#1.
Bellwood, VA
'Richmond National Battlefield Park' commemorates more than 30 American Civil War sites around Richmond, Virginia. The park's preserved battlefields include Beaver Dam Creek, Gaines' Mill, Glendale, and Malvern Hill, all sites of ... More on Wikipedia

#2.
Richmond, Chesterfield County, VA
(VA-21-01) in Richmond, Chesterfield County, VA. Belmont Rd. (SR651) E. (curves N.) 0.4 miles from jct with VA150, W. on Belmont Rd. S to the building ... More on dalejtravis.com

#3.
Bellwood, VA
'Fort Darling' was a Confederate military installation during the American Civil War located at Drewrys Bluff, a high point overlooking a bend in the James River south of Richmond in Chesterfield County, Virginia. It was the site ... More on Wikipedia

#4.
8920 Pams Avenue, Richmond VA 23237, United States of America
Inscription. Dedicated to the memory of the men of the First Virginia Infantry Regiment. Army of Northern Virginia. Killed near this place on 16 May 1864. Alphonzo A. Figner, Company I, Archibald D. Govan, Company D, Jerry Toomey, ... More on HMDB

#5.
5401 Jefferson Davis Highway, Richmond VA 23234, United States of America
Inscription. Built before 1732 by Henry Cary, this was the home of Colonel Archibald Cary, a Revolutionary leader of Virginia. The house was moved, 1929-30, to its present location off Cary Street Road in Richmond's West End. , Erected ... More on HMDB

#6.
Richmond VA 23237, United States of America
On behalf of the National Park Service and Rock Creek Park, we welcome you to a self-guided tour of historic Fort Stevens. Fort Stevens served as the focal point for defending Washington, DC during... More on Nps.gov
Inscription. Built in 1862, Fort Stevens was part of the Confederate inter-defense line of Richmond. This fort was named for Col. W. H. Stevens, who was in charge of the construction of Richmonds d... More on HMDB

#7.
Richmond VA 23237, United States of America
Inscription. The Union Army of the James, retiring across Proctor's Creek in this vicinity after the battle of Drewry's Bluff, May 16, 1864, turned east into the Peninsula between the James and Appomattox Rivers, where it was "Bottled" ... More on HMDB

#8.
10301 Jefferson Davis Highway, Richmond VA 23237, United States of America
Inscription. This old inn was the headquarters of Major-General B. F. Butler's Union Army of the James during the Battle of Drewery's Bluff, May 16, 1864. The inn was so named because of its location about midway between Richmond ... More on HMDB

#9.
Richmond VA 23237, United States of America
Inscription. “Neither army, however, manifested any disposition either to advance or retire. It was a case of stand and fire, each endeavoring to cripple the other the most, and gain, if it could, some advantage here or there. ... More on HMDB

#10.
Richmond VA 23237, United States of America
Inscription. Vanished now but for a trace, Falling Creek is the site of the first industrial ironworks in the New World. The close proximity of iron ore, wood for fuel and power provided by the falling water made the Falling Creek ... More on HMDB
