Richmond, Va. is a medium-sized Southern city (population approximately 225,000) with a nice mix of the old and the new.
CHURCH HILL
The day after Easter I did some sightseeing here with Alesia and her brother Blake. It was a pretty spring day and we had all had free time with no one in a rush to be anywhere.
One stop with its great views of downtown is Church Hill where these photos were taken. This area is also known as the St. John's Church Historic District. Keep reading to find out why.
Richmond has a great amount of early American history beyond and before its role as the capital of the Confederacy during the civil war.
As addressed in my previous blog post (link here), part of the city’s rich history has been under fire and most long-standing Confederate monuments have come down (except at Hollywood Cemetery-keep reading)
Q94 was in this building along with WRVA news radio. Back then they were owned by Harte Hanks radio (today Entercom owns Q94; iHeartMedia owns WRVA). Both stations are still on the air today but left this location long ago. What a view of the city we had through these large windows.!
My job was as assistant to News Director Treda Smith. It was a tough job in that I had to be at work at 4:30 in the morning four days a week. On Sundays, I went in at 10 p.m. to play programs including “American Top 40” with Kasey Kasem from 2-6 a.m. Mondays.
Working here plus my broadcasting courses at VCU motivated me to pursue a career in broadcast journalism. See my LinkedIn site for a summary of the stations where I was a TV news reporter and anchor.
Also on Church Hill is this famous church where American patriot and founding father Patrick Henry made his famous “Give me liberty or give me death” speech at St. John’s (Episcopal) Church (pictured) in 1775 during the Second Virginia Convention.This church dates all the way back to 1741.
I would have liked to walk around St. John’s graveyard but it was locked. Edgar Allen Poe’s mother was buried her. Wow!
Across from the church is this historic sign. The traitor Benedict Arnold led British troops to invade Richmond in 1781. I never knew that!
The heart of the downtown campus hasn’t changed too much in the, gosh, more than 35 years since I was a student here.
My last semester or two at VCU I had a very sweet living situation in this old house right across from the school library. The photo top right shows the white library and to its right the house where on N. Linden Street. I had my own place- no roommate- on the first floor. My good friend from high school Dom lived on the third floor for a while during his Georgia Tech internship at the big Philip Morris cigarette plant.
Below is a picture of the corner house that is today a VCU office (something called the Moseley House Equity and Access Unit). A small park across the street had a statue of a Confederate artilleryman. The monument was removed last summer during racial unrest after the George Floyd death at the hands (or better-said knee) of police in Minneapolis.
My interest in old gravesites is well documented but Hollywood Cemetery has a very personal connection for Alesia because this is where her parents were laid to rest. They are here in the lovely mausoleum along the James River. She paid her respects and then we drove and walked around the hilly necropolis for a little while.
For a Civil War buff like me, this cemetery’s thousands (more than 18,000 to be more specific) of Confederate veterans and war deaths are always noteworthy.
Here is a very interesting account by Willy Pegram after witnessing the "Battle of the Crater" in Petersburg in July 1864. Many Black Union troops were executed by the Southerners during and after this battle.
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