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Germanna





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Germanna was a German settlement in the Colony of Virginia, settled in two waves, first in 1714 and then in 1717. Virginia Lieutenant Governor Alexander Spotswood encouraged the immigration by advertising in Germany for miners to move to Virginia and establish a mining industry in the colony.

Germanna Site

U.S. National Register of Historic Places

Virginia Landmarks Register

Sign at the Germanna Visitor Center
Germanna is located in Virginia
Germanna

Germanna is located in the United States
Germanna

Nearest cityCulpeper, Virginia
Coordinates38°22′41N 77°46′59W / 38.378117°N 77.783185°W / 38.378117; -77.783185
Area120 acres (49 ha)
Built1724 (1724)
NRHP reference No.78003036[1]
VLR No.068-0043
Significant dates
Added to NRHPAugust 24, 1978
Designated VLRJune 21, 1977[2]

Etymology

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The name "Germanna," selected by Lt. Governor Alexander Spotswood, reflected both the German immigrants who sailed across the Atlantic to Virginia and the British Queen, Anne, who was in power at the time of the first settlement at Germanna. Though she died only months after the Germans arrived, her name continues to be a part of the area.

History

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As part of a series of land grants awarded to settlers to create a buffer against the French, the Privy Council granted Spotswood 86,000 acres (350 km2) in the newly created Spotsylvania County in 1720, of which the Germanna tract was the first, while he was Lieutenant Governor and actual executive head of the Virginia government. He served in this capacity between 1710 and 1722 and, in 1716, he carried out his famous Knights of the Golden Horseshoe Expedition and promoted many reforms and improvements.

Spotswood was replaced as the lieutenant governor by Hugh Drysdale some time in 1722. Historians suggest his removal may have been the result of years of disharmony between himself and the council, as well as when he accepted such a large amount of land, that he showed a disregard for the Crown policy which held that no single person or family could claim more than a thousand acres of Virginia land.[citation needed]

Spotswood established a colony of German immigrants on the Germanna tract in 1714, partly for frontier defense but mainly to operate his newly developed ironworks. Germanna was the seat of Spotsylvania County from 1720 to 1732. Spotswood erected a palatial home and, after the Germans moved away to Germantown, continued the ironworks with slave labor. In his later years he served as Deputy Postmaster General for the Colonies.

The Germanna Colonies consist primarily of the First Colony of forty-two persons from the Siegerland area in Germany brought to Virginia to work for Spotswood in 1714, and the Second Colony of twenty families from the Palatinate, Baden and Württemberg area of Germany brought in 1717, but also include other German families who joined the first two colonies at later dates. Although many Germanna families later migrated southward and westward from Piedmont Virginia, genealogical evidence shows that many of the families intermarried for generations, producing a rich genealogical heritage.

The site of the first settlement, Fort Germanna, is located in present-day Orange County along the banks of the Rapidan River, with subsequent settlements of Germans being established on sites in present-day Culpeper and Spotsylvania counties. Many Germanna families played roles in important events in early American history such as the American Revolution and migration west to Kentucky and beyond.

Preservation

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The site of Fort Germanna is mostly open fields with intervening thickets of second-growth timber. The Fort Germanna site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.[1] Traces of the terraces of Spotswood's mansion which came to be known as the "Enchanted Castle" are still discernible. The Germanna Foundation is conducting archaeological exploration of the Fort Germanna, Siegen Forest, and Salubria sites that it owns in Orange and Culpeper Counties.

The Germanna Foundation owns land on the original Germanna peninsula, on both sides of the Germanna Highway, State Route 3, near the site of the original Fort Germanna, once the westernmost outpost of colonial Virginia. The Germanna Foundation operates the Brawdus Martin Fort Germanna Visitor Center on the Siegen Forest side of the Germanna Highway, 15 miles (24 km) east of Culpeper and 20 miles (32 km) west of Fredericksburg, Virginia. The Foundation also owns a nearby 18th century mansion, Salubria, once the home of Governor Spotswood's widow. In October 2000, Salubria was donated by the Grayson family to the Germanna Foundation for historic preservation.[3] The Foundation maintains a research library, a memorial garden, and plans interpretive walking trails to various historic and archaeological sites. In addition, the Foundation publishes histories and genealogical books, a newsletter, offers educational programs at an Annual Historical Conference and Reunion and to the community, and offers group travel to Germany geared to the origin of the Germanna families.

Timelines

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First colony

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The first colony consisted of the family surnames: Albrecht, Brombach/Brumback, Fischbach/Fishback, Hager, Friesenhagen, Heide/Heite/Hitt, Heimbach, Hofmann, Holzklau/Holtzclaw, Huttmann, Kemper/Camper, Cuntze/Koontz, Merdten/Martin, Otterbach/Utterback, Reinschmidt, Richter/Rector, Spielmann, Weber/Weaver[4][5][6][7][8][9][10]

Second colony

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Sources

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  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  • ^ "Virginia Landmarks Register". Virginia Department of Historic Resources. Retrieved June 5, 2013.
  • ^ Germanna Foundation website
  • ^ "Research Your Germanna Roots".
  • ^ Willis M. Kemper and Harry Linn Wright, Genealogy of the Kemper Family in The United States: Descendants of John Kemper of Virginia (Chicago: Geo. K. Hazlitt & Co., 1899), 31, 40, 51.
  • ^ William J. Hinke, “The First German Reformed Colony in Virginia: 1714-1750 “(Journal of the Presbyterian Historical Society (1901-1930), Vol. 2, No. 2, 1903), 2, 8.
  • ^ Charles Herbert Huffman, Editor; Dr. Benjamin C. Holtzclaw, The Story of Germanna Descendants in Reunion at Siegen Forest Virginia (Virginia: The Memorial Foundation of the Germanna Colonies in Virginia, Inc. 1960), 22.
  • ^ Charles Herbert Huffman, Editor; Dr. Benjamin C. Holtzclaw, The Germanna Record, Germanna Record No. 1: Hitt, Martin, Weaver (Culpeper, Virginia: The Memorial Foundation of the Germanna Colonies in Virginia, Inc. 1961), 5-42.
  • ^ Dr. Benjamin C. Holtzclaw, Ancestry and Descendants of the Nassau-Siegen Immigrants to Virginia, 1714-1750 (Virginia: The Memorial Foundation of the Germanna Colonies in Virginia, Inc. 1964), 185-192.
  • ^ Dr. Lothar Irle, Siegerlander Personlichkeiten- und Geschlechter-Lexicon (Siegen: Selbstverlag des Siegerlander Heimatvererins, 1974), 131.
  • ^ Staatsarchiv Munster, Furstentum Siegen Landesarchiv 24, No. 76
  • ^ Copy of Original letter from Pastor Knabenschuh was found by Emil Flender while researching the Siegen Archives for Dr. BC Holtzclaw, Emil Flender sent it to Dr. Holtzclaw along with the translation which was found in the Germanna Foundation Visitor Center in the papers of Dr. Holtzclaw.
  • ^ a b Staatsarchiv Munster, Furstentum Siegen Landesarchiv 11, No. 28 BS2.
  • ^ Essex County, Virginia Deed Book No. 16, p. 180.
  • ^ Spotsylvania County Deed Book A, pg. 165--Naturalization of Jacob Holtzclaw
  • Bibliography

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    Last edited on 22 April 2024, at 20:10  





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