Origins When the city was originally laid out circa 1744 by Col. William Mayo, Richmond was a small area along the James River. What is now called East Broad Street was its northern border. The street was situated uphill from the town. Due to gullies and other terrain issues, it was hard to get to, from the central Main Street area, until Capitol Square was built. The Broad corridor was referred to as "upper country." Richmond's city streets had no names until 1780, when Thomas Jefferson's plan named it H Street. It was informally referred to as Haxall street for a while, but the name didn't stick. "H" remained the name until Broad Street acquired its current name in 1845. Areas north of that were what an early chronicler called the non-tax paying side, as they were outside of city limits. To the west, Broad connected to Richmond Road. Broad Street ceased to be the county line when an adjoining portion of Henrico County was annexed by the jurisdictionally independent City of Richmond in 1867.
Downtown Broad Street connects many historical sites in Downtown Richmond. It is home to the lavish Empire Theatre, which is the state's oldest operating theatre.
Theatre IV, the Children's Theatre of Virginia, the second largest children's theatre in the nation, owns the Empire and presents its mainstage season there in downtown Richmond. Until the late 19th century, the trains of the
Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac Railroad ran down the center of the street from the present Harrison Street east to Eighth Street. The area around Sixth and Broad Streets was the center of retailing in the Southeast, with department stores such as
Miller & Rhoads,
Thalhimers,
G. C. Murphy,
Woolworth, Raylass,
Sears, Cohen's and
W. T. Grant and niche retailers like
Hofheimer's. It was also home to "theater row", which included venues such as the National. It has also been the site of major institutional structures, including
Monumental Church, the
Library of Virginia, the present and former city halls, and the
Virginia Department of Transportation headquarters. In 1919, the Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac Railroad relocated its terminal to the more suburban
Broad Street Station.
West End As Richmond moved westward, so did the retail district. Miles away,
Short Pump Town Center in western
Henrico County on Broad Street has leading retailers including Macy's and Dillard's. ==See also==