N S Richmond Popular Books

N S Richmond Biography & Facts

Richmond ( RITCH-mənd) is the capital city of the Commonwealth of Virginia in the United States. Incorporated in 1742, Richmond has been an independent city since 1871. The city's population in the 2020 census was 226,610, up from 204,214 in 2010, making it Virginia's fourth-most populous city. The Richmond metropolitan area, with over 1.3 million residents, is the Commonwealth's third-most populous. Richmond is located at the James River's fall line, 44 mi (71 km) west of Williamsburg, 66 mi (106 km) east of Charlottesville, 91 mi (146 km) east of Lynchburg and 92 mi (148 km) south of Washington, D.C. Surrounded by Henrico and Chesterfield counties, Richmond is at the intersection of Interstate 95 and Interstate 64 and encircled by Interstate 295, Virginia State Route 150 and Virginia State Route 288. Major suburbs include Midlothian to the southwest, Chesterfield to the south, Varina to the southeast, Sandston to the east, Glen Allen to the north and west, Short Pump to the west, and Mechanicsville to the northeast. Richmond was an important village in the Powhatan Confederacy and was briefly settled by English colonists from Jamestown from 1609 to 1611. Founded in 1737, it replaced Williamsburg as the capital of the Colony and Dominion of Virginia in 1780. During the Revolutionary War period, several notable events occurred in the city, including Patrick Henry's "Give me liberty, or give me death!" speech in 1775 at St. John's Church and the passage of the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom written by Thomas Jefferson. During the American Civil War, Richmond was the capital of the Confederate States of America. The Jackson Ward neighborhood is the city's traditional hub of African American commerce and culture, once known as the "Black Wall Street of America" and the "Harlem of the South." At the beginning of the 20th century, Richmond had one of the world's first successful electric streetcar systems. Law, finance, and government primarily drive Richmond's economy. The downtown area is home to federal, state, and local governmental agencies as well as notable legal and banking firms. The greater metropolitan area includes several Fortune 500 companies: Performance Food Group, Altria, CarMax, Dominion Energy, Markel, Owens and Minor, Genworth Financial, and ARKO Corp. The city is home to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit and a Federal Reserve Bank (one of 13 such courts and one of 12 such banks). History Colonial era After the first permanent English-speaking settlement was established at Jamestown, Virginia, in April 1607, Captain Christopher Newport led explorers northwest up the James River to an inhabited area in the Powhatan Nation. In 1611, the first European settlement in Central Virginia was established at Henricus, where the Falling Creek empties into the James River. In 1619, early Virginia Company settlers established the Falling Creek Ironworks there. Decades of conflicts between the Powhatan and the settlers followed, including the Battle of Bloody Run, fought near Richmond in 1656, after tensions arose from an influx of Manahoacs and Nahyssans from the North. Nonetheless, the James Falls area saw more White settlement in the late 1600s and early 1700s. In early 1737, planter William Byrd II commissioned Major William Mayo to lay out the original town grid, completed in April. Byrd named the city after the English town of Richmond near (and now part of) London, because the view of the James River's bend at the fall line was similar to that of the River Thames from Richmond Hill, named after Henry VII's ancestral home in Richmond, North Yorkshire. In 1742, the settlement was incorporated as a town. American Revolution In 1775, Patrick Henry delivered his famous "Give me liberty, or give me death" speech in Richmond's St. John's Church, greatly influencing Virginia's participation in the First Continental Congress and the course of the American Revolution. On April 18, 1780, the state capital was moved from Williamsburg to Richmond, providing a more centralized location for Virginia's increasing western population and theoretically isolating the capital from a British attack from the coast. In 1781, Loyalist troops led by Benedict Arnold led a raid on Richmond and burnt it, leading Governor Thomas Jefferson to flee while the Virginia militia, led by Sampson Mathews, unsuccessfully defended the city. Early United States Richmond recovered quickly from the war, thriving within a year of its burning. In 1786, the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom, drafted by Thomas Jefferson, was enacted, separating church and state and advancing the legal principle for freedom of religion in the United States. In 1788, the Virginia State Capitol, designed by Jefferson and Charles-Louis Clérisseau in the Greek Revival style, was completed. To bypass Richmond's rapids on the upper James River and provide a water route across the Appalachian Mountains to the Kanawha River, which flows westward into the Ohio River and converges with the Mississippi River, George Washington helped design the James River and Kanawha Canal. The canal started in Westham and cut east to Richmond, facilitating the transfer of cargo from flat-bottomed James River bateaux above the fall line to the ocean-faring ships below. The canal boatmen legacy is represented by the figure in the center of the city flag. Because of the canal and the hydropower the falls generated, Richmond emerged as an important industrial center after the American Revolutionary War (1775–1783). It became home to some of the largest manufacturing facilities, including iron works and flour mills, in the South and the country. By 1850, Richmond was connected by the Richmond and Petersburg Railroad to Port Walthall, where ships carrying over 200 tons of cargo could connect to Baltimore or Philadelphia. Passenger liners could reach Norfolk, Virginia, through the Hampton Roads harbor. In the 19th century, Richmond was connected to the North by the Richmond, Fredericksburg, and Potomac Railroad, later replaced by CSXT. The railroad also was used by some to escape slavery in the mid-19th century. In 1849, Henry "Box" Brown famously had himself nailed into a small box and shipped from Richmond to abolitionists in Philadelphia through Baltimore's President Street Station on the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad, often used by the Underground Railroad to assist escaping disguised slaves reach the free state of Pennsylvania. American Civil War Five days after the Confederate attack on Fort Sumter, the Virginia legislature voted to secede from the United States and join the newly created Confederate States of America on April 17, 1861. The action became official in May, after the Confederacy promised to move its national capital to Richmond from Montgomery, Alabama. Richmond held local, state and national Confederate government offices, hospitals, a railroad hub, and one of the largest sla.... Discover the N S Richmond popular books. Find the top 100 most popular N S Richmond books.

Best Seller N S Richmond Books of 2024

  • Reclamation synopsis, comments

    Reclamation

    Gayle Jessup White

    A Black descendant of Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings’ family explores America’s racial reckoning through the prism of her ancestorsboth the enslaver and the enslaved.Gayle Jess...

  • The Horse synopsis, comments

    The Horse

    Willy Vlautin

    “Willy Vlautin’s characters blaze with honesty, fighting for their slim chance at the American dream.”Rene Denfeld, author of The Butterfly Girl and The Child Finder...

  • Lincoln and the Fight for Peace synopsis, comments

    Lincoln and the Fight for Peace

    John Avlon

    A groundbreaking and “affecting and powerful” (The New York Times Book Review) history of Abraham Lincoln’s plan to secure a just and lasting peace after the Civil Wara vision that...

  • Josephine Moore v. Richmond Hill Savings Bank synopsis, comments

    Josephine Moore v. Richmond Hill Savings Bank

    Supreme Court of New York

    The plaintiff and the defendant Richmond Hill presented this case on stipulated facts (see, Moore v Richmond Hill Sav. Bank, 120 Misc. 2d 488). The defendant Taramatie ...

  • Railroads v. Richmond synopsis, comments

    Railroads v. Richmond

    United States Supreme Court

    Mr. Platt Smith, in support of the motion: Although the acts authorize the connection of the tracks so as to form continuous lines of transportation to the place of destination; an...

  • A Right Worthy Woman synopsis, comments

    A Right Worthy Woman

    Ruth P Watson

    In the vein of The Personal Librarian and The House of Eve, a “remarkable and stirring novel” (Patti Callahan Henry, New York Times bestselling author) based on the inspiring true ...

  • The House Is on Fire synopsis, comments

    The House Is on Fire

    Rachel Beanland

    A “wildly entertaining” (NPR), “gripping” (The Washington Post) work of historical fiction about an incendiary tragedy that shocked a young nation and tore apart a community in a s...

  • Hungry Hearts synopsis, comments

    Hungry Hearts

    Elsie Chapman & Caroline Tung Richmond

    “A briliant multicultual collection that reminds readers that stories about food are rarely just about the food alone.” Kirkus Reviews (starred review)A stunning collection of shor...

  • Thank You for Coming to Hattiesburg synopsis, comments

    Thank You for Coming to Hattiesburg

    Todd Barry

    “With this charming, sardonic debut, stand up comedian and actor Todd Barry makes readers laugh as hard as the audiences at his shows” (Publishers Weekly) in this hilarious book of...

  • Lewis Ginter synopsis, comments

    Lewis Ginter

    Brian Burns

    A biography of the nineteenthcentury influential Richmond businessman.As a Confederate war hero, philanthropist and entrepreneur, Lewis Ginter was many things to Richmond. Performi...

  • Hell or Richmond synopsis, comments

    Hell or Richmond

    Ralph Peters

    Winner of the American Library Association's 2014 Boyd Award for Literary Excellence in Military Fiction.Between May 5 and June 3, 1864, the Union and Confederate armies suffered 8...

  • State v. Richmond synopsis, comments

    State v. Richmond

    2002 Session In the Supreme Court of Tennessee At Knoxville September 5

    William M. Barker, J., delivered the opinion of the court, the panel of which consisted of Frank F. Drowota, III, C.J., and E. Riley Anderson, A., J., Adolpho A. Birch, Jr., and Ja...

  • Labyrinth synopsis, comments

    Labyrinth

    Catherine Coulter

    From “one of the bonafide rock stars of the thriller genre” (The Real Book Spy) comes another tour de force in the #1 New York Times bestselling FBI Thriller series following agent...

  • H. L. Carpel of Richmond Inc. v. City of Richmond synopsis, comments

    H. L. Carpel of Richmond Inc. v. City of Richmond

    Supreme Court of Wyoming

    "Summon H. L. Carpel, 1704 Altamont avenue, to appear before me or some other justice of the peace of said city, at the police justices court in the city hall, on the 10th day of A...

  • Triangle Motors Dallas v. Benjamin S. Richmond Et Al. synopsis, comments

    Triangle Motors Dallas v. Benjamin S. Richmond Et Al.

    The Supreme Court of Texas

    hit by a descending elevator at Triangle Motors place of business. At the conclusion of the evidence in Richmonds suit for damages, the trial court withdrew the case from the jury ...

  • Rogers v. Richmond synopsis, comments

    Rogers v. Richmond

    Supreme Court of the United States

    This case has a long history. It must be told with some particularity in order to unravel issues ensnarled in protracted litigation in both state and federal courts, turning essent...

  • Koenigsberger v. Richmond Silver Mining Company. Richmond Silver Mining Company v. Koenigsberger synopsis, comments

    Koenigsberger v. Richmond Silver Mining Company. Richmond Silver Mining Company v. Koenigsberger

    Supreme Court of the United States

    MR. JUSTICE GRAY delivered the opinion of the court. This was an action at law, commenced October 17, 1883, in the district court of the first judicial district of the Territory of...

  • Central National Bank of Richmond v. First and Merchants National Bank of Richmond synopsis, comments

    Central National Bank of Richmond v. First and Merchants National Bank of Richmond

    Virginia Supreme Court

    The facts in this case were agreed to by a stipulation in writing. So far as material, they are as follows:

  • Moby Dyke synopsis, comments

    Moby Dyke

    Krista Burton

    A former Rookie contributor and creator of the popular blog Effing Dykes investigates the disappearance of America’s lesbian bars by visiting the last few in existence.Lesbian bars...

  • Arthur Ashe synopsis, comments

    Arthur Ashe

    Raymond Arsenault

    A NEW YORK TIMES NOTABLE BOOKA “thoroughly captivating biography” (The San Francisco Chronicle) of American icon Arthur Ashethe Jackie Robinson of men’s tennisa pioneering athlete ...

  • Richmond Newspapers v. Virginia Et Al. synopsis, comments

    Richmond Newspapers v. Virginia Et Al.

    Supreme Court of the United States

    In March 1976, one Stevenson was indicted for the murder of a hotel manager who had been found stabbed to death on December 2, 1975. Tried promptly in July 1976, Stevenson was conv...

  • Varina synopsis, comments

    Varina

    Charles Frazier

    Sooner or later, history asks, which side were you on?In his powerful new novel, Charles Frazier returns to the time and place of Cold Mountain, vividly bringing to life the c...

  • The Richmond, Fredericksburg, And Potomac Railroad Company, Plaintiffs in Error v. the Louisa Railroad Company synopsis, comments

    The Richmond, Fredericksburg, And Potomac Railroad Company, Plaintiffs in Error v. the Louisa Railroad Company

    United States Supreme Court

    THIS case was brought up from the Court of Appeals of the State of Virginia, by a writ of error, issued under the 25th section of the Judiciary Act. The facts in the case are state...

  • Deadlock synopsis, comments

    Deadlock

    Catherine Coulter

    This “intricate…extravagant thriller with a paranormal tinge” (Publishers Weekly)” by #1 New York Times bestselling author Catherine Coulter finds Savich and Sherlock confronting t...

  • City of Richmond v. Richmond Memorial Hospital synopsis, comments

    City of Richmond v. Richmond Memorial Hospital

    Virginia Supreme Court

    [1] This is an appeal by the City of Richmond from an adverse decision in a consolidated proceeding brought by Richmond Memorial Hospital and Richmond Eye Hospital under §§ 58114...

  • State v. Richmond synopsis, comments

    State v. Richmond

    North Carolina Court of Appeals

    An unpublished opinion of the North Carolina Court of Appeals does not constitute controlling legal authority. Citation is disfavored, but may be permitted in accordance with the p...

  • Damage Them All You Can synopsis, comments

    Damage Them All You Can

    George Walsh

    From the campaigns to the men who fought the battles, George Walsh takes the reader into the world of the most infamous fighting brigade of America's Civil War, The Army of Norther...