#1.
Burnt Chimney, VA
'Booker T. Washington National Monument' is a National Monument near Hardy, Franklin County, Virginia. It preserves portions of the 207-acre (0.90 km) tobacco farm on which educator and leader Booker T. Washington was born into slavery ... More on Wikipedia

#2.
80 Burnt Chimney Road, Burnt Chimney, Virginia, United States

#3.
12130 Booker T. Washington Highway, Hardy, Virginia
The park is the site of famed educator, orator, and presidential advisor, Booker T. Washington's birth, early life, and emancipation. Washington's ideas about education, race, and labor were shaped... More on Virginia.org
The Booker T Washington National Monument is a lovely place to walk and informative to visit. Prior to my visit I didn't know the things ... More on TripAdvisor

#4.
Roanoke, Virginia
A "must see" on most visitors list, an 88-foot manmade star (the largest in ... More on TripAdvisor
What a terrific view of the city you have from the top of this mountain. More on TripAdvisor

#5.
13630 Booker T Washington, Moneta, Virginia 24121-5884

#6.
114 Market St, Roanoke, VA 24011

#7.
541 Luck Avenue, Suite 209, Roanoke, VA 24016-5017
Opera Roanoke's 35th season in 2010-2011 features Madama Butterfly, Faust and Furious, recitals by Metropolitan ... More on Operaroanoke.org
Southwest Virginia's only professional opera company, Opera Roanoke presents two fully-staged productions and a variety of smaller-scale presentations each year. Resident in Shaftman Performance Ha... More on Virginia.org

#8.
50 Floyd Avenue, Rocky Mount, VA 24151
The Grove, an antebellum home built in 1854 by John Stafford Hale and his wife, Margaret Ingles Saunders Hale, great-granddaughter of Mary Draper Ingles, is open for tours, by appointment only. Confederate General Jubal A. Early's ... More on Virginia.org

#9.
55 Franklin Street, Rocky Mount, VA 24151

#10.
Roanoke VA 24020, United States of America
Inscription. First chartered college for women in Virginia. Established in 1842. Led for 87 years by Charles L. Cocke and his daughter Matty L. Cocke, first women president of a Virginia College. , Erected 1978 by Board of Supervisors ... More on HMDB
