Virginia Firsts, Facts, and Trivia
Virginia Famous Firsts, Virginia Interesting Facts, Virginia Trivia
Opened in 1964, the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel is 18 miles long and has two bridges and two mile-long tunnels. It extends over the mouth of Chesapeake Bay and connects the cities of Cape Charles and Norfolk.
More Virginia Firsts, Facts, and Trivia
- Virginia was named for England's "Virgin Queen," Elizabeth I.
- The major cash crop of Virginia is tobacco and many of the
people who live there earn their living from the tobacco industry.
- Jamestown, the first of the original 13 Colonies was founded for
the purpose of silk cultivation. Silk to be traded with the Court of
King James. After blight fungus destroyed the mulberry trees
(silkworm food), sericulturist planted tobacco as a cash crop.
- Jamestown was the first English settlement in the U.S. It was
also the first capital of Virginia.
- Virginia is known as "the birthplace of a nation".
- Arlington County was originally part of the ten-mile square
parcel of land surveyed in 1791 to be part of Washington, DC. The
U.S. Congress returned that portion of the land to the "Commonwealth
of Virginia" following a referendum among its citizens.
- Eight United States Presidents were born in Virginia: George
Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, William
Harrison, John Tyler, Zachary Taylor, and Woodrow Wilson.
- Six Presidents' wives were born in Virginia: Martha Washington,
Martha Jefferson, Rachel Jackson, Letitia Tyler, Ellen Arthur, Edith
Wilson.
- Seven Presidents are buried in Virginia: Washington, Jefferson,
Madison, Monroe, Tyler, Taft and Kennedy.
- The present state capital in Richmond was also the capital of
the Confederacy.
- The College of William and Mary in Williamsburg is the second
oldest in the United States, it was founded in 1693.
- The State nickname is "Old Dominion".
- The State flower is not really a flower, but the blossom of the
dogwood tree, which is also the state tree.
- The first peanuts grown in the United States were grown in
Virginia.
- The Blue Ridge Mountains are located in Virginia.
- The American Revolution ended with the surrender of Cornwallis
in Yorktown.
- On March 9, 1862 at Hampton Roads, Virginia, the USS Monitor and
the CSS Virginia (formerly the USS Merrimac) met in one of the most
famous naval engagements in US history. Their battle, the first of
its kind between metal armored vessels, changed for all time the
nature of naval warfare.
- 10th of the 13 original colonies, Virginia was admitted to the
union June 25, 1788.
- The state motto is "Sic Semper Tyrannis". (Thus always to
tyrants)
- Union Passenger Railway was the first successful electric street
railway transit agency. It was formed in 1888 at Richmond.
- The states of Kentucky & West Virginia were formed from sections
of the state of Virginia
- About 1/2 of all the people in the United States live within a
500 mile radius of the Capital of Virginia.
- Virginia has had 3 capital cities: Jamestown, Williamsburg, and
Richmond.
- Richmond was also the capital of the Confederate States during
the Civil War
- Over 1/2 the battles fought in the civil war were fought in
Virginia. Over 2,200 of the 4,000 battles.
- In Virginia more people work for the United States government
than any other industry. About 1/4 of Virginia's workers.
- Virginia's largest private employer is also the world's largest
ship building yard.
- Virginia is the home base for the United States Navy's Atlantic
Fleet.
- The tomb of the Unknown Soldier is in Arlington National
Cemetery.
- The Pentagon building in Arlington is the largest office
building in the world.
- The Pentagon has nearly 68,000 miles of internal telephone
lines.
- Dulles International Airport is one of the busiest airports in
the world.
- General Thomas Jackson got his nickname "Stonewall" in
Manassass. The site of 2 major Civil War Battles.
- The first Thanksgiving in North America was held in Virginia in
1619.
- Yorktown is the site of the final victory of the American
Revolution.
- Virginia has been dubbed the "Internet Capital of the world".
- The Atlantic headquarters of NATO is located in Norfolk.
- The Great Dismal Swamp is in Virginia near the North Carolina
border.
- Virginia Beach is the largest city in Virginia. Its population
is expected to surpass 500,000 residents by 2010.
- The Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel is the world's largest
bridge-tunnel complex.
- Wild Ponies have roamed freely on Assateague Island for
centuries.
- The world's only oyster museum is on Chincoteague Island.
- Busch Garden's Old Country Theme Park is located near
Williamsburg.
- President Thomas Jefferson designed his own home and called it
Monticello.
- George Washington's home, Mount Vernon, is located in Virginia.
- Robert E. Lee, Commanding General of the Army of Northern
Virginia, surrendered his men to Ulysses Grant, General-in-Chief of
all United States forces, on April 9, 1865 at the Appomattox Court
House.
- Patrick Henry made his "Give me Liberty or Give me Death" speech
in St. John's Church in Richmond.
- Bristol is legally two cities but they share the same main
street. One in Virginia and one in Tennessee each with its own
government and city services.
- Waynesboro was the site of the last major battle of the Civil
War in central Virginia, the Battle of Waynesboro in 1865 between
Generals Jubal Early and Philip Sheridan.
- Colvin Run Mill in Great Falls has an early 19-century wooden water wheel and operating gristmill. The old Miller's House features an exhibit about the process of milling and the families who operated the mill.
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