List of street namesakes: Difference between revisions

From Cvillepedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (→‎(C): added pictures for Chancellor St)
(11 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 14: Line 14:
:'''Main''' – The dividing line between north and south streets, runs east from First to [[C & O Lower Depot]] and west from First to University. The main Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad Station, being located under the present day [[Belmont Bridge]].  
:'''Main''' – The dividing line between north and south streets, runs east from First to [[C & O Lower Depot]] and west from First to University. The main Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad Station, being located under the present day [[Belmont Bridge]].  
:'''First''' – The dividing line between east and west streets, runs north and south from Main to city limits.
:'''First''' – The dividing line between east and west streets, runs north and south from Main to city limits.
:
From the book ''The Code of the City of Charlottesville, Virginia'' (1909) "General Ordinances" chapter:<ref>Charlottesville (Va.), et al. The Code of the City of Charlottesville, Virginia: Containing the Charter As Amended and Re-enacted As a Whole (approved March 14, 1908), the Constitutional and Legislative Provisions of the State Relating to Cities, and the General Ordinances of the City Enacted As a Whole August 6th, 1909, In Effect September 1st, 1909. Michie Co, 1909.</ref><blockquote>'''Sec. 148. Numbering and naming streets.'''</blockquote><blockquote>Main Street shall be the east and west line from which all houses and lot numbers shall be counted, those to the north of Main Street, as north, and those to the south of Main Street, as south. </blockquote><blockquote>All streets maintaining comparative parallelism with Main Street shall retain their present names. The meridian street shall be Thirty-Third or Green Street, but shall be known as North First or South First Street, as indicated by its position north or south of Main Street. </blockquote><blockquote>What is known as Thirty-Second or Church Street north of Main Street shall be known as North Second Street East, its continuation south of Main Street, as South Second Street East. What is now known as Thirty-Fourth Street, shall be known as North Second Street West or South Second Street West, as the case may be. </blockquote><blockquote>Whether one goes east or west, the streets running so as to intersect Main, actually or by supposed extension shall be known by the natural numbers increasing in either direction from the meridian at First Street, save in the matter of Park and Ridge Streets. </blockquote>


==(A)==
==(A)==
Line 22: Line 25:
*[[Albemarle Street]] &ndash; as with [[Albemarle County]], named for [[Willem van Keppel]], 2nd Earl of Albemarle
*[[Albemarle Street]] &ndash; as with [[Albemarle County]], named for [[Willem van Keppel]], 2nd Earl of Albemarle
*[[Alderman Road]] &ndash; [[Edwin A. Alderman]], first President of the [[University of Virginia]]
*[[Alderman Road]] &ndash; [[Edwin A. Alderman]], first President of the [[University of Virginia]]
[[File:1906 - Edwin Anderson Alderman.JPG|right|thumb|300px|Edwin Anderson Alderman, ca. 1906]]
[[File:1906 - Edwin Anderson Alderman.JPG|right|thumb|300px|Edwin Anderson Alderman, ca. 1906]]
*[[Allen Drive]] &ndash; unknown
*[[Allen Drive]] &ndash; unknown
*[[Allied Lane]] &ndash; possibly Allied Concrete, founded in 1946 and now located near the street
*[[Allied Lane]] &ndash; possibly Allied Concrete, founded in 1946 and now located near the street
Line 91: Line 96:
*[[Buckler Drive]] &ndash; unknown
*[[Buckler Drive]] &ndash; unknown
*[[Bunker Hill Drive]] &ndash; [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Bunker_Hill Battle of Bunker Hill] , an important battle during the American Revolutionary War. Part of a cluster of names pertaining to American history in the [[Greenbrier neighborhood]].
*[[Bunker Hill Drive]] &ndash; [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Bunker_Hill Battle of Bunker Hill] , an important battle during the American Revolutionary War. Part of a cluster of names pertaining to American history in the [[Greenbrier neighborhood]].
*[[Burgess Lane]] &ndash; John Anderson Burgess (1873-1948), moved to Charlottesville in [[1898]]. [[1890]] opened general contractor business at 401-403 E Market Street; employed 20 painters, paper hangers, carpenters (residence listed as ''Woolen Mills Road'', ca. 1914)
*[[Burgess Lane]] &ndash; Burguss Family;
 
:Robert Nicholas Burgess (1839 – 1911) born in Albemarle County, served in the Confederate States army from 1861 to 1865 in Company I, Forty-Sixth Virginia Regiment. He began farming immediately upon his return from the army and continued as a farmer and overseer in Albemarle County until April 1881, when he moved to Charlottesville and accepted a position as policeman;
:John Anderson Burgess (1873-1948), moved to Charlottesville in [[1898]]. [[1890]] opened general contractor business at 401-403 E Market Street; employed 20 painters, paper hangers, carpenters (residence listed as ''Woolen Mills Road'', ca. 1914)
 
*[[Burnet Street]] &ndash; unknown
*[[Burnet Street]] &ndash; unknown
*[[Burnet Way]] &ndash; unknown
*[[Burnet Way]] &ndash; unknown
Line 99: Line 108:


*[[Cabell Avenue]] &ndash; The Cabell Family has lived in Charlottesville since arriving in Virginia in 1726. Members of the family served in the American Revolution and help found the University of Virginia<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://small.library.virginia.edu/collections/featured/the-cabell-family-papers-2/biographies/|title=The Cabell Family|last=|first=|publishdate=2018|publisher=University of Virginia Special Collections Library|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|accessdate=}}</ref>
*[[Cabell Avenue]] &ndash; The Cabell Family has lived in Charlottesville since arriving in Virginia in 1726. Members of the family served in the American Revolution and help found the University of Virginia<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://small.library.virginia.edu/collections/featured/the-cabell-family-papers-2/biographies/|title=The Cabell Family|last=|first=|publishdate=2018|publisher=University of Virginia Special Collections Library|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|accessdate=}}</ref>
*[[Calhoun Street]] &ndash; possibly [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_C._Calhoun John C. Calhoun]
*[[Calhoun Street]] &ndash; possibly [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_C._Calhoun John C. Calhoun]. Calhoun was political theorist from South Carolina.
*[[Cambridge Circle]] &ndash; [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cambridge Cambridge, England]
*[[Cambridge Circle]] &ndash; [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cambridge Cambridge, England]
*[[Camellia Drive]] &ndash; botanical name
*[[Camellia Drive]] &ndash; botanical name
Line 114: Line 123:
*[[Cedars Court]] &ndash; presumably the tree
*[[Cedars Court]] &ndash; presumably the tree
*[[Center Avenue]] &ndash; unknown
*[[Center Avenue]] &ndash; unknown
*[[Chancellor Street]] &ndash; Chancellor family; Doctor J. Edgar Chancellor, served as a surgeon in the Confederate Army during the Civil War, and was later Demonstrator of Anatomy in the University of Virginia for a number of years and lived in the [[Birdwood Estate]]. His son, Samuel Chancellor, owner and operator of Chancellor’s Drug Store (1415 University Avenue). Sam was one of the first businesses on [[The Corner]] to adopt Coca-Cola products and sell them in mass quantities.<ref>https://news.virginia.edu/content/do-you-know-history-your-favorite-corner-spots</ref> (previously named Staunton Avenue)
 
[[File:Chancellor's Drug Store.JPG|right|thumb|200px|Chancellor's Drug Store at [[The Corner]]]]
[[File:Chancellor's Drug Store.JPG|right|none|thumb|Chancellor's Drug Store at [[The Corner]]]]
[[File:1915 S. C. Chancellor.JPG|thumb|200px|Samuel Cleveland Chancellor, ca. 1915]]
 
*[[Charlton Avenue]] &ndash; Originally (ca. 1916) named "Carlton" until the city changed the spelling by adding an "h" to disambiguate from the east side Carlton Ave
*[[Chancellor Street]] &ndash; Chancellor family; Doctor J. Edgar Chancellor, served as a surgeon in the Confederate Army during the Civil War, and was later "Demonstrator of Anatomy" in the University of Virginia for a number of years and lived in the [[Birdwood Estate]]. His son, Samuel Chancellor, owner and operator of Chancellor’s Drug Store (1415 University Avenue). Sam was one of the first businesses on [[The Corner]] to adopt Coca-Cola products and sell them in mass quantities.<ref>https://news.virginia.edu/content/do-you-know-history-your-favorite-corner-spots</ref>; Originally Staunton Avenue, named for the destination city of Staunton, Virginia.
*[[Charlton Avenue]] &ndash; Originally (ca. 1916) ''Carlton Avenue'' until the city changed the spelling by adding an "h" to disambiguate from the east side Carlton Avenue.
*[[Chelsea Drive]] &ndash; unknown
*[[Chelsea Drive]] &ndash; unknown
*[[Cherry Avenue]] &ndash; botanical name, parallel to Elm and Pine Streets
*[[Cherry Avenue]] &ndash; botanical name, parallel to Elm and Pine Streets
Line 137: Line 147:
*[[Cottage Lane]] &ndash; one of several streets named for the property surrounding [[Rugby Hall]], formerly owned by Confederate general [[Thomas L. Rosser]]. Cottage Lane runs between Rugby Hall (908 Cottage Lane) and two cottages (907 and 909 Cottage Lane) that were owned by Rosser in the late 19th century. For a time the cottages were rented out by the Rossers to help generate income.<ref>Sheridan R. Barringer, ''Custer's Gray Rival'', (Burlington, NC, 2019), 249.</ref>
*[[Cottage Lane]] &ndash; one of several streets named for the property surrounding [[Rugby Hall]], formerly owned by Confederate general [[Thomas L. Rosser]]. Cottage Lane runs between Rugby Hall (908 Cottage Lane) and two cottages (907 and 909 Cottage Lane) that were owned by Rosser in the late 19th century. For a time the cottages were rented out by the Rossers to help generate income.<ref>Sheridan R. Barringer, ''Custer's Gray Rival'', (Burlington, NC, 2019), 249.</ref>
*[[Cottonwood Road]] &ndash; presumably the tree
*[[Cottonwood Road]] &ndash; presumably the tree
*[[Court Square]] &ndash; unknown
 
*[[Cream Street]] &ndash; unknown
[[File:1906 - Court House.JPG|right|thumb|300px|Albemarle County Court House. Located at the corner of Jefferson and Park St., this photograph actually shows the portion built in 1859-60. The rear, or north wing, dates to 1803. ''Source: Albemarle Historical Society'']]
 
*[[Court Square]] &ndash; Courthouse House Square, historical term refers to the square in the middle of a town where the county courthouse is located.
 
[[File:1914 - Albemarle Ice Cream.JPG|right||none|thumb|Albemarle Creamery Co. located at 709 Brown Street, ca. 1914;  J. B. Andrews, pres, H. F. Wilde sec. and mgr.]]
 
*[[Cream Street]] &ndash; Just a bit off [[West Main Street]] in the [[Starr Hill Neighborhood]] it was named after a type of business. In [[1914]], Charlottesville had two creameries, with the Albemarle Creamery Co., Inc. standing at 709 Brown Street, on the north side of the street east of [[Charlottesville Union Station |Union Station]]. 
*[[Cresap Road]] &ndash; unknown
*[[Cresap Road]] &ndash; unknown
*[[Crestmont Avenue]] &ndash; unknown
*[[Crestmont Avenue]] &ndash; unknown
Line 153: Line 169:
*[[Darien Terrace]] - unknown
*[[Darien Terrace]] - unknown
*[[David Terrace]] - unknown  
*[[David Terrace]] - unknown  
*[[Davis Avenue]] -  Davis family, by <nowiki>[[R. M. Davis]]</nowiki> who developed the subdivision around the street in the 1970s.   
*[[Davis Avenue]] -  Davis family, named by [[R. M. Davis]] who developed the subdivision around the street in the 1970s.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://correctingthenarrative.org/posts/davis-field/Davis_Field.pdf|title=|last=|first=|publishdate=|publisher=|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|accessdate=}}</ref>  
*[[Del Mar Drive]] - unknown
*[[Del Mar Drive]] - unknown
*[[Delevan Street]] - unknown
*[[Delevan Street]] - unknown
Line 161: Line 177:
*[[Dice Street]] – Dice family or specifically Dr. Dice whose house was located in 1877 at the 300 of Dice block south of Garrett Street  
*[[Dice Street]] – Dice family or specifically Dr. Dice whose house was located in 1877 at the 300 of Dice block south of Garrett Street  
*[[Douglas Avenue]] - ''probably'' the Douglas family who owned the Rose Valley estate north of the city. A Reaves family owned a lot around the turn of the twentieth century that was called “The Grove” and included the area east of [[Douglas Avenue]] to “Coal Bin Hill”, or near the present day [[Chestnut Street]] area.
*[[Douglas Avenue]] - ''probably'' the Douglas family who owned the Rose Valley estate north of the city. A Reaves family owned a lot around the turn of the twentieth century that was called “The Grove” and included the area east of [[Douglas Avenue]] to “Coal Bin Hill”, or near the present day [[Chestnut Street]] area.
*[[Druid Avenue]] - referring to the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Druid Druids] from Celtic culture; parallel to Stonehenge Avenue and Rockland Avenue, all of which lead to the now-abandoned quarry where Quarry Park is now; parallel with [[Stonehenge Avenue]], it is part of a group of themed streets in the [[Belmont-Carlton]] neighborhood carrying names associated with the Ancient Order of Druids. [https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_Edmund_Antrobus,_4th_Baronet Sir Edmund Antrobus], 4th Baronet, owner of Stonehenge (1848-1915). In [[1905]], he was initiated into the Ancient Order of Druids and welcomed the first massive ceremony of this Order in Stonehenge.


[[File:1909 March edition of The Druid.JPG|thumb|400px|The March 1909 edition of The Druid, the magazine published by the Ancient Order of Druids.]]
[[File:1909 March edition of The Druid.JPG|thumb|300px|The March 1909 edition of The Druid, the magazine published by the Ancient Order of Druids.]]


*[[Druid Avenue]] - referring to the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Druid Druids] from Celtic culture; parallel to Stonehenge Avenue and Rockland Avenue, all of which lead to the now-abandoned quarry where Quarry Park is now; parallel with [[Stonehenge Avenue]], it is part of a group of themed streets in the [[Belmont-Carlton]] neighborhood carrying names associated with the Ancient Order of Druids. [https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_Edmund_Antrobus,_4th_Baronet Sir Edmund Antrobus], 4th Baronet, owner of Stonehenge (1848-1915). In [[1905]], he was initiated into the Ancient Order of Druids and welcomed the first massive ceremony of this Order in Stonehenge.
*[[Dublin Road]] - ''likely'' Dublin, Ireland
*[[Dublin Road]] - ''likely'' Dublin, Ireland
*[[Duke Street]] - likely the Duke family, notably R. T. W. Duke, Sr. and R. T. W. Duke, Jr.  
*[[Duke Street]] - likely the Duke family, notably R. T. W. Duke, Sr. and R. T. W. Duke, Jr.  
Line 171: Line 187:
==(E)==
==(E)==


*[[Earhart Street]] - unknown
*[[Earhart Street]] - Earhart family, notably L. A. Earhart and A. W. Earhart
*[[Early Street]] - the Early family, including John Early (namesake of [[Earlysville]]) or his son, Confederate general and Lost Cause promoter [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jubal_Early Jubal Early]
*[[Early Street]] - the Early family, including John Early (namesake of [[Earlysville]]) or his son, Confederate general and Lost Cause promoter [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jubal_Early Jubal Early]
*[[Eastview Street]] - unknown
*[[Eastview Street]] - unknown
Line 249: Line 265:


*[[Hammond Street]] - unknown
*[[Hammond Street]] - unknown
*[[Hampton Street]] - ''possibly'' [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wade_Hampton_III Wade Hampton III] (Confederate officer and white supremacist from South Carolina), given the development of the Belmont subdivision by Confederate [[Bartlett Bolling]]; less likely to be after Hampton, Virginia.  
*[[Hampton Street]] - ''likely'' Hampton, Virginia.  
*[[Hanover Street]] - [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanover_County,_Virginia Hanover County, Virginia]  
*[[Hanover Street]] - [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanover_County,_Virginia Hanover County, Virginia]  
*[[Hardwood Avenue]] - presumably, a botanical name, referencing a classification of tree wood
*[[Hardwood Avenue]] - presumably, a botanical name, referencing a classification of tree wood
Line 316: Line 332:
*[[Keystone Place]] - unknown
*[[Keystone Place]] - unknown
*[[King Mountain Road]] - [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Kings_Mountain Battle of Kings Mountain], an important battle during the American Revolutionary War. Part of a cluster of names pertaining to American history in the [[Greenbrier neighborhood]].
*[[King Mountain Road]] - [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Kings_Mountain Battle of Kings Mountain], an important battle during the American Revolutionary War. Part of a cluster of names pertaining to American history in the [[Greenbrier neighborhood]].
*[[King Street]] - unknown
*[[King Street]] - possibly [[W. W. King]] (1869-1928), president of the [[King Lumber Company]] which he founded in [[1899]].
*[[Knoll Street]] - unknown
*[[Knoll Street]] - unknown


Line 565: Line 581:
*[[St Charles Avenue]] - unknown
*[[St Charles Avenue]] - unknown
*[[St Charles Court]] - unknown
*[[St Charles Court]] - unknown
*[[St Clair Avenue]] - [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clare_of_Assisi Clare of Assisi]
*[[St Clair Avenue]] - Sinclair Family who owned [[Locust Grove]] when it was a plantation, whose Scottish family name was changed from "St. Clair" to "Sinclair" in the late 17th century.
*[[St George Avenue]] - unknown
*[[St George Avenue]] - unknown
*[[St James Circle]] - unknown
*[[St James Circle]] - unknown
Line 629: Line 645:
*[[E Water Street|Water Street]] - unknown
*[[E Water Street|Water Street]] - unknown
*[[Waterbury Court]] - Waterbury, Connecticut (co-located with Hartford, Greenwich, and Danbury Courts, which abbreviates to "Ct" same as the abbreviation for Conneticut)
*[[Waterbury Court]] - Waterbury, Connecticut (co-located with Hartford, Greenwich, and Danbury Courts, which abbreviates to "Ct" same as the abbreviation for Conneticut)
*[[Watson Avenue]] - [[Watson family]] in general. The [[John Davis Watson]] family owned [[Hard Bargain]] located a few hundred feet to the north at 1105 Park Street.  
*[[Watson Avenue]] - [[Watson family]], who owned [[Hard Bargain]] located a few hundred feet to the north at 1105 Park Street. Other prominent family members include [[John Davis Watson]], Judge Egbert R. Watson, and William O. Watson (longtime official for the C&O Railroad).  
*[[Wayside Place]] - unknown
*[[Wayside Place]] - unknown
*[[Welk Place]] - unknown
*[[Welk Place]] - unknown
Line 666: Line 682:
==Street name changes==
==Street name changes==


* Augusta Road - renamed Rosser Lane. Constructed sometime after 1938, it appeared as August Rd on the 1950 Census Enumeration Map of Charlottesville.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://catalog.archives.gov/id/51435466|title=1950 Census Enumeration District Maps - Virginia (VA) - Charlottesville City - Charlottesville - ED 104-1 to 31|last=|first=|publishdate=|publisher=US Census Bureau|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|accessdate=}}</ref>
* 33rd Street / Green Street - renamed 1st Street
* 32nd Street / Church Street - renamed 2nd Street East
* 34th Street - renamed North 2nd Street West
* Augusta Road - renamed Rosser Lane. Constructed sometime after 1938, it appeared as Augusta Rd on the 1950 Census Enumeration Map of Charlottesville.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://catalog.archives.gov/id/51435466|title=1950 Census Enumeration District Maps - Virginia (VA) - Charlottesville City - Charlottesville - ED 104-1 to 31|last=|first=|publishdate=|publisher=US Census Bureau|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|accessdate=}}</ref>
* Azalea Street - renamed to Manila Street to avoid confusion with nearby Azalea Drive
* Azalea Street - renamed to Manila Street to avoid confusion with nearby Azalea Drive
* Belmont Avenue (Rose Hill) - now Dale Aveue
* Carlton Avenue (Rose Hill) - now Charlton Avenue
*Staunton Avenue - renamed [[Chancellor Street]] after the family


==Extinct streets==
==Extinct streets==
Line 673: Line 695:
*Alphanso Street – ran north from Williams Street to Preston W first east of 10th NW
*Alphanso Street – ran north from Williams Street to Preston W first east of 10th NW
*Apple Street – West of 601 Ridge Street
*Apple Street – West of 601 Ridge Street
*Cabell Street – parallel to Lee Street, subsumed by Pinn Hall at UVA Medical Center
*Cabell Street – parallel to Lee Street, removed by Pinn Hall at UVA Medical Center
*Belmont Avenue (Rose Hill) - now Dale Aveue
*Diggs - removed with the development of Garrett Square (now Friendship Court) (Sanborn Maps)
*Diggs - removed with the development of Garrett Square (now Friendship Court) (Sanborn Maps)
*Fuller Avenue - renamed as part of Monticello Avenue, when Monticello was "redirected" to continue west instead of turning north on what is now Avon Street (Sanborn Maps)
*Fuller Avenue - renamed as part of Monticello Avenue, when Monticello was "redirected" to continue west instead of turning north on what is now Avon Street (Sanborn Maps)
*Loudoun Road (ca. 1964) – (undeveloped street between Lewis Mountain and Thomson roads)<ref>https://v3.lib.virginia.edu/catalog/uva-lib:2681176/view#openLayer/uva-lib:2681197/3799.5/4438.5/4/1/0</ref>
*Loudoun Road (ca. 1964) – (undeveloped street between Lewis Mountain and Thomson roads)<ref>https://v3.lib.virginia.edu/catalog/uva-lib:2681176/view#openLayer/uva-lib:2681197/3799.5/4438.5/4/1/0</ref>
*Park Place Avenue – perpendicular to Lee Street, subsumed by Pinn Hall at UVA Medical Center
*Park Place Avenue – perpendicular to Lee Street, removed by Pinn Hall at UVA Medical Center
*Parrot - removed with the development of Garrett Square (now Friendship Court) (Sanborn Maps)
*Parrot - removed with the development of Garrett Square (now Friendship Court) (Sanborn Maps)
*Randall Street – parallel to Lee Street, subsumed by Pinn Hall at UVA Medical Center
*Randall Street – parallel to Lee Street, removed by Pinn Hall at UVA Medical Center
*Staunton Avenue - renamed [[Chancellor Street]] after the family
*Williams Street - on Sanborn Maps  
*Williams Street - on Sanborn Maps  
*Wyndhurst Circle and Wyndhurst Way, ca. [[1920]]; precursors to the present-day Preston Place.<ref>https://www.dhr.virginia.gov/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/104-0048_Wyndhurst_2018_NR_Summary_Proposed_Relocation.pdf</ref>
*Wyndhurst Circle and Wyndhurst Way, ca. [[1920]]; precursors to the present-day Preston Place.<ref>https://www.dhr.virginia.gov/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/104-0048_Wyndhurst_2018_NR_Summary_Proposed_Relocation.pdf</ref>


=== Automobile Blue Book (1919) ===
[[File:Charlottesville,_Virginia_-_Automobile_Blue_Book,_1919.JPG|800x800px]]
[[Category:Lists]]
[[Category:Lists]]
[[Category:Geography]]  
[[Category:Geography]]  

Revision as of 09:24, 17 November 2020

The following is a list of streets in City of Charlottesville and where there names are derived from.

Many of the names of these streets can be found on historic maps of Charlottesville.

Guide to streets

The system of numbering the streets is somewhat similar to the Washington plan. Each block represents 100 numbers, whether heading east, west, north or south. The city is divided into four sections.[1]

Fifth – South of 500 W Main Street
First – North of East Main and East of North First, or Northeast
Second – South of East Main and east of South First, or Southeast
Third – North of West Main and west of North First, or Northwest
Fourth – South from 402 West Main
Sixth-and-a-Half – South from 606 Dice
Seventh-and-a-Half – South from 620 Dice
Main – The dividing line between north and south streets, runs east from First to C & O Lower Depot and west from First to University. The main Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad Station, being located under the present day Belmont Bridge.
First – The dividing line between east and west streets, runs north and south from Main to city limits.

From the book The Code of the City of Charlottesville, Virginia (1909) "General Ordinances" chapter:[2]

Sec. 148. Numbering and naming streets.

Main Street shall be the east and west line from which all houses and lot numbers shall be counted, those to the north of Main Street, as north, and those to the south of Main Street, as south.

All streets maintaining comparative parallelism with Main Street shall retain their present names. The meridian street shall be Thirty-Third or Green Street, but shall be known as North First or South First Street, as indicated by its position north or south of Main Street.

What is known as Thirty-Second or Church Street north of Main Street shall be known as North Second Street East, its continuation south of Main Street, as South Second Street East. What is now known as Thirty-Fourth Street, shall be known as North Second Street West or South Second Street West, as the case may be.

Whether one goes east or west, the streets running so as to intersect Main, actually or by supposed extension shall be known by the natural numbers increasing in either direction from the meridian at First Street, save in the matter of Park and Ridge Streets.

(A)

Edwin Anderson Alderman, ca. 1906

(B)

In 1919, Stewart Fuller lived on Booker Street with his parents, Stewart & Alberta Douglas Fuller.
Robert Nicholas Burgess (1839 – 1911) born in Albemarle County, served in the Confederate States army from 1861 to 1865 in Company I, Forty-Sixth Virginia Regiment. He began farming immediately upon his return from the army and continued as a farmer and overseer in Albemarle County until April 1881, when he moved to Charlottesville and accepted a position as policeman;
John Anderson Burgess (1873-1948), moved to Charlottesville in 1898. 1890 opened general contractor business at 401-403 E Market Street; employed 20 painters, paper hangers, carpenters (residence listed as Woolen Mills Road, ca. 1914)

(C)

Chancellor's Drug Store at The Corner
Albemarle County Court House. Located at the corner of Jefferson and Park St., this photograph actually shows the portion built in 1859-60. The rear, or north wing, dates to 1803. Source: Albemarle Historical Society
  • Court Square – Courthouse House Square, historical term refers to the square in the middle of a town where the county courthouse is located.
Albemarle Creamery Co. located at 709 Brown Street, ca. 1914; J. B. Andrews, pres, H. F. Wilde sec. and mgr.

(D)

The March 1909 edition of The Druid, the magazine published by the Ancient Order of Druids.
  • Druid Avenue - referring to the Druids from Celtic culture; parallel to Stonehenge Avenue and Rockland Avenue, all of which lead to the now-abandoned quarry where Quarry Park is now; parallel with Stonehenge Avenue, it is part of a group of themed streets in the Belmont-Carlton neighborhood carrying names associated with the Ancient Order of Druids. Sir Edmund Antrobus, 4th Baronet, owner of Stonehenge (1848-1915). In 1905, he was initiated into the Ancient Order of Druids and welcomed the first massive ceremony of this Order in Stonehenge.
  • Dublin Road - likely Dublin, Ireland
  • Duke Street - likely the Duke family, notably R. T. W. Duke, Sr. and R. T. W. Duke, Jr.
  • Dunova Court - unknown

(E)

Gitchells Studio.JPG

(F)

(G)

(H)

(I)

(J)

(K)

(L)

(M)

(N)

(O)

(P)

View of Pen Park Plantation House, ca. 1897. In 1777, Dr. George Gilmer purchased the land and his family owned it until 1800. Originally the estate consisted of four thousand acres; by 1897 all had been sold off save the six hundred acres immediately about the house.

(Q)

(R)

(S)

(T)

(U)

(V)

(W)

Colonel Wertenbaker was a Civil War veteran, having served in the 19th Virginia Regiment

(Y)

(Z)

Street name changes

  • 33rd Street / Green Street - renamed 1st Street
  • 32nd Street / Church Street - renamed 2nd Street East
  • 34th Street - renamed North 2nd Street West
  • Augusta Road - renamed Rosser Lane. Constructed sometime after 1938, it appeared as Augusta Rd on the 1950 Census Enumeration Map of Charlottesville.[18]
  • Azalea Street - renamed to Manila Street to avoid confusion with nearby Azalea Drive
  • Belmont Avenue (Rose Hill) - now Dale Aveue
  • Carlton Avenue (Rose Hill) - now Charlton Avenue
  • Staunton Avenue - renamed Chancellor Street after the family

Extinct streets

  • Alphanso Street – ran north from Williams Street to Preston W first east of 10th NW
  • Apple Street – West of 601 Ridge Street
  • Cabell Street – parallel to Lee Street, removed by Pinn Hall at UVA Medical Center
  • Diggs - removed with the development of Garrett Square (now Friendship Court) (Sanborn Maps)
  • Fuller Avenue - renamed as part of Monticello Avenue, when Monticello was "redirected" to continue west instead of turning north on what is now Avon Street (Sanborn Maps)
  • Loudoun Road (ca. 1964) – (undeveloped street between Lewis Mountain and Thomson roads)[19]
  • Park Place Avenue – perpendicular to Lee Street, removed by Pinn Hall at UVA Medical Center
  • Parrot - removed with the development of Garrett Square (now Friendship Court) (Sanborn Maps)
  • Randall Street – parallel to Lee Street, removed by Pinn Hall at UVA Medical Center
  • Williams Street - on Sanborn Maps
  • Wyndhurst Circle and Wyndhurst Way, ca. 1920; precursors to the present-day Preston Place.[20]

References

  1. https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x000196692&view=1up&seq=33
  2. Charlottesville (Va.), et al. The Code of the City of Charlottesville, Virginia: Containing the Charter As Amended and Re-enacted As a Whole (approved March 14, 1908), the Constitutional and Legislative Provisions of the State Relating to Cities, and the General Ordinances of the City Enacted As a Whole August 6th, 1909, In Effect September 1st, 1909. Michie Co, 1909.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Massie, Frank A., and Virginia School Company. A New and Historical Map of Albemarle County, Virginia. Owned and published by the Virginia School Company, 1907. https://search.lib.virginia.edu/sources/maps/items/u2716440
  4. Web. Albemarle County In Virginia, Rev. Edgar Woods, The Michie Company, Printers, 1901, retrieved May 7, 2019.
  5. Web. The Cabell Family, University of Virginia Special Collections Library, 2018
  6. https://news.virginia.edu/content/do-you-know-history-your-favorite-corner-spots
  7. Sheridan R. Barringer, Custer's Gray Rival, (Burlington, NC, 2019), 249.
  8. Web. Kenneth R. Crispell, 79, Dean And Health Expert on Presidents, New York Times, Aug. 26, 1996, retrieved 2020-10-14.
  9. Web. [1]
  10. https://uvamagazine.org/articles/the_golden_age_of_the_rooming_house_matrons
  11. Web. [2]
  12. Woods, E. (1901). Albemarle County in Virginia: giving some account of what it was by nature, of what it was made by man, and of some of the men who made it. Charlottesville, Va.: The Michie Company, printers. https://www.google.com/books/edition/Albemarle_County_in_Virginia/oX3hxtr5L24C?hl=en
  13. http://www2.vcdh.virginia.edu/lewisandclark/students/projects/homesteads/genealogy/meriwethers.html
  14. http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaxtf/view?query=Roslyn&docId=uva-sc%2Fviu03696.xml&chunk.id=
  15. https://www.dhr.virginia.gov/historic-registers/104-0136/
  16. http://www.charlottesville.org/community/neighborhood-connection/10th-and-page
  17. http://www.c-ville.com/Rosey_homecoming/
  18. Web. 1950 Census Enumeration District Maps - Virginia (VA) - Charlottesville City - Charlottesville - ED 104-1 to 31, US Census Bureau
  19. https://v3.lib.virginia.edu/catalog/uva-lib:2681176/view#openLayer/uva-lib:2681197/3799.5/4438.5/4/1/0
  20. https://www.dhr.virginia.gov/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/104-0048_Wyndhurst_2018_NR_Summary_Proposed_Relocation.pdf

External Links