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Kingsmill Plantation

Kingsmill Plantation
Kingsmill Plantation, Dependencies, Kingsmill Pond vicinity, Williamsburg vicinity (James City, Virginia).jpg
Kingsmill Plantation Dependency
Kingsmill is located in Virginia
Kingsmill
Kingsmill is located in the US
Kingsmill
Nearest city Williamsburg, Virginia
Coordinates 37°13′37″N 76°40′46″W / 37.22694°N 76.67944°W / 37.22694; -76.67944Coordinates: 37°13′37″N 76°40′46″W / 37.22694°N 76.67944°W / 37.22694; -76.67944
Area 135 acres (55 ha)
Built 1680
NRHP Reference # 72001401
VLR # 047-0010
Significant dates
Added to NRHP April 26, 1972
Designated VLR March 21, 1972

Kingsmill is a name which has been used in James City County, Virginia since the mid-18th century. Initially the name of a plantation, in modern times, the name is attached to a geographic area which includes a large planned residential community, a resort complex, a theme park, a brewery, and a commercial park.

The Kingsmill area is located between the north bank of the James River just east (downstream) of the site where the first permanent English settlement in North America at Jamestown was established in 1607 and Interstate Highway 64. Highway access to most of the area's many businesses and attractions is from U.S. Route 60 between the eastern city limits of Williamsburg and the adjacent community of Grove, or from Virginia State Route 199, which forms a semi-circular beltway of sorts around Williamsburg's southern side.

A prominent member of the Virginia Company, Richard Kingsmill, became the namesake of the Kingsmill Plantation. The Virginia Company was a for-profit organization chartered in England which was charged with the founding and settlement of Virginia under the reign of King James I. Richard Kingsmill was given one of the first land grants of 300 acres (1.2 km2) in the southwest area of what later became a much larger plantation. In the mid-1730s, British Colonel Lewis Burwell III established a 1,400-acre (5.7 km2) plantation which he named Kingsmill Plantation. It included a mansion, outbuildings and garden. He was the colonial customs inspector for the upper James River. Along the river, Burwell's Landing, site of his inspection station, also featured a tavern, storehouse, warehouse, and ferry house. Quarterpath Road extended between Burwell's Landing and Williamsburg.


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