County
Background
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Virginia
with insert of Fluvanna County(Click
image for map page)
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Near
the center of Virginia you will find the small, but rapidly growing
County of Fluvanna. Fluvanna covers about 282 square miles, one of the
smaller counties in Virginia, and is 25 miles east of Charlottesville,
60 miles west of Richmond and 120 miles south of Washington, D.C. To
the south Fluvannas border is the James River separating her from
Buckingham and Cumberland Counties, while to the west she is bordered
by Albemarle, to the north by Louisa and the east by Goochland County.
Fluvanna County is one of the fastest growing counties in population
size in Virginia.
Brief
History of Old Flu
As
with most counties formed in colonial times, the future Fluvanna was
originally part of much larger counties the first being the original
1634 Shire of Henrico. If an 18th century settler was fortunate to live
to old age in the area, they could have possibly lived in fourth counties-
Henrico, Goochland (1727), Albemarle (1744), and Fluvanna (1777), without
ever moving an inch.
Indirectly
named after Anne (1665-1714), the second daughter of England's King
James II (1633-1701), Fluvanna took its name from the Fluvanna River,
which was what the upper James River was called in colonial times (Long,
p. 37).
Before
settlers from Virginia's tidewater region began moving into the area,
Fluvanna was inhabited by Monacan Indians. One of the largest Monacan
settlements in Virginia, Rassawek, was located near the present town
of Columbia near Fluvanna's border with Goochland County. Fluvanna's
first river port was located at Seven Islands, a small but industrious
community loosely based between the Hardware River and Bremo Creek.
A community
was established around Virgin Mills (built circa 1800) at Seven Islands,
which included industries such as blacksmithing, coopering (barrel making),
carpentry, and bricklaying. Also located around the mill were a general
store, a boat landing and a post office that was established in 1842.
As
time progressed, the lengthy James River and Kanawha Canal replaced
the risky bateaux boat travel on the James in 1840. The canal passed
right in front of the Seven Islands community. Virgin Mills was situated
right on the canal and made for easy shipment of goods. When the canal
was being put through in the 1830s, all creeks or other bodies of water
had elaborate culverts built, which carries the water under the canal
build. These culverts still are in use today, with heavy coal trains
barreling over them several times a day, a great testament to the workmanship
used to build them.
Having
a heyday of only 20 years, after the Civil War the canal fell into disrepair
and was replaced by the railroad in 1880. Though the railroad provided
a much quicker means of transportation than the canal ever had, it would
indirectly lead to the downfall of the Seven Islands community. The
sparks from a passing locomotive effectively ended the life of Virgin
Grist Mills around 1895. Without the mill, the community focused more
on that of nearby Shores, which had Middleton Mills, a train station,
hotel, general store and other industries. Without its mill, Seven Islands
just could not keep up.
The 20th century was slow to find rural Fluvanna. However the trains
brought the outside in to Fluvanna. With few paved roads and no interstates
the only reliable form of transportation was the trains that stopped
twice a day at Shores, once in the morning going west and once in the
evening going east. By early 1950s only a few inhabitants still lived
in the Seven Islands area.
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Tutwiler
Homeplace Seven Islands, Virginia circa 1935
Courtesy:
Mrs. D.T. Wood
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Mrs.
Leona C. Tutwiler Moore (1885-1954), the last of the Tutwiler family
to live at Seven Islands, was a widow who lived by herself in the Tutwiler
home place (originally the miller's house for Virgin Mills) located
adjacent to the mill ruins. Mrs. Moore's death in November 1954 brought
a chapter in Fluvanna's history to a close. In addition by 1960 passenger
and mail service, provided by the railway since it started service in
1881, ceased operations. Now Seven Islands and Shores no longer had
a daily connection with the outside world.
The businesses closed shop and were knocked down and now there is hardly
a trace of the community that once thrived at Shores. Seven Islands
has reverted to wilderness. Pictures from the 1920s show the Tutwiler
homeplace surrounded by open fields, no trees in sight. Today it is
dwarfed by a forest that has reclaimed the land.
Todays
Seven Islands would most likely look more familiar to the settlers of
the 18th century then the farmers of the early 20th century. Reminders
of its past still survive, though hidden by time and
Mother Nature. The wind whistles through the empty home as trains continue
to ramble past the house as they have for over 125 years. Mighty trees
that once watched the homeplace radiate with life now stand as silent
witnesses to the effects of time and nature. Though houses may empty
and their inhabitants may pass on, grand homeplaces such as the Tutwiler
home will always retain the spirit of its previous owners.