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This County is available for adoption, contact
the
State Coordinator
Jeff Kemp for
details
Welcome...
Welcome to the Accomack County, Virginia USGenWeb site. This
site is intended to provide useful information for the purpose of
researching your Accomack County, Virginia ancestors. We
welcome your genealogy research to add to the other family history
collections on these pages.
Though Accomack County was established as one of Virginia's eight
original shires in 1634, the government was situated in the southern
part of the Eastern Shore near Eastville until the division of the
shore into two counties (Northampton and Accomack) in 1663. During
this era, religious diversity began in the area, as Presbyterian
Francis Makemie received a plantation nearby which he used as a base
for his mercantile and missionary journeys, and where he died at age
50 a few years after winning a New York court case brought against
his preaching (as the Scots-Irish emigrant to Maryland's Eastern
Shore counties produced a preaching license from Barbados). Early
Baptist Elijah Baker (Baptist) also arrived near Accomac before the
American Revolutionary War, and was likewise imprisoned for
unauthorized preaching, but eventually also had that case dismissed.
After the creation of the present-day Accomack County, the court
convened alternatively at Pungoteague and Onancock until the 1690s
when it shifted to the house of John Cole at the site that later
became the town of Accomac, then known by the name Matompkin. A
brick courthouse was built in 1756 and the surrounding settlement
became known as Accomack Courthouse. On December 7, 1786, Richard
Drummond, Gilbert Poiley, John McLean, Edward Kerr, Catherine Scott,
Patience Robertson, and William Berkeley petitioned the Virginia
House of Delegates for the creation of an incorporated town at
Accomack Courthouse. Their petition was granted and the House of
Delegates passed an "Act to establish a Town at the Courthouse of
the county of Accomack...by the name of Drummond," named in honor of
the chief landholder in the new town. Many of the town's historic
houses, churches, and other buildings were constructed between the
last decade of the eighteenth century and first half of the
nineteenth century, representing vernacular interpretations of late
Georgian, Federal, and Greek Revival architectural styles, as the
town prospered as the terminus of a ferry across Chesapeake Bay. The
modern ferry only travels between nearby Onancock, Virginia and
Tangier Island.
During the American Civil War, the Union Army occupied the Eastern
Shore to cut supply lines to the south and prevent the Confederate
Army from using the shore as a staging area to attack the north
through Maryland. Union General Henry H. Lockwood commanded the
occupying forces and established a headquarters in the rectory of
St. James Episcopal Church (then home to town physician Dr. Peter F.
Browne). Other than damages to the Presbyterian and Methodist
Churches which were used by the army for stables and housing,
Drummondtown escaped the war with little damage.
The late nineteenth century brought slow but steady economic
prosperity for the citizens of Drummondtown, fueled by the arrival
of the railroad from the north, and several new homes were
constructed in and around the older core of the town in the 1880s
and 1890s. The coming of the railroad also presented a challenge for
Drummondtown when residents of the newly established town of
Parksley initiated a referendum to move the county seat to the new
community. The referendum vote took place in 1895 after nearly a
decade of debate, and the residents of Accomack County elected to
keep the court where it had been located for the past two centuries.
By this time, the town had been renamed "Accomac" by order of the
United States Post Office Department dated August 9, 1893. The name
Accomac is derived from a Native American word translated to mean
"on the other side".
New County Coordinator Needed
We would like to thank Mark Lewis, Gene
Williams and Kevin Lett for their hard work on making this site what
it is today. This site is designed to provide easy access to all the information
contained within. If you would like to be the next coordinator for
Accomack County, please contact
the State Coordinator.
County Coordinator: VACANT
State Coordinator:
JEFF
KEMP
Assistant State Coordinator:
VACANT
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Contributors
We are always looking for volunteers and
contributors! This site is comprised of information gathered by
contributors and submitted to the Accomack County Coordinator. It is
your contributions that have made this site such a success. I
hope that this site assists you
with your genealogical research.
If you are interested in looking information
up for other researchers (Look-Ups) in materials you own or have
access to, would like to donate information for your Accomack county
ancestor to be included on this site, or find a broken link, please
send an email to the Temporary Coordinator:
MaryAlice
Message Boards & Queries:
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View Old Rootsweb Lists for Virginia.
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Accomack County Here.
Another option is to use
Rootsweb's Message Board for Accomack County.
Copyright © 2022
by Volunteers For VAGenWeb and USGenWeb Projects.
Last updated
September 2022
All materials
herein are not to be used for commercial purposes, duplication,
distribution or publishing without the express written permission of the
owner.
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