Yorktown

Begin at the painting in the Lobby of the Visitor Center then head out the doors and take a right on the sidewalk to continue the tour.  

Historic Yorktown

Yorktown was established by the Act for Ports of 1691, passed by the General Assembly at Jamestown (Virginia's government seat for almost a century). The legislation was but in place by the colonial government to encourage growth of towns in rural Tidewater Virginia.
Fifty acres of land along the York River for the site of Yorktown were purchased from Benjamin Read of Gloucester County (across the York River from Yorktown) for 10,000 pounds of "merchantable sweet scented tobacco and cask." The town site was subdivided into 85 lots which were offered for sale. Lot prices were 180 pounds of tobacco. On the first day of sale, November 24, 1691, 36 lots were recorded. Within a year, 61 had been sold.
Yorktown became an important tobacco port, exporting crops from area plantations. At peak prosperity (1740-1770), Yorktown had several hundred buildings and almost 2,000 residents, making it a substantial 18th century community.

Yorktown's growth and prosperity peaked about 1750, though the shops and wharves were busy for perhaps another quarter of a century. The town's future potential was wiped out by the destruction and waste that came with the Siege of 1781, the "Great Fire" of 1814, and the Civil War's Peninsular Campaign of 1862. The soil of the surrounding country was worn thin, the center of tobacco culture moved southwest, and other points of trade developed.


Many important reminders of Yorktown's 18th century past still exist. On Main Street is the Nelson House, the Georgian Manor style home of Thomas Nelson. Jr., a signer of the Declaration of Independence, is the most prominent of the remaining 18th century structures. Nearby is the Dudley Digges house, built in the mid-18th century by Yorktown lawyer Dudley Digges, who held several important positions in Virginia's colonial and state government. Also along Main Street is the Customhouse, where taxes were collected on imported and exported goods passing through the port, and the Sessions, Pate and Somerwell houses. On nearby streets are Grace Church and the Smith and Ballard houses. Reconstructed 18th century buildings, including the Swan Tavern, also help preserve Yorktown's historical atmosphere.
Though Yorktown no longer appears as it did when it was an important 18th century port city, it is still a place of national importance - a place where independence for the United States of America was won.

Please head out the doors and take a right on the sidewalk to begin the tour of the Village of Yorktown.