Accomack Parish of the
Anglican (Episcopal) Church was separated from
Hungars Parish in 1663. St. James Church was originally established as a chapel of ease for Accomack Parish to serve congregants living in southeastern Accomack County. The original church, constructed of brick in
Georgian style, was completed in 1767. It stood near the present-day town of
Onley, Virginia. About twenty years after the construction of the first St. James Church,
Drummondtown) was chartered by the
Virginia General Assembly and established as the county seat for
Accomack County. As the town developed in the early-19th century, St. James' parishioners decided to move their church closer to the county seat. Drummondtown had two thriving hotels, as well as a Methodist and Presbyterian churches, furniture and hat-making factories, stores and houses. Land was purchased in 1838 and construction began with some bricks from the original church. The new church was designed in the popular
Greek Revival style and laid out in the
low-church style typical of Episcopal Churches in the first half of the nineteenth century. This plan can still be seen in the church today, which has two doors leading into two aisles inside the church and a central platform which was originally the site of the pulpit. A vesting room was constructed at the center of the back wall of the church. The vestry commissioned traveling artist Jean G. Potts to fresco the church's interior walls and ceiling. The artist, a master of the
trompe-l'oeil ("fool the eye") style, created a chancel designed to make the church seem deeper, and also decorated the walls with simulated
pilasters,
moulding, and raised-panel walls. The town flourished in the 1840s and by 1860 hosted the first newspaper published on the Eastern Shore. This was the home parish of
Henry A. Wise, a prominent lawyer who served as U.S. Minister to
Brazil, and Virginia's 33rd governor (from 1856 until 1860). His birthplace remains visible from the church's back lawn. Wise's first two wives came from Pennsylvania, and the sister of his second wife (who died of childbirth complications in 1850) married an army officer who became Union General
George G. Meade. By 1853, Wise had moved to his third wife's estate near
Norfolk. Governor Wise may be most famous for signing
John Brown's death warrant, or for his
secession oratory. Despite his lack of military training, Wise became a Confederate General (removed from his duties in the west in 1862 and reassigned to protect the southern Chesapeake Bay region, but who lost the
Battle of Roanoke Island). Confederate General Wise continued to serve in North Carolina and Virginia until war's end, when he urged General
Robert E. Lee to surrender at
Appomattox Courthouse. After the war, Wise resumed his legal practice in Richmond. While many other churches on the
Eastern Shore of Virginia were severely damaged by occupying
Union Army during the
American Civil War, including nearby
St. George's Church, St. James Church was spared. Union
General Henry H. Lockwood listened to the urging of Accomac's citizens and kept his troops well-disciplined. Lockwood also took over a house abandoned by Dr. Peter Browne, which he made Union headquarters for construction of a telegraph line to
Hampton Roads, and later became the rectory for this church's ministers. ==Architecture==