When British soldiers approached, Elizabeth Bennett Young, the wife of an Isle of Wight County deputy clerk, spirited the county records away and buried them.

Ben Swenson
Ben Swenson is a writer, editor and educator who lives in James City County
The American army in the Revolution was integrated. It would not be again until the Korean War.
Foreign military officers referred to the American military as “speckled,” owing to the diverse racial makeup of its troops.
The ‘other’ Lafayette: An enslaved man who spied for the French general, adopted his surname but then was denied his promised freedom
The Marquis de Lafayette eventually helped secure his freedom. A statue to James Armistead Lafayette will be dedicated this month in New Kent County.
Virginia had its own ‘tea party.’ This year marks the 250th anniversary of the one in Yorktown.
The event was very similar to the one in Boston, just on a smaller scale.
Early voting opened Friday. Local registrars have been working for weeks to make sure that their voting machines are ready.
State law requires local officials to test all voting equipment ahead of each election.
This year’s presidential primaries cost localities about $4 million more than the state will cover
In some places, the state will cover the whole cost. But some localities are finding the state is only covering about one-quarter of the expense.
For Colonists, hemp was both economic security and national security
Colonial Virginians used hemp to make rope, sails and caulking. They also used it to pay taxes.
Virginia’s Native Americans were caught in the crossfire of the revolution
Eastern tribes sided with American patriots while Western tribes backed the British.
Colonial Virginia was divided in many ways. Food was the great uniter.
Colonists relied on a lot of Native American methods for preparing food.