List of street namesakes: Difference between revisions

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*[[Brookwood Lane]] – unknown
*[[Brookwood Lane]] – unknown
*[[Brown Street]] – ''possibly'' Brown family, owners of the [[Rugby (house)|Rugby]] estate in 1875 or the Brown family of Brown's Cove
*[[Brown Street]] – ''possibly'' Brown family, owners of the [[Rugby (house)|Rugby]] estate in 1875 or the Brown family of Brown's Cove
*[[Bruce Avenue]] – unknown
*[[Bruce Avenue]] – ''possibly'' Dr. Philip Alexander Bruce (March 7, 1856 – August 16, 1933), widely known historian, biographer and author.
*[[Brunswick Road]] – unknown
*[[Brunswick Road]] – unknown
*[[Buckingham Road]] – [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buckingham_County,_Virginia Buckingham County, Virginia]
*[[Buckingham Road]] – [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buckingham_County,_Virginia Buckingham County, Virginia]
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*[[Flint Drive]] - unknown
*[[Flint Drive]] - unknown
*[[Florence Road]] - unknown
*[[Florence Road]] - unknown
*[[Fontaine Avenue]] - likely for William M. Fontaine. He was elected to the chair of natural history and geology at the University of Virginia in [[1879]] - a position first held by [[John Patten Emmet]] (1796–1842), namesake of [[Emmet Street]].
*[[Fontaine Avenue]] - Fontaine family, notably [[Matthew Fontaine Maury]], the famous “Pathfinder of the Seas;” William M. Fontaine, elected to the chair of natural history and geology at the University of Virginia in [[1879]] - a position first held by [[John Patten Emmet]] (1796–1842), namesake of [[Emmet Street]].
*[[Forest Hills Avenue]] - Adjacent to [[Forest Hills Park]], tree-lined area with mountain views.
*[[Forest Hills Avenue]] - Adjacent to [[Forest Hills Park]], tree-lined area with mountain views.
*[[Forest Ridge Road]] - Adjacent to [[Forest Hills Park]], tree-lined area with mountain views.
*[[Forest Ridge Road]] - Adjacent to [[Forest Hills Park]], tree-lined area with mountain views.
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*[[Garrett Street]] – [[Alexander Garrett]], who owned the "[[Oak Hill]]" plantation around the area of the street. Formerly known as Garrett's Avenue and City Line in 1877.   
*[[Garrett Street]] – [[Alexander Garrett]], who owned the "[[Oak Hill]]" plantation around the area of the street. Formerly known as Garrett's Avenue and City Line in 1877.   
*[[Gentry Lane]] – unknown
*[[Gentry Lane]] – unknown
*[[Gildersleeve Wood]] – [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basil_Lanneau_Gildersleeve Basil Lanneau Gildersleeve]. Elected professor of Greek at the University of Virginia in [[1856]], he served as aide-de-camp on the staff of Gen. Gilham, and later on that of Gen. [[J. B. Gordon]] in the Confederate Army. When the Johns Hopkins University opened in [[1876]], Gildersleeve was one of five original full professors.  An unapologetic defense of slavery during and after the Civil War, he was elected president of the American Philological Association in [[1877]] and again in [[1908]] and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters as well as of various learned societies. Father-in-law of [[Benjamin Tonsler]]; grandfather of Basil Tonsler and Gildersleeve Tonsler.  
*[[Gildersleeve Wood]] – [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basil_Lanneau_Gildersleeve Basil Lanneau Gildersleeve]. Elected professor of Greek at the University of Virginia in [[1856]], he served as aide-de-camp on the staff of Gen. Gilham, and later on that of Gen. [[J. B. Gordon]] in the Confederate Army. When the Johns Hopkins University opened in [[1876]], Gildersleeve was one of five original full professors.  An unapologetic defense of slavery during and after the Civil War, he was elected president of the American Philological Association in [[1877]] and again in [[1908]] and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters as well as of various learned societies. Considered to be the father of Fannie Gildersleeve Tonsler (wife of [[Benjamin Tonsler]]) and grandfather of Basil Tonsler and Gildersleeve Tonsler.  
*[[Gillespie Avenue]] – unknown
*[[Gillespie Avenue]] – unknown
*[[Gleason Street]] – H. M. Gleason & Sons Feed and Farm Supply Store once located at 126 [[Garrett Street]], 1873-2004.
*[[Gleason Street]] – H. M. Gleason & Sons Feed and Farm Supply Store once located at 126 [[Garrett Street]], 1873-2004.
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==(H)==
==(H)==
[[File:Holiday Inn.JPG|right|none|thumb|Holiday Inn Motel, ca. 1960]]
[[File:Holiday Inn.JPG|right|none|thumb|(Postcard) Holiday Inn Motel, ca. 1960]]
 
*[[Hammond Street]] - unknown
*[[Hammond Street]] - unknown
*[[Hampton Street]] - ''likely'' Hampton, Virginia.  
*[[Hampton Street]] - ''likely'' Hampton, Virginia.  
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*[[Jamestown Drive]] - [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamestown,_Virginia Jamestown, Virginia]. Part of a cluster of names pertaining to American history in the [[Greenbrier neighborhood]].
*[[Jamestown Drive]] - [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamestown,_Virginia Jamestown, Virginia]. Part of a cluster of names pertaining to American history in the [[Greenbrier neighborhood]].
*[[Jeanette Lancaster Way]] - Jeanette Lancaster, former Dean of Nursing at UVA
*[[Jeanette Lancaster Way]] - Jeanette Lancaster, former Dean of Nursing at UVA.
*[[E Jefferson Street|Jefferson Street]] - [[Thomas Jefferson]]
* Named for [[Thomas Jefferson]]
*[[Jefferson Park Avenue]] – [[Thomas Jefferson]], formerly known as Fry's Springs Road.
**[[Jefferson Street]]  
*[[Jefferson Park Circle]] - [[Thomas Jefferson]]
**[[Jefferson Park Avenue]], formerly known as Fry's Springs Road.
**[[Jefferson Park Circle]]
*[[John Street]] - unknown
*[[John Street]] - unknown
*[[John W Warner Parkway|John W. Warner Parkway]] - namesake of former Republican [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Warner Sen. John W. Warner], who advocated for the project in Washington D.C. and secured $27 million in federal funds its construction
*[[John Warner Parkway]] - namesake of former Republican [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Warner Sen. John W. Warner], who advocated for the project in Washington D.C. and secured $27 million in federal funds for its construction.<ref>Tubbs, Sean. "Supervisors pass resolution in support of naming Meadowcreek Parkway after John Warner." Charlottesville Tomorrow News Center. 8 Jan. 2009. <http://cvilletomorrow.typepad.com/charlottesville_tomorrow_/2009/01/board_parkway.html>.</ref>
*[[Jones Street]] - unknown
*[[Jones Street]] - unknown


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*[[Mason Street]] - unknown
*[[Mason Street]] - unknown
*[[Massie Road]] - Massie family of Spring Hill plantation<ref>Woods, E. (1901). ''Albemarle County in Virginia: giving some account of what it was by nature, of what it was made by man, and of some of the men who made it.'' Charlottesville, Va.: The Michie Company, printers. https://www.google.com/books/edition/Albemarle_County_in_Virginia/oX3hxtr5L24C?hl=en</ref>
*[[Massie Road]] - Massie family of Spring Hill plantation<ref>Woods, E. (1901). ''Albemarle County in Virginia: giving some account of what it was by nature, of what it was made by man, and of some of the men who made it.'' Charlottesville, Va.: The Michie Company, printers. https://www.google.com/books/edition/Albemarle_County_in_Virginia/oX3hxtr5L24C?hl=en</ref>
*[[Maury Avenue]] - Maury family, owners of Piedmont plantation; notable members include S. Price Maury, Jesse Lewis Maury, and Reuben Maury
*[[Maury Avenue]] - Maury family, owners of Piedmont plantation; notable members include S. Price Maury, Jesse Lewis Maury, and Reuben Maury. Possibly the Maury and Fontaine families (both Huguenot families who fled France because of religious persecution since the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes), notably [[Matthew Fontaine Maury]] the famous “Pathfinder of the Seas” and grandson of Rev. [[James Maury]], who taught science to young [[Thomas Jefferson]] in east [[Albemarle County]].
*[[Maywood Lane]] - unknown
*[[Maywood Lane]] - unknown
*[[McElroy Drive]] - unknown
*[[McElroy Drive]] - unknown
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*[[Tarleton Drive]] - presumably General [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banastre_Tarleton Banastre Tarleton]
*[[Tarleton Drive]] - presumably General [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banastre_Tarleton Banastre Tarleton]
*[[Taylor Street]] - The home of '''[[J. S. Taylor|James T. S. Taylor]]''' (1840–1918) was located at 534 NE Taylor St. In [[1863]], Taylor became one of about 240 African-Americans from Albemarle County to join the Union Army in the [[Civil War]]. During [[Reconstruction]], Taylor went on to be a county delegate at the Virginia Constitutional Convention of [[1868]].  
*[[Taylor Street]] - According to the [[1914]] City Directory, the home of '''[[J. S. Taylor|James T. S. Taylor]]''' (1840–1918) was located at 534 NE Taylor St. In [[1863]], Taylor became one of about 240 African-Americans from Albemarle County to join the Union Army in the [[Civil War]]. During [[Reconstruction]], Taylor went on to be a county delegate at the Virginia Constitutional Convention of [[1868]].  
*[[Thomas Drive]] - unknown
*[[Thomas Drive]] - unknown
*[[Thomson Road]] - unknown
*[[Thomson Road]] - unknown
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[[File:1906-Col. Charles C. Wertenbaker.JPG|thumb|400px| Colonel Wertenbaker was a Civil War veteran, having served in the [[19th Virginia Regiment]]]]
[[File:1906-Col. Charles C. Wertenbaker.JPG|thumb|400px| Colonel Wertenbaker was a Civil War veteran, having served in the [[19th Virginia Regiment]]]]


*[[West Street]] - in the neighborhood of [[10th and Page]], was named for [[John West]], a former slave. A barber by trade, over time West made a substantial return from real estate investments. His house was located in the 300 block (land is now part of the [[Westhaven]] development.) <ref>http://www.charlottesville.org/community/neighborhood-connection/10th-and-page</ref> West Street is named for an African American.<ref>http://www.c-ville.com/Rosey_homecoming/</ref>    
*[[West Street]] - in the neighborhood of [[10th and Page]], was named for [[John West]], a former slave. A barber by trade, over time West made a substantial return from real estate investments. Contrary to popular misconception, his home was on West Main Street and not on the street or on the land now occupied by Westhaven.   
*[[Westerly Avenue]] - unknown
*[[Westerly Avenue]] - unknown
*[[Westview Road]] - presumably for the view across the western portion of the 200-acre property owned by Confederate general [[Thomas L. Rosser]] and [[Elizabeth Winston Rosser]].  
*[[Westview Road]] - presumably for the view across the western portion of the 200-acre property owned by Confederate general [[Thomas L. Rosser]] and [[Elizabeth Winston Rosser]].  
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*[[Zan Road]] – unknown
*[[Zan Road]] – unknown


==Street name changes==
==Street name changes in Charlottesville==


* 33rd Street / Green Street - renamed 1st Street
* Augusta Road - renamed Rosser Lane. Constructed sometime after 1938, it appeared as Augusta Rd on the 1950 Census Enumeration Map of Charlottesville.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://catalog.archives.gov/id/51435466|title=1950 Census Enumeration District Maps - Virginia (VA) - Charlottesville City - Charlottesville - ED 104-1 to 31|last=|first=|publishdate=|publisher=US Census Bureau|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|accessdate=}}</ref> <ref>https://1950census.archives.gov/search/?county=Charlottesville&page=1&state=VA#</ref>
* 32nd Street / Church Street - renamed 2nd Street East
{| class="wikitable"
* 34th Street - renamed North 2nd Street West
|+
* Augusta Road - renamed Rosser Lane. Constructed sometime after 1938, it appeared as Augusta Rd on the 1950 Census Enumeration Map of Charlottesville.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://catalog.archives.gov/id/51435466|title=1950 Census Enumeration District Maps - Virginia (VA) - Charlottesville City - Charlottesville - ED 104-1 to 31|last=|first=|publishdate=|publisher=US Census Bureau|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|accessdate=}}</ref>
!OLD STREET NAMES
* Azalea Street - renamed to Manila Street to avoid confusion with nearby Azalea Drive
!NEW NAMES
* Belmont Avenue (Rose Hill) - now Dale Aveue
!NEW NAMES after 1828
* Carlton Avenue (Rose Hill) - now Charlton Avenue
!NEW NAMES circa 1950
*Staunton Avenue - renamed [[Chancellor Street]] after the family
!
!Notes
|-
|33rd St (Green St)
|1st St
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|-
|32nd St (Church St)
|2nd St E
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|-
|34th St
|N 2nd St W
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|-
|Augusta Rd
|Rosser Ln
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|-
|Azelea St
|Manila St
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|-
|Belmont Ave
|Dale Ave
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|Rose Hill Subdivision
|-
|Carlton Ave
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|Charlton Ave
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|Rose Hill Subdivision
|-
|Staunton Ave
|Chancellor St
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|Whitehall Rd
|Preston Ave
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|Forrest St
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|Forest St
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|Court St
|5th St NE
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|County Rd
|6th St NE
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|-
|North St (Maiden Ln)
|
|High St
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|-
|Livers Road
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|Hessian Rd
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|-
|Union St
|4th St NE
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|-
|School St
|3rd St NE
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|-
|Church St
|2nd St NE
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|Green St
|1st St NE
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|Hill St
|2nd St NW
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|Free Bridge Rd
|E High St
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|}


==Extinct streets==
==Extinct streets==
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*Cabell Street – parallel to Lee Street, removed by Pinn Hall at UVA Medical Center
*Cabell Street – parallel to Lee Street, removed by Pinn Hall at UVA Medical Center
*Diggs - removed with the development of Garrett Square (now Friendship Court) (Sanborn Maps)
*Diggs - removed with the development of Garrett Square (now Friendship Court) (Sanborn Maps)
*Digges - ran from South First, west to Ridge St
*Fuller Avenue - renamed as part of Monticello Avenue, when Monticello was "redirected" to continue west instead of turning north on what is now Avon Street (Sanborn Maps)
*Fuller Avenue - renamed as part of Monticello Avenue, when Monticello was "redirected" to continue west instead of turning north on what is now Avon Street (Sanborn Maps)
*Indian Run - ca. 1950; undeveloped street between Spottswood Rd and Pine Top Rd.
*Johnny Cake Ln - ca. 1950; undeveloped street between Hessian Rd and Spottswood Rd.
*McKee - North from Jefferson to High, first east of 4th N E
*McKee - North from Jefferson to High, first east of 4th N E
*Loudoun Road (ca. 1964) – (undeveloped street between Lewis Mountain and Thomson roads)<ref>https://v3.lib.virginia.edu/catalog/uva-lib:2681176/view#openLayer/uva-lib:2681197/3799.5/4438.5/4/1/0</ref>
*Loudoun Road (ca. 1964) – (undeveloped street between Lewis Mountain and Thomson roads)<ref>https://v3.lib.virginia.edu/catalog/uva-lib:2681176/view#openLayer/uva-lib:2681197/3799.5/4438.5/4/1/0</ref>
*Lyman's Row - ran from C&O depot, east to city limits
*Lutheran Lane - ran from Dice St south to Oak St
*Park Place Avenue – perpendicular to Lee Street, removed by Pinn Hall at UVA Medical Center
*Park Place Avenue – perpendicular to Lee Street, removed by Pinn Hall at UVA Medical Center
*Parrot - removed with the development of Garrett Square (now Friendship Court) (Sanborn Maps)
*Parrot - removed with the development of Garrett Square (now Friendship Court) (Sanborn Maps)

Revision as of 23:12, 27 April 2022

The following is a list of streets in City of Charlottesville and where there names are derived from.

Many of the names of these streets can be found on historic maps of Charlottesville.

Guide to streets

The system of numbering the streets is somewhat similar to the Washington plan. Each block represents 100 numbers, whether heading east, west, north or south. The city is divided into four sections.[1]

Fifth – South of 500 W Main Street
First – North of East Main and East of North First, or Northeast
Second – South of East Main and east of South First, or Southeast
Third – North of West Main and west of North First, or Northwest
Fourth – South from 402 West Main
Sixth-and-a-Half – South from 606 Dice
Seventh-and-a-Half – South from 620 Dice
Main – The dividing line between north and south streets, runs east from First to C & O Lower Depot and west from First to University. The main Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad Station, being located under the present day Belmont Bridge.
First – The dividing line between east and west streets, runs north and south from Main to city limits.

From the book The Code of the City of Charlottesville, Virginia (1909) "General Ordinances" chapter:[2]

Sec. 148. Numbering and naming streets.

Main Street shall be the east and west line from which all houses and lot numbers shall be counted, those to the north of Main Street, as north, and those to the south of Main Street, as south.

All streets maintaining comparative parallelism with Main Street shall retain their present names. The meridian street shall be Thirty-Third or Green Street, but shall be known as North First or South First Street, as indicated by its position north or south of Main Street.

What is known as Thirty-Second or Church Street north of Main Street shall be known as North Second Street East, its continuation south of Main Street, as South Second Street East. What is now known as Thirty-Fourth Street, shall be known as North Second Street West or South Second Street West, as the case may be.

Whether one goes east or west, the streets running so as to intersect Main, actually or by supposed extension shall be known by the natural numbers increasing in either direction from the meridian at First Street, save in the matter of Park and Ridge Streets.

(A)

Edwin Anderson Alderman, ca. 1906

(B)

In 1919, Stewart Fuller lived on Booker Street with his parents, Stewart & Alberta Douglas Fuller.
Robert Nicholas Burgess (1839 – 1911) born in Albemarle County, served in the Confederate States army from 1861 to 1865 in Company I, Forty-Sixth Virginia Regiment. He began farming immediately upon his return from the army and continued as a farmer and overseer in Albemarle County until April 1881, when he moved to Charlottesville and accepted a position as policeman;
John Anderson Burgess (1873-1948), moved to Charlottesville in 1898. 1890 opened general contractor business at 401-403 E Market Street; employed 20 painters, paper hangers, carpenters (residence listed as Woolen Mills Road, ca. 1914)

(C)

Chancellor's Drug Store at The Corner
Albemarle County Court House. Located at the corner of Jefferson and Park St., this photograph actually shows the portion built in 1859-60. The rear, or north wing, dates to 1803. Source: Albemarle Historical Society
  • Court Square – Courthouse House Square, historical term refers to the square in the middle of a town where the county courthouse is located.
Albemarle Creamery Co. located at 709 Brown Street, ca. 1914; J. B. Andrews, pres, H. F. Wilde sec. and mgr.

(D)

The March 1909 edition of The Druid, the magazine published by the Ancient Order of Druids.
  • Druid Avenue - referring to the Druids from Celtic culture; parallel to Stonehenge Avenue and Rockland Avenue, all of which lead to the now-abandoned quarry where Quarry Park is now; parallel with Stonehenge Avenue, it is part of a group of themed streets in the Belmont-Carlton neighborhood carrying names associated with the Ancient Order of Druids. Sir Edmund Antrobus, 4th Baronet, owner of Stonehenge (1848-1915). In 1905, he was initiated into the Ancient Order of Druids and welcomed the first massive ceremony of this Order in Stonehenge.
  • Dublin Road - likely Dublin, Ireland
  • Duke Street - likely the Duke family, notably R. T. W. Duke, Sr. and R. T. W. Duke, Jr.
  • Dunova Court - unknown

(E)

(F)

(G)

(H)

(Postcard) Holiday Inn Motel, ca. 1960

(I)

(J)

(K)

(L)

(M)

(N)

(O)

(P)

View of Pen Park Plantation House, ca. 1897. In 1777, Dr. George Gilmer purchased the land and his family owned it until 1800. Originally the estate consisted of four thousand acres; by 1897 all had been sold off save the six hundred acres immediately about the house.

(Q)

(R)

(S)

(T)

(U)

(V)

(W)

Colonel Wertenbaker was a Civil War veteran, having served in the 19th Virginia Regiment

(Y)

(Z)

Street name changes in Charlottesville

  • Augusta Road - renamed Rosser Lane. Constructed sometime after 1938, it appeared as Augusta Rd on the 1950 Census Enumeration Map of Charlottesville.[17] [18]
OLD STREET NAMES NEW NAMES NEW NAMES after 1828 NEW NAMES circa 1950 Notes
33rd St (Green St) 1st St
32nd St (Church St) 2nd St E
34th St N 2nd St W
Augusta Rd Rosser Ln
Azelea St Manila St
Belmont Ave Dale Ave Rose Hill Subdivision
Carlton Ave Charlton Ave Rose Hill Subdivision
Staunton Ave Chancellor St
Whitehall Rd Preston Ave
Forrest St Forest St
Court St 5th St NE
County Rd 6th St NE
North St (Maiden Ln) High St
Livers Road Hessian Rd
Union St 4th St NE
School St 3rd St NE
Church St 2nd St NE
Green St 1st St NE
Hill St 2nd St NW
Free Bridge Rd E High St

Extinct streets

  • Alphanso Street – ran north from Williams Street to Preston W first east of 10th NW
  • Apple Street – West of 601 Ridge Street
  • Cabell Street – parallel to Lee Street, removed by Pinn Hall at UVA Medical Center
  • Diggs - removed with the development of Garrett Square (now Friendship Court) (Sanborn Maps)
  • Digges - ran from South First, west to Ridge St
  • Fuller Avenue - renamed as part of Monticello Avenue, when Monticello was "redirected" to continue west instead of turning north on what is now Avon Street (Sanborn Maps)
  • Indian Run - ca. 1950; undeveloped street between Spottswood Rd and Pine Top Rd.
  • Johnny Cake Ln - ca. 1950; undeveloped street between Hessian Rd and Spottswood Rd.
  • McKee - North from Jefferson to High, first east of 4th N E
  • Loudoun Road (ca. 1964) – (undeveloped street between Lewis Mountain and Thomson roads)[19]
  • Lyman's Row - ran from C&O depot, east to city limits
  • Lutheran Lane - ran from Dice St south to Oak St
  • Park Place Avenue – perpendicular to Lee Street, removed by Pinn Hall at UVA Medical Center
  • Parrot - removed with the development of Garrett Square (now Friendship Court) (Sanborn Maps)
  • Randall Street – parallel to Lee Street, removed by Pinn Hall at UVA Medical Center
  • Williams Street - on Sanborn Maps
  • Wyndhurst Circle and Wyndhurst Way, ca. 1920; precursors to the present-day Preston Place.[20]

References

  1. https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x000196692&view=1up&seq=33
  2. Charlottesville (Va.), et al. The Code of the City of Charlottesville, Virginia: Containing the Charter As Amended and Re-enacted As a Whole (approved March 14, 1908), the Constitutional and Legislative Provisions of the State Relating to Cities, and the General Ordinances of the City Enacted As a Whole August 6th, 1909, In Effect September 1st, 1909. Michie Co, 1909.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Massie, Frank A., and Virginia School Company. A New and Historical Map of Albemarle County, Virginia. Owned and published by the Virginia School Company, 1907. https://search.lib.virginia.edu/sources/maps/items/u2716440
  4. Web. Albemarle County In Virginia, Rev. Edgar Woods, The Michie Company, Printers, 1901, retrieved May 7, 2019.
  5. Web. The Cabell Family, University of Virginia Special Collections Library, 2018
  6. https://news.virginia.edu/content/do-you-know-history-your-favorite-corner-spots
  7. Sheridan R. Barringer, Custer's Gray Rival, (Burlington, NC, 2019), 249.
  8. Web. Kenneth R. Crispell, 79, Dean And Health Expert on Presidents, New York Times, Aug. 26, 1996, retrieved 2020-10-14.
  9. Web. [1]
  10. https://uvamagazine.org/articles/the_golden_age_of_the_rooming_house_matrons
  11. Tubbs, Sean. "Supervisors pass resolution in support of naming Meadowcreek Parkway after John Warner." Charlottesville Tomorrow News Center. 8 Jan. 2009. <http://cvilletomorrow.typepad.com/charlottesville_tomorrow_/2009/01/board_parkway.html>.
  12. Web. [2]
  13. Woods, E. (1901). Albemarle County in Virginia: giving some account of what it was by nature, of what it was made by man, and of some of the men who made it. Charlottesville, Va.: The Michie Company, printers. https://www.google.com/books/edition/Albemarle_County_in_Virginia/oX3hxtr5L24C?hl=en
  14. http://www2.vcdh.virginia.edu/lewisandclark/students/projects/homesteads/genealogy/meriwethers.html
  15. http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaxtf/view?query=Roslyn&docId=uva-sc%2Fviu03696.xml&chunk.id=
  16. https://www.dhr.virginia.gov/historic-registers/104-0136/
  17. Web. 1950 Census Enumeration District Maps - Virginia (VA) - Charlottesville City - Charlottesville - ED 104-1 to 31, US Census Bureau
  18. https://1950census.archives.gov/search/?county=Charlottesville&page=1&state=VA#
  19. https://v3.lib.virginia.edu/catalog/uva-lib:2681176/view#openLayer/uva-lib:2681197/3799.5/4438.5/4/1/0
  20. https://www.dhr.virginia.gov/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/104-0048_Wyndhurst_2018_NR_Summary_Proposed_Relocation.pdf

External Links