Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. From Culpeper to Fredericksburg, Route 3 is dotted with Civil War battlefields. The man who led the Confederate forces to victory in August of 1862 at Cedar Mountain would be severely wounded at Chancellorsville on May 2, 1863, losing his left arm, and died eight days later. Who was it?
2. Located seven miles east of Culpeper is "Salubria," a formal Georgian style estate built in the early 1740's and thought to be the oldest brick house in Culpeper County. James Hansbrough, who bought the property in 1802, gave Salubria its name, which comes from the Latin adjective meaning what?
3. This 1844 brick building a few miles west of Fredericksburg in Spotsylvania County was the scene of a Confederate stand after Union General John Sedgwick crossed the Rappahannock and captured the Sunken Road and Marye's Heights. It served as a field hospital after the Battle of Chancellorsville. What is the name of this often overlooked battle?
4. Located along Route 3 in Stafford County on the banks of the Rappahannock River opposite Fredericksburg is George Washington's boyhood home. This is where he lived between the ages of 6 and 20, and where the legendary story of chopping down the cherry tree supposedly took place. What was the name of this 600 acre farm?
5. Located in Port Conway in King George County, "Conway House" fell into the Rappahannock River in the 1930's in the area now spanned by the James Madison Memorial Bridge. Which United States president was born there on March 16, 1751?
6. Virginia has produced eight United States presidents, so it should come with no surprise to find another presidential birthplace just north of Route 3 between Oak Grove and Colonial Beach. An archeological survey in 1976 uncovered the ruins of the family home, a modest four room, rough-cut wooden farm house. From these relatively humble beginnings came a member of the Continental Congress, Senator, Minister to France, Governor of Virginia, Secretary of State, and President. A famous doctrine bears his name, which is what?
7. George Washington was born just off Route 3 east of Oak Grove in Westmoreland County. It was called Pope's Creek Plantation when Washington lived there as a small boy, but an uncle later renamed it, and that name has long since been erroneously associated as Washington's birthplace. What name is that?
8. Mary Ball was born in either 1708 or 1709 just eight miles from the present-day Mary Ball Washington Museum and Library located on Route 3 in Lancaster. Who was Mary Ball Washington?
9. Only a few minutes away from Westmoreland State Park is Stratford Hall, the brick Georgian plantation house built between 1730 and 1738 by Thomas Lee. Earlier Lee history included two signers of the Declaration of Independence, but if that was not enough for posterity, the future General of the Confederate Army was born at Stratford in 1807. What was his name?
10. Before leaving the Northern Neck and crossing the Rappahannock via Route 3 into the Middle Peninsula, one must visit this 1735 Georgian architectural wonder near Irvington in Lancaster County. Robert "King" Carter, colonial Virginia's most influential planter, built the present-day brick church on the former site of a wooden church his father, John Carter, had built in 1670. It shares its name with a large New Zealand city, which is what?
Source: Author
McGruff
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bloomsby before going online.
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