans were first brought to Colonial Virginia in 1619 but laws making the practice legal were not enacted until 1661 23 As an example of how children were put to work on a plantation Thomas Jefferson recorded his strategy in his Farm Book Until the age of 10 children served as nurses When the plantation grew tobacco children were at a good height to remove and kill tobacco worms from the crops 24 Once he began growing wheat fewer people were needed to maintain the crops so Jefferson established manual trades He stated that children go into the ground or learn trades When girls were 16 they began spinning and weaving textiles Boys made nails from age 10 to 16 In 1794 Jefferson had a dozen boys working at the nailery 24 While working at the nailery boys received more food and may have received new clothes if they did a good job After the nailery boys became blacksmiths coopers carpenters or house servants 24 In Goochland County most of the residents were black bondspeople owned by the largest plantations by 1789 In 1790 there were 4 656 enslaved people and 257 free black people and 4 140 whites Over time there was an increase in the percentage of enslaved people while the population of whites diminished There were 5 845 slave and 644 free blacks while the number of whites went down to 3 865 by 1850 25 By 1850 there were 644 free blacks in Virginia Those who were freed during the antebellum period built modest homes similar to those of white people with low income 26 In 2008 a historical marker was established at the Ellisville Bridge by the Goochland County Historical Society 28 Tuckahoe was intertwined with the lives of the Jeffersons through the time that Peter Jefferson and his family lived at the plantation when William Randolph s children were orphaned and also through the marriage of Martha Jefferson to Thomas Mann Randolph 31 References edit Virginia Landmarks Register Virginia Department of Historic Resources Archived from the original on September 21 2013 Retrieved March 12 2013 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service January 23 2007 a b Tuckahoe National Historic Landmark summary listing National Park Service Retrieved April 20 2008 James Dillon October 9 1974 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Tuckahoe Plantation pdf National Park Service and Accompanying 14 photos aerial and exterior and interior from 1968 1972 and 1974 32 KB Charles W Snell March 19 1971 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Tuckahoe Plantation House Thomas Jefferson Boyhood Home Tuckahoe PDF National Park Service Glenn Thomas Allen ed 1898 The Randolphs Randolph Genealogy Some Colonial Mansions And Those Who Lived In Them With Genealogies Of The Various Families Mentioned Vol 1 Philadelphia Pennsylvania Henry T Coates amp Company pp 430 459 Tuckahoe Plantation Archived 2010 12 14 at the Wayback Machine Tuckahoe Thomas Jefferson s Monticello Retrieved May 4 2021 Anderson Jefferson Randolph 1937 Tuckahoe and the Tuckahoe Randolphs Register of the Kentucky State Historical Society 35 110 30 32 ISSN 2328 8183 JSTOR 23371542 a b c d e f g h i The History Historic Tuckahoe March 4 2013 Retrieved May 3 2021 a b c Malone Dumas Jefferson the Virginian St Martin s Press 1948 Volume 1 p 19 a b Meacham Jon 2012 Thomas Jefferson The Art of Power Random House Publishing Group pp 6 10 ISBN 978 0 679 64536 8 Malone p 19 Malone pp 20 26 Malone p 20 n48 Randolph Thomas M August 28 1829 A Valuable and Beautiful Farm for Sale No Vol VI No 65 Pleasants Abbot amp Co The Constitutional Whig Richmond Va Retrieved July 12 2020 a b c d Tuckahoe Plantation Nomination Form PDF Virginia Department of Historic Resources 1974 p 6 Retrieved May 4 2021 Worsham Gibson 2003 A Survey of Historic Architecture in Goochland County Virginia PDF Virginia Department of Historic Resources p 79 a b c d Estates on James Retain Original Features The Times Dispatch April 24 1949 p 122 Retrieved May 4 2021 a b c Miller Brandon Marie September 2011 Thomas Jefferson for Kids Chicago Review Press pp 1 2 ISBN 978 1 56976 942 3 Tuckahoe Richmond Enquirer October 28 1845 p 4 Retrieved May 4 2021 Delle James A Fellows Kristen R 2012 A Plantation Transplanted Archaeological Investigations of a Piedmont Style Slave Quarter at Rose Hill Geneva New York Northeast Historical Archaeology 41 4 64 doi 10 22191 neha vol41 iss1 4 via The Open Repository Binghamton a b Rose Willie Lee Nichols 1999 A Documentary History of Slavery in North America University of Georgia Press pp 15 22 25 ISBN 978 0 8203 2065 6 a b c The Dark Side of Thomas Jefferson Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved May 9 2021 Worsham Gibson 2003 A Survey of Historic Architecture in Goochland County Virginia PDF Virginia Department of Historic Resources pp 22 33 Worsham Gibson 2003 A Survey of Historic Architecture in Goochland County Virginia PDF Virginia Department of Historic Resources p 76 Slave Clothing and Adornment in Virginia Encyclopedia Virginia Retrieved May 5 2021 a b Purdue Sharon September 2009 Ellisville Bridge Historic Marker PDF Goochland History Retrieved May 4 2021 Kern Susan September 21 2010 The Jeffersons at Shadwell Yale University Press pp 100 161 294 9 ISBN 978 0 300 15570 9 Kierner Cynthia A May 14 2012 Martha Jefferson Randolph Daughter of Monticello Her Life and Times Univ of North Carolina Press p 77 ISBN 978 0 8078 8250 4 a b Kern Susan September 21 2010 The Jeffersons at Shadwell Yale University Press p 315 ISBN 978 0 300 15570 9 a b Worsham Gibson 2003 A Survey of Historic Architecture in Goochland County Virginia PDF Virginia Department of Historic Resources p 82 Anderson Jefferson Randolph 1937 Tuckahoe and the Tuckahoe Randolphs Register of the Kentucky State Historical Society 35 110 29 59 ISSN 2328 8183 JSTOR 23371542 Extensive and Valuable James River Lands Richmond Enquirer September 13 1842 p 1 Retrieved May 4 2021 a b c Slave Sales Encyclopedia Virginia Retrieved May 4 2021 Clipped From The Virginia Gazette or The American Advertiser The Virginia Gazette or The American Advertiser January 3 1784 p 3 Retrieved May 5 2021 Twenty Dollars Reward Richmond Enquirer January 23 1836 p 1 Retrieved May 5 2021 Two Hundred Dollars Reward Richmond Enquirer November 23 1852 p 1 Retrieved May 5 2021 Worsham Gibson 2003 A Survey of Historic Architecture in Goochland County Virginia PDF Virginia Department of Historic Resources pp 88 91 Ely Melvin Patrick December 1 2010 Israel on the Appomattox A Southern Experiment in Black Freedom from the 1790s Through the Civil War Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group pp 109 110 ISBN 978 0 307 77342 5 3 women wanted for painting We profit off slavery at Tuckahoe Plantation February 19 2019 Retrieved May 5 2021 Vandals paint We profit off slavery at Tuckahoe Plantation February 19 2019 Retrieved May 5 2021 Further reading editMasson Kathryn and Brooke Steven photographer Historic Houses of Virginia Great Plantation Houses Mansions and Country Places Rizzoli International Publications New York City New York 2006External links edit nbsp Media related to Tuckahoe Plantation at Wikimedia Commons Tuckahoe at National Park Service James River Plantations a National Park Service Discover Our Shared Heritage Travel Itinerary Tuckahoe Goochland County 4 photos at Virginia DHR Historic American Buildings Survey HABS No VA 712 Tuckahoe Plantation River Road Richmond vicinity Manakin vicinity Goochland County VA 8 measured drawings Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tuckahoe plantation amp oldid 1204754202, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.