History
* Links that direct you to a site outside of Joyner Fine Properties will open in a window in the background.
A smattering of Richmond's history:
- 1607: Captains Newport and Smith arrive in the area, attempt to settle at the Falls of the James
- 1611: Citie of Henricus is established
- 1612: Tobacco is planted, to become a major cash crop for Virginia
- 1671: William Byrd I successfully settles at the Falls
- 1742: Richmond becomes a town, named after Richmond on the Thames in England
- 1775: Second Virginia Convention with Patrick Henry's "Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death" speech
- *photo above is St John's Church, site of the speech
- 1782: Richmond becomes a city
- 1786: Statute for Religious Freedom passed in Virginia
- recognized as the first time in history religious freedom is codified
- 1801: John Marshall, of Richmond, is appointed US Chief Justice
- 1835: Edgar Allen Poe moves to Richmond
- 1836: Tredegar Iron Works opens
- later provides most of the armor used in the Civil War
- 1838: Medical College of Virginia is established
- 1861-1865: Richmond is capital of the Confederacy
- Richmond and surrounding areas are the sites of a good deal of fighting in the war
- Much of Richmond is destroyed by fire at the end of the war
- President Lincoln visits Richmond 5 days before his assassination
- 1870: Virginia is readmitted to the Union
- 1879: Richmond is the first city in the South to have telephone service
- 1903: Maggie L. Walker becomes the country's first woman bank president, she is also African-American
- 1914: Richmond becomes the headquarters of the Fifth District of the Federal Reserve Bank
* Timeline augmented by information from the Richmond Metropolitan Convention & Visitors Bureau website