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Welcome to King William County

 

King William County at a Glance William III, the County's Namesake
Important Dates in County's Establishment U.S. Decennial Census Population
What Else Happened in 1702? Lieutenant General Lewis B. "Chesty" Puller
King William Courthouse Tourist Attractions
King William Historical Society

Establishment: By enabling act of Virginia General Assembly effective on April 11, 1702; created from Pamunkey Neck section of King & Queen County (Town of West Point incorporated on July 11, 1870)

Namesake: William III; King of England, Scotland and Ireland from April 11, 1689 to March 19, 1702

Demographics:

2000 Census:
Total Population: 13,146 persons, including 10,280 in unincorporated territory and 2,866 in Town of West Point
Population Increase 1990-2000: 2,233 persons (20.5%)
Density: 47.73 persons per square mile, including 37.98 in unincorporated territory and 609.79 in Town of West Point
Race: 9,835 (74.8%) white; 2,999 (22.8%) black; 202 (1.5%) Native America; and 110 (0.8%) other
Sex: 6,470 (49.2%) male; and 6,676 (50.8%) female
Age: 3,433 (26.1%) under 18 years; 8,180 (62.2%) 18-64 years; and 1,533 (11.7%) 65 years and older
Median Age: 37.0 years
Average Household Size: 2.69 persons
Average Family Size: 3.06 persons
Median Household Income: $43,037
Largest Occupations: manufacturing 949 persons; wholesale and retail trade 687; services 628; government 600; construction 262; and agriculture, forestry and fishing 86

Geography:
Regional Location: western end of the Middle Peninsula of Virginia; approximately 33 miles northeast of City of Richmond
Area: 275.4 square miles, including 270.7 in unincorporated territory and 4.7 in Town of West Point
Shoreline: 135.7 miles
Elevation: sea level to 200 feet
Topography: flat to gently rolling

Natural Resources:
Major Water Bodies: Mattaponi River forms northern jurisdictional boundary; Pamunkey River forms southern jurisdictional boundary; rivers' confluence at West Point forms York River
Watersheds: York River and Chesapeake Bay
Commercial Natural Resources: loblolly pine; mixed hardwoods; sand; gravel; and clay

Climate:
Average January Temperature: 38 degrees
Average July Temperature: 77 degrees
Average Annual Precipitation: 44 inches
Average Annual Snowfall: 14 inches

Government:
County Seat: King William Court House
Organizational Form of County Government: Traditional; organized and operates pursuant to Virginia statutes
County Governing Body: 5-member Board of Supervisors elected by districts for 4-year terms
Chief County Executive / Administrative Officer: county administrator appointed by Board of Supervisors
Other County Elected Officials: 5-member School Board, Clerk of the Circuit Court, Commissioner of the Revenue, Commonwealth's Attorney, Sheriff and Treasurer
Virginia House of Delegates Districts: 97th and 98th
Virginia Senate District: 4th
United States Congressional District: 1st

Primary Sources: Community Profile: King William County, Virginia by Dominion Virginia Power, 2000; Demographic Characteristics: 2000, Geographic Area: King William County, Virginia by U.S. Census Bureau; and Tidewater Town: A Pictorial History of West Point, Virginia by Alonzo T. Dill, 1970

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Primary Sources: King William County Courthouse: A Memorial to Virginia Self-Government by Alonzo Thomas Dill, 1984; How Justice Grew, Virginia Counties: An Abstract of Their Foundation by Martha W. Hiden, 1957; The Hornbook of Virginia History: A Ready-Reference Guide to the Old Dominion's People, Places, and Past edited by Emily J. Salmon and Edward D. C. Campbell, Jr., 1994; Pocahontas's People: The Powhatan Indians of Virginia Through Four Centuries by Helen C. Rountree, 1990; Tidewater Town: A Pictorial History of West Point, Virginia by Alonzo T. Dill, 1970; King William Celebrates Its 250th Anniversary by Dr. M. H. Harris in Program - 250th Anniversary of the Founding of King William County, Virginia, 1952; and West Point's History Begins Almost With the Founding of Nation by Elizabeth Stuart Gray in Program - 250th Anniversary of the Founding of King William County, Virginia, 1952.

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Primary Sources: HistoryChannel.com; The World Book Encyclopedia; The Columbia Encyclopedia; The Encyclopedia Britannica; The Encyclopedia of World History; timepage.org; usahistory.org; and AboutBritain.com.

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King William Courthouse

King William County Courthouse was built about 1725. The one-room, T-shaped, hipped-roof structure likely replaced the original wooden frame courthouse structure. The historic building is not only the county's oldest public building, but is purportedly the oldest public building in use in Virginia and the oldest courthouse of English foundation in continuous use in the United States. The Circuit Court of King William County sits in the historic courthouse.

The courthouse was constructed of brick laid in Flemish bond. It is one of only three surviving Virginia courthouses - the others being Charles City County and Hanover County - with an arcade or a piazza imitating the first colonial capital in Williamsburg. The building is considered one of the finest examples of early colonial brickwork and courthouse design. The Virginia Department of Historic Resources, which maintains the Virginia Landmarks Register, considers the courthouse to be the best preserved of Virginia's eleven colonial era court buildings.

In 1840 the courthouse was enlarged and a brick wall was erected to enclose the court green and to keep livestock and poultry away from the buildings. It is one of the few remaining enclosed court greens in Virginia. A jail was constructed in 1890 on the site of the 1800s-era Clerk's Office that was destroyed by fire in 1885. A new Clerk's Office was established in the former jail in 1908. The Confederate monument was dedicated on the court green in 1904. The interior of the courthouse was extensively renovated about 1926 and again in 1983-84, the latter an effort to restore the building to more of its original 18th century appearance.

A new courthouse designed to modern court facility standards will be erected on the tract of county property located adjacent to the historic courthouse on Courthouse Lane (State Route 1301). The architecture of the new facility will be compatible with the historic courthouse, incorporating many of the features of the old building such as the piazza, hipped-roof and tall chimneys. The new 27,570-square foot facility will include: two courtrooms, judges chambers and three clerks offices for the Circuit, General District and Juvenile and Domestic Relations Courts; a hearing room; a deed and land records room; a Commonwealth's Attorney's office; a magistrate's office; a Victim-Witness Assistance Program office; and a Sheriff's Office with a dispatcher room, four holding cells and a secured sally port. Completion of the structure is tentatively projected for late 2003 or early 2004. Following occupancy of the new courthouse, the judges of the local courts will periodically perform some judicial functions in the historic courthouse so as to maintain the building's historic "continuous use" traditions.

Primary Sources: King William County Courthouse: A Memorial to Virginia Self-Government by Alonzo Thomas Dill, 1984; and King William Courthouse - Current Floor Plan with Mechanical Room at Rear of Building by Wiley & Wilson, Lynchburg, Virginia, March 14, 2002.

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William, III, the County's Namesake


King William III, also known as William of Orange, was born on November 14, 1650 in The Hague, Netherlands. He was the son of William II, Prince of Orange, and Mary, the oldest daughter of King Charles I of England. He married his English first cousin Mary Stuart, Protestant daughter of Roman Catholic King James II, in 1677.

William and Mary were invited to England by seven leaders of the English political parties, the Tory and Whig, who were concerned about James' absolutist royal leanings, his inability to cooperate with Parliament and Catholic succession to the throne following the birth of a son to James in 1688. William landed in Torbay at Devonshire with army of some 15,000 men on November 5, 1688. James' forces deserted him, whereupon he abdicated the throne and, in December, was allowed by William to flee to France with his wife and son. The new monarchs were crowned King William III and Queen Mary II of England, Scotland and Ireland during a coronation in Westminster Abbey on April 11, 1689. William and Mary's ascension to the throne became known as the Glorious or Bloodless Revolution. It prevented the Catholic succession of the monarchy. In Virginia, it helped secure the General Assembly's legitimacy as a permanent branch of government.

William reigned during an almost unprecedented period in the transition to a parliamentary form of English government that marked the end of royal prerogative. The significant enhancement of the rights and powers of Parliament and the diminishment of those of the crown characterized this transition. William's signing of the Declaration of Rights (later called the Bill of Rights) in 1689 effectively specified the conditions upon which the throne was offered to the sovereigns. The Bill of Rights was a major victory for Parliament as it greatly limited royal powers such as the authority to suspend or dispense with laws, stipulated a Protestant line of royal succession, and reserved to Parliament control of taxation, finances and the army. The Act of Settlement in 1701 specified royal succession, required the monarch to be a member of the Church of England and placed the first parliamentary limits on the royal control of foreign policy and war-making authority. The Triennial Act in 1694 required a new Parliament every three years. Other significant political developments during William's reign included: establishment of a national debt policy in 1692 and the Bank of England in 1694 that were directly related to England's more active role in international affairs; enhancement of freedom of the press through the expiration of the License Act in 1695; and elimination of some of the legal disqualifications imposed upon Protestant nonconformists through the Toleration Act of 1689.

William's reign also transpired during the early years of the Enlightenment (also known as the Age of Enlightenment or the Age of Reason), an intellectual movement that originated in England in the seventeenth century, but then had widespread global influence. The Age, which is considered a significant demarcation in the emergence of the modern world, was a period of extensive scientific discovery and political and social thought that fostered the belief in natural law and universal order and the confidence in human reason. A rational and scientific approach to religious, social, political and economic matters encouraged a secular perception of the world, a general sense of progress and a belief that the state was its logical instrument. Among the most noteworthy of the English intellectuals who were emerging during William's rule were: Sir Isaac Newton, a mathematician and natural philosopher (physicist); John Locke, a philosopher and political theorist; Jonathan Swift, an author and satirist; and Sir Richard Steele, an essayist and playwright.

William was an adept soldier and astute diplomat. He spent much of his adult life in The Netherlands and England opposing through military means and political alliances among European countries French King Louis XIV's efforts to annex the Spanish Empire. His European alliances formed the opposition to Louis during the War of the Grand Alliance (1688-1697), or King William's War as it was known on the American continent, and the War of the Spanish Succession (1702-1713) following his death. In Scotland, his victory over the Louis-supported Jacobites at Killieurankie in 1689 secured Scottish Presbyterianism. The Jacobites were supporters of the exiled royal House of Stuart that sought restoration of James II to the throne. William defeated French and Jacobite Irish forces under James II on July 1, 1690 at the Battle of Boyne, near Dublin, Ireland. William's victory, James's flight to France and the Treaty of Limerick in 1691 ended the former monarch's counterrevolutionary attempt to reclaim the throne and resulted in harsher Penal Laws designed to keep Roman Catholics powerless. The Protestants of Ulster, Ireland, supported William and are still called Orangemen.

Although William was an able monarch, he was unpopular among some of his subjects largely because they did not understand his foreign ways and he did not understand the English political system. He ruled jointly with his popular wife, Mary - although she only actually ruled during his absences, primarily on military expeditions - until she died from smallpox in 1694 at the age of 32. Following Mary's death, he governed alone until his death on March 19, 1702 in London, England, at the age of 51. He died of complications from injuries sustained when he was thrown off his horse. His death occurred only twenty-three days before the thirteenth anniversary of William and Mary's coronation and the establishment of the Virginia county bearing his name. In accordance with the Act of Settlement in 1701, his sister-in-law, Anne, succeeded the childless William to the throne.

More Virginia counties and cities are named, at least in part, for William than any other person. These are the County of King William, the County of King and Queen, and the City of Williamsburg. The College of William and Mary, the second oldest college in the United States, was also named after King William III and Queen Mary II, who granted it a royal charter in 1693.

Primary Sources: The World Book Encyclopedia; The Columbia Encyclopedia; The Encyclopedia of World History; and TheLearningNetwork.com.

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Year Population Change from Previous Census
Net Percentage
1790 8,123    
1800 9,055 927 11.41
1810 9,285 230 2.54
1820 9,697 412 4.44
1830 9,812 115 1.19
1840 9,258 (554) (5.65)
1850 8,779 (479) (5.17)
1860 8,530 (249) (2.84)
1870 7,515 (1,225) (12.75)
1880 8,751 1,236 16.45
1890 9,605 854 9.76
1900 8,380 (1,225) (12.75)
1910 8,547 167 1.99
1920 8,739 192 2.25
1930 7,929 (810) (9.27)
1940 7,855 (74) (0.93)
1950 7,563 (266) (3.39)
1960 7,563 (26) (0.34)
1970 7,497 (66) (0.87)
1980 9,334 1,837 24.5
1990 10,913 1,579 16.92
2000 13,146 2,233 20.46
2007 Estimate 15,315 2,169 16.5
2010 Projection 16,003 2,857 21.73

Note: Parentheses denote negative numbers or percentages.

Sources: U.S. Census Bureau; Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service, University of Virginia

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Lieutenant General Lewis Burwell "Chesty" Puller was born in West Point, Virginia, on June 26, 1898. He attended Virginia Military Institute in Lexington until he enlisted in the United States Marine Corps in August 1918 at the age of 20. He served in the Corps for 37 years, spending all but 10 of those years overseas. His service encompassed four World War II campaigns in the Pacific Theatre, the Korean War and expeditionary service in Haiti, China and Nicaragua. During World War II he fought on Guadalcanal, Eastern New Guinea, Cape Gloucester and Peleliu. His Korean War combat experience included the Inchon Landing and the Chosin Reservoir.

During his distinguished military career, General Puller won 14 personal decorations in combat plus campaign medals, unit citations and medals from foreign countries. He is the only Marine to win the Navy's highest honor for valor in combat - the Navy Cross - five times. He also was awarded the Army's highest medal, the Distinguished Service Cross. He remains the most decorated Marine in the history of the Marine Corps.

General Puller was the guest of honor or "favorite son" at King William County's 250th anniversary celebration program on April 26, 1952. He died following a long illness in Hampton, Virginia on October 11, 1971 at the age of 73. He was buried in Christchurch cemetery in Middlesex County, Virginia.

Primary Source: U.S. Marine Corps.

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