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From:
David Kiracofe <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Discussion of research and writing about Virginia history <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 8 Sep 2003 14:41:43 -0400
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Dear Mr. Grundset:  Thanks so much.  You've given me some nice leads to
follow -- and a picture!  I've used Scott & Wyatt before but was unaware
of either the rock or of the picture the last time I saw the book --
needless to say, out here in west Michigan, we don't have a copy on the
shelves, so I appreciate all the more the assistance.

David Kiracofe

David Kiracofe
History Department
MAK 1060
Grand Valley State University
Allendale, MI 49501
[log in to unmask]
>>> [log in to unmask] 09/08/03 14:28 PM >>>
Dear Mr. Kircofe,

This sounded really familiar to me. My mother is a native of Petersburg,
and I think she's told me about that stone.

Pocahontas is a small section of the city of Petersburg, that, as I
recall, was once an island. The bridges over the Appomattox on Rt. 1 and
I-95 both cross over this island/peninsula. The land may well once have
been considered to be in Chesterfield County, since the boundary has
fluctuated as the river's course has changed over the centuries.

Please note the following in Francis Earle Lutz's Chesterfield: An Old
Virginia County (Richmond: William Byrd Press, 1954), p. 204.

"B. F. Lossing, the renowned historian, was a Chesterfield visitor in
1844 gathering material for his books while here. He inspected the
Mancester iron and cotton factories and also visted Pocahontas, where he
was interested in the so-called Pocahontas stone wash basin. He reported
that the basin had been moved from its original site to the northwest
abutment of the bridge and in the transfer it had been broken and
patched up with cement.[Shades of Plymouth Rock!!!!] The later removal
to Petersburg in 1914 was a more workman-like job. The basin is five
feet in diameter with an oval excavation twelve inches acreoss and
twelve inches deep. While tradition associates the stone with
Pocahontas, it is probable  that it actually was a mortar for grinding
corn with a pestle. It was at the Indian village in which it stood
orginally that Captain Smith secred a goodly supply of corn for his
hungry comrades at Jamestown."

Also, see James G. Scott and Edward A. Wyatt, IV's Petersburg's Story: A
History (Petersburg, 1960), for a picture of the stone next to the old
bridge (opposite page 18) and a commentary on the stone on nearby pages,
noting that Pocahontas supposedly bathed in the basin! The text says
that the first move of the stone was to the lawn of the Court House in
Petersburg and later to Poplar Lawn, which is a park in the middle of
the city. I don't know if it's still there or not.

(Reading that it was in Poplar Lawn park (aka Central Park), I'm sure
that my mother told me about it, because she grew up a block from the
park and took me there when I was a kid. I was born near Petersburg at
Fort Lee.)

I'll bet the Virginia Department of Historic Resources knows something
about this rock! There's bound to be a lot of other information on it
there, at Petersburg Public Library, the Virginia Historical Society,
LVA, etc.

Eric G. Grundset
Library Director
DAR Library
1776 D St., N.W.
Washington, DC 20006-5303
202-879-3313 (phone)
202-879-3227 (fax)
[log in to unmask]


-----Original Message-----
From: David Kiracofe [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
Sent: Monday, September 08, 2003 1:08 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Pocahontas sites


Dear listers:  I'm trying to locate if possible a site that was
connected with Pocahontas in popular memory in the early 19th century
(at least, that's the date of my source).  It was a large conical stone
known as Pocahontas's Basin -- the basin was apparently scooped out on
one side of the cone.  According to my source (in the Southern Literary
Messenger vol 4 (1838), it was within the limits of Petersburg on the
north bank of the Appomattox.  Any help -- and any other references to
historical sites connected with Pocahontas -- will be appreciated!!

David Kiracofe
Grand Valley State University
[log in to unmask]

David Kiracofe
History Department
MAK 1060
Grand Valley State University
Allendale, MI 49501
[log in to unmask]

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