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Cities Near Gordonsville, VA

$130,000 View on Map
PJM5442
1481 Vawter Corner Rd
Louisa, VA (7.9 miles)
3 Bed, 2 Bath Home
1160 sq.ft.
$399,000 View on Map
WGG6655
153 Red Hill Rd
Orange, VA (9.2 miles)
5 Bed, 3 Bath Home
3016 sq.ft.
$359,000 View on Map
PDW5148
63 Hemlock Ln
Barboursville, VA (10.9 miles)
4 Bed, 2+ Bath Home
2550 sq.ft.

Beautiful Home W/ Mother in Law Suite

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DMT0957 31 Photos
297 Tanglewood Dr
Barboursville, VA (10.9 miles)
5 Bed, 4+ Bath Home
4100 sq.ft.
This Home Originally Built in 2006 was Recently Renovated and Added onto in 2009 and Boasts of High …more»
$125,000 View on Map
TJG8804
Woodland Shores
Louisa, VA (12.9 miles)
Vacant Lot or Land

Lake Anna Waterfront

$729,000 View on Map
TTJ1050 10 Photos
15111 Parkwood Cir
Orange, VA (15.6 miles)
4 Bed, 4+ Bath Home
3700 sq.ft.
MILLION DOLLAR HOME FOR $729,000  This authentic timber frame home on the …more»
 

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Local city information for Gordonsville, VA

Gordonsville is a town in Louisa and Orange counties in the U.S. state of Virginia. The population was 1,498 at the 2000 census.

Nathaniel Gordon purchased in 1787 and in 1794, or possibly earlier, applied for and was granted a license to operate a tavern. Travelers leaving the Charlottesville of Thomas Jefferson's day followed the "Fredericksburgh Great road" northward which, at the site of the present traffic circle in Gordonsville, crossed the road from Richmond leading west over the Blue Ridge Mountains into the Valley. President Jefferson described Gordon’s in 1802 as a "good house" when recommending the best route south to Charlottesville from the recently established National capital on the Potomac.

The building was know as Gordon’s Tavern, Gordon Tavern or later as Gordon Inn. Stagecoach passengers found a well-furnished public house where they could refresh themselves with apple brandy -'the common drink of the country,' a visiting Englishman noted, or other spirits. The commemorative marker at the site lists these prominent Americans as guests at the tavern: George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Monroe, James & Philip Pendleton Barbour, James Waddel, William Wirt & Henry Clay. Another famous visitor was Major General the Marquis de Lafayette.

In 1839, the General Assembly authorized the Louisa Rail Road Company to extend its line from Louisa Court House to Gordonsville. Thus was ushered in a time of growth and prosperity for Gordonsville. It became a center of trade for the plantations and farms in the surrounding countryside. The Orange & Alexandria railroad completed its line into Gordonsville in 1854. The wood-burning locomotives traveled at speeds of up to twenty miles per hour.

When Richard Omohundro’s tavern near the depot burned in 1859 it was replaced by the Exchange Hotel, which still stands. The hotel was an elegant stopping place which became a military hospital.

Gordonsville and the railroads which intersected there were of vital importance to the Confederacy. Troops from Richmond on the way to the battle of Bull Run on July 21, 1861 came through town. During the war years, Robert E. Lee, James Longstreet, Stonewall Jackson, Ewell & A.P. Hill spent time in Gordonsville. Major Gen. Philip Sheridan led a raid in the direction of Gordonsville and Charlottesville but was stopped by Wade Hampton’s Confederate cavalry in the vicinity of Trevilian Station. Gordonsville was threatened many times but was always successfully defended by the Confederates.

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