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Woodlawn Historic and Archaeological District, King George County

  • May 24
  • 1 min read

The Woodlawn Historic and Archaeological District encompasses Woodlawn plantation, assembled in King George County in the early 18th century by Col. Thomas Turner. The earliest portion of the present house, the east wing, was built for the Turners ca. 1790. The main part, built around 1841, continued the traditional rectangular, hip-roofed format of the area’s larger colonial dwellings.


Adjacent to the house are two outbuildings and a slave house. Intact elements of the antebellum plantation landscape are the field system, the farm road network, a drainage ditch network, and various outbuilding sites. Also on the plantation is an important series of Indian archaeological sites including what may be a palisaded enclosure within a more broadly distributed village along the Rappahannock.


Many of the artifacts uncovered within the Woodlawn Historic and Archaeological District relate to the early 17th century when various groups of the Powhatan Chiefdom were slowing moving west, distancing themselves from the European settlements.



Photo credit: Calder Loth/DHR, 1990
Photo credit: Calder Loth/DHR, 1990
Rear Elevation. Photo credit: Calder Loth/DHR, 1990
Rear Elevation. Photo credit: Calder Loth/DHR, 1990
Photo credit: DHR, 1971
Photo credit: DHR, 1971
Photo credit: Thomas Waterman/HABS, Library of Congress, 1941
Photo credit: Thomas Waterman/HABS, Library of Congress, 1941

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