Earliest inhabitants Nomadic hunters are
estimated to have arrived in Virginia around 17,000 years ago. Evidence from
Daugherty's Cave shows it was regularly used as a
rock shelter by 9,800 years ago. During the late
Woodland period (500–1000 AD), tribes coalesced, and farming, first of corn and squash, began, with beans and tobacco arriving from
the southwest and Mexico by the end of the period.
Palisaded towns began to be built around 1200. The native population in the current boundaries of Virginia reached around 50,000 in the 1500s. Large groups in the area at that time included the
Algonquian in the
Tidewater region, which they referred to as
Tsenacommacah, the
Iroquoian-speaking
Nottoway and
Meherrin to the north and south, and the
Tutelo, who spoke
Siouan, to the west. Powhatan controlled more than 150 settlements that had a total population of around 15,000 in 1607. Three-fourths of the native population in Virginia, however, died from
smallpox and other
Old World diseases during that century, disrupting their
oral traditions and complicating research into earlier periods. To help counter
Spain's colonies in the Caribbean, Queen
Elizabeth I of England supported
Walter Raleigh's 1584 expedition to the
Atlantic coast of North America. The name "Virginia" was used by Captain
Arthur Barlowe in the expedition's report, and may have been suggested by Raleigh or Elizabeth (perhaps noting her status as the "Virgin Queen" or that they viewed the land as being untouched) or related to an
Algonquin phrase,
Wingandacoa or
Windgancon, or leader's name,
Wingina, as heard by the expedition. The name initially applied to the entire coastal region from
South Carolina in the south to
Maine in the north, along with the island of
Bermuda.
Raleigh's colony failed, but the potential financial and strategic gains still captivated many English policymakers. In 1606,
King James I issued a
charter for a new colony to the
Virginia Company of London. The group financed an expedition under
Christopher Newport that established a settlement named
Jamestown in 1607. Though more settlers soon joined, many were ill-prepared for the dangers of the new settlement. As the colony's president,
John Smith secured food for the colonists from nearby tribes, but after he left in 1609, this trade stopped and a
series of ambush-style killings between colonists and natives under
Chief Powhatan and
his brother began, resulting in
mass starvation in the colony that winter. By the end of the colony's first fourteen years, over eighty percent of the roughly eight thousand settlers transported there had died.
Demand for exported tobacco, however, fueled the need for more workers. Starting in 1618, the
headright system tried to solve this by granting colonists farmland for their help attracting
indentured servants. Enslaved Africans
were first sold in Virginia in 1619. Though other Africans arrived as indentured servants and could be freed after four to seven years, the basis for
lifelong slavery was developed in legal cases like those of
John Punch in 1640 and
John Casor in 1655. Laws passed in Jamestown defined slavery as
race-based in 1661, as
inherited maternally in 1662, and as enforceable by death in 1669. was destroyed by fire, the
Colony of Virginia's capitol was moved to
Williamsburg, where the
College of William & Mary was founded six years earlier.|alt=A three-story red brick colonial-style hall and its left and right wings during summer. From the colony's start, residents agitated for greater local control, and in 1619, certain male colonists began electing representatives to an assembly, later called the
House of Burgesses, that negotiated issues with the
governing council appointed by the London Company. Unhappy with this arrangement, the monarchy revoked the company's charter and began directly naming
governors and Council members in 1624. In 1635, colonists arrested
a governor who ignored the assembly and sent him back to England against his will.
William Berkeley was named governor in 1642, just as the turmoil of the
English Civil War and
Interregnum permitted the colony greater autonomy. As a supporter of the king, Berkeley welcomed other
Cavaliers who fled to Virginia. He surrendered to
Parliamentarians in 1652, but after the 1660
Restoration made him governor again, he blocked assembly elections and exacerbated the
class divide by disenfranchising and restricting the movement of indentured servants, who made up around eighty percent of the workforce. On the colony's frontier,
tribes like the
Tutelo and
Doeg were being squeezed by
Seneca raiders from the north, leading to more confrontations with colonists. In 1676, several hundred working-class followers of
Nathaniel Bacon, upset by Berkeley's refusal to retaliate against the tribes, burned Jamestown.
Bacon's Rebellion forced the signing of
Bacon's Laws, which restored some of the colony's rights and sanctioned both attacks on native tribes and the enslavement of their people. The
Treaty of 1677 further reduced the independence of the tribes that signed it, and aided the colony's assimilation of their land in the years that followed. Colonists in the 1700s were pushing westward into the area held by the Seneca and their larger
Iroquois Nation, and in 1748, a group of wealthy speculators, backed by the British monarchy, formed the
Ohio Company to start English settlement and trade in the
Ohio Country west of the
Appalachian Mountains. France, which claimed this area as part of
New France, viewed this as a threat, and in 1754 the
French and Indian War engulfed England, France, the Iroquois, and other allied tribes on both sides. A militia from several British colonies, called the
Virginia Regiment, was led by Major
George Washington, himself one of the investors in the Ohio Company.
Statehood In the decade following the
French and Indian War, the
British Parliament passed new taxes which were deeply unpopular in the colonies. In the
House of Burgesses, opposition to
taxation without representation was led by
Patrick Henry and
Richard Henry Lee, among others. Virginians began to
coordinate their actions with other colonies in 1773 and sent delegates to the
Continental Congress the following year. After the House of Burgesses was dissolved in 1774 by
the royal governor, Virginia's revolutionary leaders continued to govern via the
Virginia Conventions. On May 15, 1776, the Convention declared Virginia's independence and adopted
George Mason's
Virginia Declaration of Rights, which was then included in a new constitution that designated Virginia as a
commonwealth. Another Virginian,
Thomas Jefferson, drew upon Mason's work in drafting the national
Declaration of Independence. After the
American Revolutionary War began,
George Washington was selected by the
Second Continental Congress in
Philadelphia to head the
Continental Army, and many
Virginians joined the army and revolutionary militias. Virginia was the first colony to ratify the
Articles of Confederation in December 1777. In April 1780, the capital was moved to
Richmond at the urging of Governor Thomas Jefferson, who feared that Williamsburg's coastal location would make it vulnerable to British attack. In January 1781,
Benedict Arnold's British forces
raided Richmond before establishing a base at
Portsmouth. The British army had over seven thousand soldiers and twenty-five warships stationed in Virginia at the beginning of 1781, but
General Charles Cornwallis and his superiors were indecisive, and maneuvers by the three thousand soldiers under the
Marquis de Lafayette and twenty-nine allied French warships together managed to
confine the British to a swampy area of the
Virginia Peninsula in September. Around sixteen thousand soldiers under George Washington and
Comte de Rochambeau quickly
converged there and defeated Cornwallis in the
siege of Yorktown. His surrender on October 19, 1781, led to
peace negotiations in Paris and secured the independence of the colonies. Virginians were instrumental in writing the
United States Constitution.
James Madison drafted the
Virginia Plan in 1787 and the
Bill of Rights in 1789,|alt=A family of eight women and children sit on a bench behind a cylindrical metal heater, while one adult male sits on his own to the right. Between 1790 and 1860, the number of
slaves in Virginia rose from around 290,000 to over 490,000, roughly one-third of the state population, and the number of slave owners rose to over 50,000. Both of these numbers represented the most in the U.S. The boom in
Southern cotton production using
cotton gins to harvest
upland cotton increased the amount of labor needed, but
new federal laws prohibited the importation of slaves. Decades of
monoculture tobacco farming had also
degraded Virginia's
agricultural productivity. On October 16, 1859, abolitionist
John Brown led a
raid on Harpers Ferry, Virginia, in an attempt to start a slave revolt across the southern states. The polarized national response to his raid, capture, trial, and execution that December marked a tipping point for many who believed slavery would need to be ended by force.
Abraham Lincoln's 1860 election further convinced many southern supporters of slavery that his opposition to its expansion would ultimately mean the end of slavery across the country. The
seizure of Fort Sumter by
Confederate forces on April 14, 1861, prompted Lincoln to
call for the federalization of 75,000 militiamen. used
Richmond as their capital from May 1861 till April 1865, when they abandoned the city and set fire to
its downtown.|alt=A color drawing of a city skyline in flames as a steady stream of people on horses or in horse-drawn carriages cross a long bridge over a river. The
Virginia Secession Convention of 1861 voted on April 17
to secede on the condition it was approved in a referendum the next month. The convention voted to join the Confederacy, which named
Richmond its capital on May 20. During the May 23 referendum, armed pro-Confederate groups prevented the casting and counting of votes from areas that opposed secession. Representatives from 27 of these northwestern counties instead began the
Wheeling Convention, which organized a government loyal to the
Union and led to the separation of
West Virginia as a new state. The armies of the Union and Confederacy first met on July 21, 1861, at
Bull Run near
Manassas, Virginia, a bloody Confederate victory. Union General
George B. McClellan organized the
Army of the Potomac, which
landed on the Virginia Peninsula in March 1862 and reached the outskirts of Richmond that June. With Confederate General
Joseph E. Johnston wounded in fighting outside the city, command of his
Army of Northern Virginia fell to
Robert E. Lee. Over the next month, Lee
drove the Union army back, and starting that September led
the first of several invasions into Union territory. During the next three years of war, more battles were fought in Virginia than anywhere else, including the battles of
Fredericksburg,
Chancellorsville,
Spotsylvania, and the concluding
Battle of Appomattox Court House, where Lee surrendered on April 9, 1865.
Reconstruction and segregation Port of Embarkation at Newport News became the second-largest U.S. port of embarkation during
World War I.|alt=Several World War I ships line a port crowded with warehouses, with a city skyline behind them. Virginia was formally restored to the United States in 1870, due to the work of the
Committee of Nine. During the post-war
Reconstruction era, African Americans were able to unite in communities, particularly around
Richmond,
Danville, and the
Tidewater region, and take a greater role in Virginia society; many achieved some land ownership during the 1870s. Virginia
adopted a constitution in 1868 which guaranteed political, civil, and
voting rights, and provided for free public schools. However, with many railroad lines and other infrastructure destroyed during the Civil War, the Commonwealth was deeply in debt, and in the late 1870s redirected money from public schools to pay bondholders. The
Readjuster Party formed in 1877 and won legislative power in 1879 by uniting Black and white Virginians behind a shared opposition to debt payments and the perceived
plantation elites. The Readjusters focused on building up schools, like
Virginia Tech and
Virginia State, and successfully forced
West Virginia to share in the pre-war debt. But in 1883, they were divided by a proposed repeal of
anti-miscegenation laws, and days before that year's election, a
riot in Danville, involving armed policemen, left four Black men and one white man dead. These events motivated a push by white supremacists to seize political power through
voter suppression, and segregationists in the
Democratic Party won the legislature that year and
maintained control for decades. They passed
Jim Crow laws that established a
racially segregated society, and in 1902 rewrote the
state constitution to include a
poll tax and other voter registration measures that effectively
disenfranchised most African Americans and many poor whites. New economic forces meanwhile industrialized the Commonwealth. Virginian
James Albert Bonsack invented the tobacco cigarette rolling machine in 1880 leading to new large-scale production centered around Richmond. Railroad magnate
Collis Potter Huntington founded
Newport News Shipbuilding in 1886, which was responsible for building 38 warships for the
U.S. Navy between 1907 and 1923. During
World War I, German submarines attacked ships outside the port, which was a major site for transportation of soldiers and supplies. The shipyard continued building warships in
World War II, and quadrupled its pre-war labor force to 70,000 by 1943. The
Radford Arsenal outside
Blacksburg also employed 22,000 workers making explosives, while the
Torpedo Factory in
Alexandria had over 5,050.
Civil rights to present .|alt=A bronze statue of a man riding a horse on a tall pedestal that is covered in colorful graffiti. High-school student
Barbara Rose Johns started a strike in 1951 at her underfunded and segregated school in
Prince Edward County. The protests led
Spottswood Robinson and
Oliver Hill to file
a lawsuit against the county. Their case joined
Brown v. Board of Education at the Supreme Court, which rejected the doctrine of "
separate but equal" in 1954. The segregationist establishment, led by Senator
Harry F. Byrd and his
Byrd Organization, reacted with a strategy called "
massive resistance", and the General Assembly passed
a package of laws in 1956 that cut off funding to local schools that
desegregated, causing some to close. Courts ruled the strategy unconstitutional, and on February 2, 1959, Black students
integrated schools in
Arlington and
Norfolk, where they were known as the
Norfolk 17. Rather than integrate, county leaders in Prince Edward shut their school system in June 1959. When
litigation again reached the Supreme Court, it ordered the county to reopen and integrate its schools, which finally happened in September 1964. Federal passage of the
Civil Rights Act (1964) and
Voting Rights Act (1965), and their later enforcement by the
Justice Department, helped end racial segregation in Virginia and overturn
Jim Crow laws. In 1967, the Supreme Court struck down the state's ban on
interracial marriage with
Loving v. Virginia. In 1968, Governor
Mills Godwin called a commission to rewrite the state constitution. The new constitution, which banned discrimination and removed articles that now violated federal law,
passed in a referendum and went into effect in 1971. In 1989,
Douglas Wilder became the first African American elected as governor in the United States, and in 1992,
Bobby Scott became the first Black congressman from Virginia since 1888. The expansion of federal government offices into Northern Virginia's suburbs during the
Cold War boosted the region's population and economy. The
Central Intelligence Agency outgrew their offices in
Foggy Bottom during the
Korean War, and moved to
Langley in 1961, in part due to a decision by the
National Security Council that the agency relocate outside the District of Columbia.
The Pentagon, built in
Arlington during
World War II as the headquarters of the Department of Defense, was struck by a hijacked plane in the
September 11, 2001 attacks. Mass shootings at
Virginia Tech in 2007 and in
Virginia Beach in 2019 led to passage of gun control measures in 2020. Racial injustice and the presence of
Confederate monuments in Virginia have also led to large demonstrations, including in August 2017, when a white supremacist
drove his car into protesters, killing one, and in June 2020, when protests that were part of the larger
Black Lives Matter movement brought about the
removal of Confederate statues. ==Geography==