Virginia Geography
Jamestown Settlement
Colonial Life
Revolutionary Era
Civil War and Beyond
100

This region is characterized by flat land located near the Atlantic Ocean and Chesapeake Bay

Coastal Plain

100

Jamestown was founded in this year

1607

100

This cash crop became the primary source of wealth for the Virginia colony.

tobacco

100

He was the primary author of the U.S. Constitution and is known as the "Father of the Constitution".

James Madison

100

This African American woman served as a spy in the Confederate White House for the Union.

Mary Bowser

200

This piece of land is a flat, low-lying peninsula located east of the Chesapeake Bay.

Eastern Shore

200

This document from the King of England gave the Virginia Company the right to establish a colony.

Virginia Company of London Charter

200

This group of people was brought to the colony against their will to provide labor for plantations.

Enslaved African Americans

200

This Virginian wrote the Virginia Declaration of Rights.

George Mason

200

These laws were designed to enforce racial segregation and limit the rights of African Americans

Jim Crow laws

300

This region features old, rounded mountains and is the source of many rivers.

Blue Ridge Mountains

300

This important Indigenous leader lived in the village of Werowocomoco.


Chief Powhatan

300

This group of Indigenous people primarily spoke the Siouan language and lived in this region

Piedmont region

300

Thomas Jefferson wrote this document, which served as the basis for the First Amendment.

Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom

300

This 1896 Supreme Court case upheld the "separate but equal" doctrine.

Plessy v. Ferguson

400

 To travel westward, early settlers crossed the Appalachian Mountains through this specific gap.

Cumberland Gap

400

Settlers moved the capital from Jamestown to this city in 1699 to find cleaner living conditions.

Williamsburg

400

This tribe spoke Algonquian and was mostly in the Coastal Plain Region

Powhatan

400

This Virginian served as the Commander-in-Chief of the Continental Army and the first U.S. President.

George Washington

400

This organization provided schools, legal assistance, and healthcare to freedmen after the Civil War

Freedmen’s Bureau

500

This geographic feature separates the Tidewater and Piedmont regions where waterfalls prevent further travel upriver.

Fall Line

500

The arrival of this group of people in 1619 allowed for families and a more permanent settlement

Women

500

This season native Americans would have harvested crops

fall

500

These colonists remained loyal to Great Britain and faced risks like loss of property and physical attacks.

Loyalists

500

This Virginian refused to give up her seat on a bus in 1944, years before the modern Civil Rights Movement.



Irene Morgan