America: From the Beginning

Native Americans

Archeological evidence suggests that Native Americans were present in the Shenandoah Valley 11,000 years ago. Migratory tribes traveled through the region and hunted here in the ensuing centuries. Before Europeans arrived, regional bands included the Monocan, Saponi and Tutelo tribes. When Scots Irish immigrants began settling the Valley in the mid-1700s, the dominant tribes were the Iroquois Confederacy and the Shawnee.

Pioneer History

For Scots-Irish and German pioneers traveling south from Pennsylvania, the primary route though the region's rolling hills and mountains was the Great Wagon Road, which tracked a Native American footpath. The route was also called the Great Road. Scenic Route 11, a state highway which runs parallel to I-81, travels the same path today.

Innovators and Leaders

Famed surgeon Ephraim McDowell, who performed the world's first successful abdominal surgery, was born in the Lexington area in 1771. Seven miles north of Lexington beside Route 11, a slab of Texas pink granite marks the Sam Houston Wayside. Houston, born in the county in 1793, served as governor of Tennessee and Texas. A roadside marker at the Goshen Pass Wayside honors former VMI professor Matthew Fontaine Maury. Maury was a 19th-century oceanographer and mapmaker whose research revolutionized maritime navigation.


Graceful Natural Bridge was one of the most famous natural attractions in the country in the 1700s. Thomas Jefferson purchased the 215ft-high limestone arch in 1774, and his family owned it until 1833. Rockbridge County is named for this geologic landmark. Local farmer and inventor Cyrus McCormick patented the mechanical reaper in 1834. A prototype of his machine, which kick-started modern industrial farming, is displayed at McCormick Farm.

Trade and Transportation

The Maury and James Rivers were key transportation routes for the distribution of locally produced goods, which included iron, flour, and whiskey. Flat-bottomed wooden boats, called bateaux, carried these goods downriver in the 1700s.

To enable upriver travel, canal companies began building a flat-water canal system in 1851. Cargo-laden packet boats, pulled by harnessed mules along a towpath, were soon navigating the system's locks and dams, which eventually stretched from the James River to the upper reaches of the Maury.

The ruins of several locks and dams are visible from the Chessie Nature Trail, which follows the old mule towpath along the Maury River. The 7-mile trail starts at Jordan's Point, which was an important commercial hub near Lexington. Rail travel replaced the canal boats in the 1880s, and the railroad line followed sections of the towpath. The Miller’s House Museum is dedicated to interpreting the industrial & transportation history of the Lexington area.

For information about Civil War sites in Rockbridge County, see The Legacy of Great Leaders. Details about historic local figures are inscribed on sidewalk pavers scattered across downtown Lexington and listed on the Righteous & Rascals of Rockbridge website.

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