The war and the campaign had ruined what remained of the planter class fortunes and a number of families both rich and poor had been wiped out. The battles had destroyed or heavily damaged much of the countryside's physical infrastructure and homes. The population of enslaved Blacks had declined heavily through escape during the war and the subsequent
emancipation of slaves. The devastation of the plantation economy also wreaked havoc on the small white communities in the countryside. Most of these white laborers, as plantation work overseers,
skilled workers and
servants, or as
county law enforcement and
civil servants such as
Patrol constables, and Road agents, gained important cash from supporting the plantations and government. Consequently, with the end of the antebellum economy and Reconstruction, aside from suffering losses to its male population in the war, these white families now faced an unemployable economy. As a result, along with much of what remained of the slave population they turned to sharecropping and became notoriously impoverished. Others turned to the small town or slowly drifted elsewhere across the country. The Hundreds never again recovered its early population level into the 21st century. Inside the town, the physical structures had been damaged as well. Most of the capital stock was seized by the
Union Army, including the precious stock need for building and repairing boats or creating the arts and crafts for supporting the community in its
quality of life. With war's end, the town's population temporarily increased with the arrival of large numbers from the countryside putting massive pressure on the town. With the loss of much of the boats, the fishing and small freight trading businesses were wiped out permanently. Finally, without capital to stop silting or dredge, the port's ability to handle traffic further decreased. Unable to ship their commercial crops while the shipping businesses struggled to rebuild, the planter class endeavored to create other avenues of transportation and rebuild the economy through land infrastructure improvement, especially in railroads. Whilst losing their fortune, the planter and mercantile classes still retained their privileged positions in politics. Navigating the treacherous waterways of
Reconstruction, some managed to bring capital into the area for building up a new railway structure. After the American Civil War, the
Brighthope Railway in
Chesterfield county was rerouted from Osborne's Landing to Bermuda Hundred. It was extended west to Epps Falls on the
Appomattox River and narrowed to be a
narrow gauge railroad. The Brighthope Railway went bankrupt and was sold to become part of the
Farmville and Powhatan Railroad. The Farmville and Powhatan Railroad, later renamed the
Tidewater and Western Railroad, ran to the headwaters of the Appomattox River at the town of
Farmville through
Cumberland,
Powhatan. Although decisively helpful in keeping the agricultural community from total loss, especially in regards to bringing in valued
specie into the local economy, it nonetheless failed in fulfilling its wider aims of putting the planter class back into financial prosperity. The
Great Depression of 1873, and subsequent farming depressions, and most importantly the growth of
Egyptian cotton and
Indian cotton pushed aside American cotton, which had previously provided the prosperity of the planter class. Although this decreased the demand and forced a change to crops such as corn, and wheat thereby restoring
soil health, the new crops did not bring in enough wealth or traffic to the growers, merchant class, and railroad. Still, the growers experimented with multi-crop rotation, schemes at sharecropping and tenant farming, and eventually earned valuable income from tobacco in later decades. The number of plantations never recovered, yet, ironically several of the sharecroppers and tenant farmers managed to evolve into a yeoman farmers. However, the setbacks in economic markets and demand, domestic and foreign competition, all combined to keep the narrow gauge railroad from generating sufficient traffic and rebuilding the antebellum prosperity. Ironically, it did succeed in returning the area to its 17th-century period of mixed economy, thereby allowing the continued survival and slow economic growth of the region. Meanwhile in the town, much as in the countryside, the war caused at least a generational, if not two-generational, economic loss. By the time some of the planter class had restored their infrastructure, trading networks, and crop production back to their antebellum periods, the country and world had changed dramatically. They never recovered their former prosperity from the land and many lost or sold their land. As a result, despite every effort, the returns of the railroad and the merchant firms barely made a profit over a sixty-year period, while simultaneously depriving the town's waterway shipping business. In turn, the town never recovered its merchant sector instead slowly declining into a small fishing village and local tidewater harbor. Eventually, like another railway about 15 miles downstream at
Claremont, the railroad and port facilities were largely abandoned by the
Great Depression, turning the town into a pale shell of its former times. In modern times, the town of Bermuda Hundred is settled by approximately four families: the McWilliams, the Hewletts, the Johnsons, and a Gray. In the 1980s
Phillip Morris opened a Tobacco Processing facility at Bermuda Hundred. This was soon followed by an
Allied Signal plant, and an industrial facility operated by
Imperial Chemical Industries. In 1990 the
Varina-Enon Bridge opened connecting the once rural area to Richmond via Interstate 295. As a result, by the end of the first decade of the 21st century most of the remaining farms, and former plantations in the Bermuda Hundred such as Presquile, Mount Blanco, Meadowville, and Rochedale had been sold for commercial or residential development. A portion of Presquile farm is preserved as the
Presquile National Wildlife Refuge. ==First Baptist Church Bermuda Hundred==