Endview Plantation

Endview Plantation

Share

This historic home was built in 1769 and was occupied by Dr. Humphrey Harwood Curtis who commanded t

Photos 04/01/2014

Endview Plantation’s Annual Civil War Reenactment to be Held April 5th & 6th
Civil War history will come to life April 5th and 6th as re-enactors and living historians re-create historic battles and camp life. The focus this year will be on the 150th anniversary of the Siege of Petersburg. Experience the history of the Union attacks against the fortifications of Petersburg through the sights and sounds of battles. Lectures and demonstrations will take place on both days. The hours for the event are 10:00 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day. Admission is $7.00 per person. Children under the age of seven are admitted for free. Tours of the house will be available for an additional fee.

Newport News Ambassador Pass - Newport News Tourism Development Office 01/09/2014

Endview Plantation will be accepting Ambassador Passes January 9th through 12th. Newport News residents can pick up the passes good for up to two adults and two children free admission to Endview from the Newport News Visitor Center, 13560 Jefferson Avenue. Proof of residency is required to pick up passes. For more information including attraction schedules and additional pass pick-up locations visit http://www.newport-news.org/ambassador-passes.html. Please use this opportunity to visit!

Newport News Ambassador Pass - Newport News Tourism Development Office 2013 Newport News Ambassador Passes available beginning December 24, 2012. Newport News residents and city employees are once again invited to discover all their city has to offer – for free.

Virginia Celebrates Architecture 12/19/2013

Vote for Endview Plantation and Lee Hall Mansion to be included in the top 100 structures in Virginia. Go to http://vacelebrates.org/ for more information and to vote.

The structures featured in this survey were nominated by architects throughout the Commonwealth of Virginia as they look toward the 100th anniversary of the Virginia Society of the American Institute of Architects in 2014. Choose your favorites based on design, innovation, history, or the spirit of your community and Virginia. More importantly, select structures that hold a special place in your heart and mind. Voting is open until December 27th!

Once the votes are tallied, the Virginia Center for Architecture will announce the top 100 structures — Virginia’s Favorite Architecture. These favorites will be featured in an exhibition at the Center opening on April 10, 2014.

Virginia Celebrates Architecture The structures featured in this survey were nominated by architects throughout the Commonwealth of Virginia as they look toward the 100th anniversary of the� Virginia Society of the American Institute of Architects �in 2014.

Photos from Endview Plantation's post 12/17/2013

Endview is decorated for the holidays! Enjoy these photos as a preview. Visit now through December 30th to learn how residents in the years before the Civil War adorned their house for the holiday season. Open regular hours, closed Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, New Year's Eve, and New Year's Day.

06/07/2013

As of today, at 11:00 a.m., the "Summer Celebration Wine Festival" at Lee Hall Mansion in Newport News is still scheduled for Saturday, June 8 as planned. We will continue to monitor the weather forecast and assess site conditions as needed, and update the voicemail recording for Newport News Parks, Recreation & Tourism with any new information beginning at 5:00 p.m. today. The phone number to call for weather-related updates is (757) 926-1400. Thank you for your patience while tropical system "Andrea" passes through, hopefully clearing the skies for a beautiful Saturday.

04/15/2013

Check out this video footage from the battle portion of the re-enactment portraying Wise's Attacks on Williamsburg at Endview Plantation. Enjoy!

Wise's Attacks on Williamsburg 2013 04/15/2013

The 150th Anniversary of the 1863 attacks by Confederate General Wise were re-created at Endview Plantation on April 13-14, 2013.

Photos 04/09/2013

Confederate General Henry A. Wise was a former Governor of Virginia and involved in President Tyler's election campaign. Join us this upcoming weekend for the 150th Anniversary of Wise's attacks on Williamsburg re-enactment. Bring the family!

New Work on Redoubt at Endview 04/03/2013

Volunteers stormed the re-enactment field redoubt and have reveted a portion of the redoubt for the upcoming re-enactment on April 13-14. Come out then and see it in person.

Private Watkins's War 03/18/2013

Private Watkins's War Although the battle of Perryville, Ky., was fought on Oct. 8, 1862, initial troop deployments occupied the preceding day while local residents pondered...

Photos 03/13/2013

THE HOOP SKIRT SMUGGLERS

In July 1864, four women risked charges of treason to smuggle supplies for Confederate soldiers across the Potomac River. Their story begins on the Maryland-Virginia border in northern Loudoun County, a place of divided loyalties and fierce fighting, and serves to challenge conventional notions regarding nineteenth century women as weak and apolitical.

The climate of war that framed the journey of Elizabeth White, Kate and Betsie Ball, and Annie Hempstone into Union territory to obtain supplies was one of increasing desperation for the Confederacy. The women’s illicit crossing of the Potomac from Virginia to Maryland coincided with a renewed burst of fighting on the border. In July 1864, General Robert E. Lee had ordered General Jubal Early to initiate an attack against Washington D.C., and in tandem with this offensive, Col. John S. Mosby was sent to sever communication lines between Washington and Harpers Ferry. Col. Mosby succeeded in defeating Union forces at their Point of Rocks base on July 5, 1864, and spent the evening dining at the Confederate enclave of Temple Hall.

Temple Hall, located north of Leesburg, was the residence of Henry Ball, the father of two sons in the Confederacy. Ball himself briefly fought early in the war and was once imprisoned for refusing to pledge allegiance to the Union. Also living there during this time was Elizabeth White, the wife of Confederate cavalry officer Elijah V. White. Mrs. White was not present at that night’s festivities, however, for on that morning she and three friends had embarked on a daring mission north into Maryland to retrieve supplies for “our dear Maryland boys in grey.” Annie Hempstone later wrote of their adventure as a “little trip across the Potomac,” which belied the true perils of their journey.

While guns blazed just up the Potomac River in nearby Point of Rocks on the morning of July 5, 1864, Elizabeth White, Kate and Betsie Ball (daughters of Henry Ball), and Annie Hempstone hurriedly crossed the Potomac at White’s Run. Once in Montgomery County, the four friends quickly set upon their covert mission to collect boots and clothing for Confederate soldiers. The next day, their hoop skirts heavily laden with concealed supplies, the women attempted to return to Loudoun County, only to find that Union guards had arrived and a river crossing was impossible. The women were forced to retreat to the Dickerson, Maryland home of Elizabeth White’s mother, and fearing arrest, hid their clandestine goods in the walls of the house. Their concerns were soon validated, as the four women were arrestedand transported to the Old Capitol Prison in Washington, D.C. (coincidentally where Henry Ball had been imprisoned in 1862.)

Though the women were intimately connected to the Confederacy and known to harbor secessionist views, no evidence could be found to support the charge of spying. The women maintained that their business in Montgomery County was mere pleasure, and they were released three weeks later. Somehow managing to evade detection, Elizabeth White and her comrades promptly returned to the house in Dickerson, where they retrieved their concealed items, and once again attempted to cross the river, this time at Edward’s Ferry.

The river crossing was a precarious and tension-filled affair due to the heavy (and treasonous) loads each woman was secretly carrying beneath the folds of her dress. Annie Hempstone seemed to relish the opportunity to incite the ire of the Union guards:

Upon arriving in Virginia, the boots and clothing were distributed to Col. White’s grateful cavalrymen. Elizabeth White, Annie Hempstone, and Kate and Betsie Ball had done more than deliver boots to Confederate soldiers, however. These women had taken great risks in order to accomplish their mission, and in the process had demonstrated their courage, their political resolve, and their willingness to enter the arena of the war to support their soldiers. They were, clearly, neither weak nor apolitical.

http://www.crossroadsofwar.org/discover-the-story/women-and-children-in-the-midst-of-war/civil-war-stories/

~Robert~

Photos 03/11/2013

Today in 1862 General McClellan was relieved of his command of Armies of the United States by President Lincoln. Gen. McClellan's failure to move against Confederate General Joseph "Joe" Johnston's force at Bull Run played into this decision. Lincoln had long complained that "Little Mac has got the slows".

Want your school to be the top-listed School/college in Newport News?

Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.

Location

Category

Telephone

Address


362 Yorktown Road
Newport News, VA
23603