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Just upriver from Jamestown, Berkeley Plantation stands as one of Virginia’s most historic estates. Its story begins in 1619 with the Berkeley Hundred, an early settlement that saw both hope and heartbreak on the colonial frontier. Over the centuries, its halls would witness the rise of the Harrison family, whose descendants signed the Declaration of Independence and held the presidency, while its grounds bore witness to one of the Civil War’s darkest summers, when Union troops camped here after the Seven Days Battles and the solemn notes of Taps were first carried across the James.
But alongside its celebrated past, Berkeley holds a legacy steeped in tragedy. A lightning strike in 1745 claimed the lives of Benjamin Harrison IV and his daughters inside the mansion, and some say their presence still lingers in its rooms. Visitors tell of doors opening on their own, chandeliers trembling without cause, and the apparition of a young girl gazing silently out across the river. Others speak of phantom soldiers pacing the shoreline, or the distant roll of a spectral drum that recalls the property’s days as a wartime encampment.
Berkeley Plantation remains a place where the weight of history and the spirits of those who lived it continue to live on.
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Just upriver from Jamestown, Berkeley Plantation stands as one of Virginia’s most historic estates. Its story begins in 1619 with the Berkeley Hundred, an early settlement that saw both hope and heartbreak on the colonial frontier. Over the centuries, its halls would witness the rise of the Harrison family, whose descendants signed the Declaration of Independence and held the presidency, while its grounds bore witness to one of the Civil War’s darkest summers, when Union troops camped here after the Seven Days Battles and the solemn notes of Taps were first carried across the James.
But alongside its celebrated past, Berkeley holds a legacy steeped in tragedy. A lightning strike in 1745 claimed the lives of Benjamin Harrison IV and his daughters inside the mansion, and some say their presence still lingers in its rooms. Visitors tell of doors opening on their own, chandeliers trembling without cause, and the apparition of a young girl gazing silently out across the river. Others speak of phantom soldiers pacing the shoreline, or the distant roll of a spectral drum that recalls the property’s days as a wartime encampment.
Berkeley Plantation remains a place where the weight of history and the spirits of those who lived it continue to live on.
Want to Listen to Southern Gothic Ad-Free?
Connect with Southern Gothic Media:
Advertise on this podcast: [email protected]
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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