Eugene Sydnor died in Richmond in 2003, survived by his widow and stepdaughters, as well as his ex-wife and their children. In the 1969, Eugene and Lucy Sydnor had acquired an estate at "Dancing Point" in
Charles City County overlooking the confluence of the
James and
Chickahominy Rivers. They allowed an archeological survey in 1982. That confirmed that indigenous people had lived in the area for centuries, as well as that English colonists first settled there in 1617, naming it "Smith's Hundred" and renaming it "Southampton Hundred" circa 1620. Although five settlers died in the Massacre of 1622, it became a private plantation by the 1630s, and part of the Lightfoot family's Sandy Point plantation by that century's end (although they built their main house, Tedlington, about 1.5 miles upstream) and it continued under Lightfoot ownership until 1810. Because it remains in private ownership and contains significant historical artifacts of both indigenous peoples and colonial settlers, access is restricted. The Sydnors hired architect Robert Welton Steward of Richmond and California-based landscape architect
Thomas Dolliver Church to design a post-modern house and gardens. Lucy gained ownership of what had been the family's weekend residence during their divorce in the 1980s and expanded the property by purchasing an additional 92 acres. She continued to live there until her death in 2006. The postmodern house and landscape were restored in 2015 and placed on the Virginia Landmarks register and the
National Register of Historic Places in April 2016. It is occasionally open for tours. Development as a spiritual retreat or conference center was contemplated. The family's department store chain is defunct, not surviving competition from mass market retailers. In March, 1999, the family store in Williamsburg, run by his son Charles, requested bankruptcy court protection, in part due to ice storm damage. The scholarship at the
University of Richmond's Evening Division was established in 1915 to honor his father, who founded the Richmond Dry Goods Co. and as president of the Richmond Chamber of Commerce had helped found
Shenandoah National Park in the 1920s. ==References==