Virginia Polytechnic Institute
Lost Communities of Virginia
Lost Communities of Virginia
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Virginia's back roads and rural areas are dotted with traces of once-thriving communities. General stores, train depots, schools, churches, banks, and post offices provide intriguing details of a way of life now gone. The buildings may be empty or repurposed today, the existing community may be struggling to survive or rebuilding itself in a new and different way, but the story behind each community's original development is an interesting and important footnote to the development of Virginia and the United States.
Lost Communities of Virginia documents thirty small communities from throughout the Commonwealth that have lost their original industry, transportation mode, or way of life. Using contemporary photographs, historical information, maps, and excerpts of interviews with longtime residents of these communities, the book documents the present conditions, recalls past boom times, and explains the role of each community in regional settlement.
Author: Terri Fisher, Kirsten Sparenborg
Publisher: Virginia Polytechnic Institute
Published: 05/13/2011
Pages: 252
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 4.35lbs
Size: 10.30h x 12.29w x 1.11d
ISBN: 9780974270739
Review Citation(s):
Reference and Research Bk News 08/01/2011 pg. 90
About the Author
Terri Fisher is Outreach and Programs Coordinator at the Community Design Assistance Center at Virginia Tech, Executive Director of the Giles County Historical Society, and author of two pictorial histories of Giles County, Virginia. Kirsten Sparenborg is a member of the studio of Sottile & Sottile Urban Analysis & Design in Savannah, Georgia. She works as an artist and designer in the field of preservation in Washington, DC.
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