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Stafford County Case Study

Decent Essays

Before the Civil War, Stafford County was a rural area. The 1860 census indicated 8,555 people lived in the county and there were no urban areas with a population of more than 2,500 people. There were 4,922 whites and 3,633 blacks of which 3,314 were slaves. There were 476 farms in the county, fifty-one percent of farms were between 100 to 500 acres produced 148,975 pounds of tobacco as their largest crop. In addition to tobacco plantations, the 1860 manufacturing census lists seven different industries in Stafford County: blacksmithing, cooperage (barrel making), cotton goods, fisheries, flower and meal, gold mining, and lumber. Of those seven, flower and meal had ten established mills, and the annual value of the products …show more content…

Many of the families which owned land in the county left the area. The Union occupation destroyed or confiscated anything they found useful, “Nearly the whole county of Stafford has received a terrible blow, from which long years of patient toll will scarcely recover her (we may say) entire negro population, but the fencing of the county has been burnt- her horses, mules, sheep and hogs, corn and hay used as though the Federal government had a vested right in each and all. A few farmers have escaped with slightly less, but they are exceptions.” By the time the Union Army departed the county in 1863, “The scene of their occupation, which compromised the whole of Stafford County between Fredericksburg and Aquia Creek, is a barren waste. The federals have not only been felled but as if to debase future growth, the places where they grew have been burned over until not a spring of green relieves the blackened surface of the earth, and where this appearance is not presented, the fields for mile after mile resemble a race track in their trampled condition and barrenness of vegetation.” Stafford County residents did not have much of a home after the Union Army left the county. With little remaining

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