17th century origins Port Royal is one of the area's oldest colonial settlements. It was first established in 1652 by English colonists as a port at the head of sea-going navigation on the
Rappahannock River. Waterways were the fastest and easiest method of transportation of people and property in the British
colony of Virginia. It was an important point for export of tobacco, Virginia's
cash crop. Local tradition holds that Port Royal was named after the Roy family. Dorothy Roy and her husband John owned a warehouse chartered by the crown, a
ferry service across the Rappahannock River to
King George County, and a tavern. In the 21st century, the chimneys of the Roy house are preserved landmarks in the town. Port Royal was incorporated as a town in 1744. The "town green", where the Town Hall and the firehouse stand today, was forever reserved "for public and civic use".
19th–20th centuries Shipping of goods and products from the port began to decline after completion of competing railroads in Virginia, beginning in the 1830s. But the last scheduled passenger ship service ended in 1932, supplanted by highways. However, Port Royal was served by the new highways which became
U.S. Route 17 and
U.S. Route 301, with their crossroads at Port Royal. In April, 1863 before the start of the
Chancellorsville Campaign, Port Royal would be captured by the 1st and 2nd Brigades of the 1st Division of the
I Corps (Union Army) of the
Army of the Potomac, with the 1st brigade being the famed
Iron Brigade. The units who led the assault were the
24th Michigan Infantry Regiment of the Iron Brigade and the
84th New York Volunteer Infantry Regiment (14th Brooklyn Zouves) of the 2nd Brigade. Port Royal's most notable claim to fame is that
John Wilkes Booth was killed about two miles outside town by Sgt.
Boston Corbett, part of a contingent of federal troops, at the now obsolete Garrett farmstead on April 26, 1865. Booth had
assassinated United States President Abraham Lincoln on the night of April 14, 1865 at
Ford's Theatre in
Washington, DC. Booth initially escaped through
southern Maryland, fleeing to Virginia across the
Potomac and
Rappahannock rivers. He was cornered in a tobacco barn on the Garrett farm at sunrise. Shot through the neck and instantly paralyzed, Booth died on the porch of the Garrett house, where he was carried from the barn.
David Herold, one of his accomplices, was with him and captured at the Garrett farm. He was tried, convicted, and hanged on July 7, 1865, in Washington, DC, along with other conspirators. Poet
Judith Lomax lived in Port Royal for some years. ==Geography==