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Advancing Landscape Preservation and Interpretation at Chatham Manor

Plants and flowers grow in garden beds on both sides of a walkway, leading to a brick wall and fields beyond
Designed garden at Chatham Manor. The surrounding agricultural fields are visible beyond the wall.

NPS

The National Park Service documents properties that are new to NPS administration, as well as places that have been part of the National Park System for decades. Understanding the significance of these resources is part of planning for their care and sharing their history. Often this landscape significance is related to the reason that the park was established, but it can also incorporate new research or information about the lives and activities in a place over time

Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park was established on February 14, 1927 and transferred from the War Department to the NPS in 1933. The Chatham Manor property was added later, between 1964 and 1978.

View from a high point across a river bordered by leafy trees to a small town under a cloudy sky.
Fredericksburg across the Rappahannock River from Chatham Manor. Starting in 1768, William Fitzhugh operated a plantation on the Chatham Manor landscape, which prospered under enslaved labor and the connection to the young town of Fredericksburg. The plantation continued under several owners until the Civil War.

NPS / Mary O'Neill

The Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park was listed in the National Register in 1966 (with the passage of the National Historic Preservation Act) and approved in 1978. Chatham Manor was identified in that documentation for its use as the headquarters for several Union generals during the Civil War, a hospital, and the site of an early field telegraph relay station. It was also noted for its architectural style.

Since then, efforts have been made to revise the 1978 National Register documentation to address recently-added park property and more thoroughly document the resources and areas of significance. This expansion identified the park and landscape’s role in Civil War commemoration efforts, federal battlefield park development, the work of the Civilian Conservation Corps in the 1930s, and landscape architecture, particularly the 1920s Colonial Revival design of the Chatham Manor formal garden by landscape architect Ellen Shipman. The overall period of significance in the 2016 National Register nomination update begins in 1768 with the construction of Chatham Manor, and ends in 1965, the 100th anniversary of the end of the Civil War.

A labeled site plan shows features of the agricultural landscape around Chatham Manor in 1931.
The 1931 Period Plan in the Chatham Manor Cultural Landscape Report identifies significant features of the landscape at that time.

NPS / Olmsted Center for Landscape Preservation

When locations and features are identified as contributing resources at Chatham Manor, it establishes their importance to the park’s areas of historic significance and helps to create the pathway for their preservation. A Cultural Landscape Report for Chatham Manor was published in 2019. The landscape that visitors experience when they visit Chatham Manor today reflects this expanded documentation. In addition to the Georgian style main house and connections to Civil War history, the surrounding landscape contains evidence of the agrarian and industrial economy of antebellum Virginia and the lives of the enslaved and free people who lived there.

Even with the additional documentation in the updated National Register nomination, there is opportunity to expand the investigation of post-war commemorative activities and the roles of African Americans at Chatham Manor during and after the war. This includes additional archeological work to better understand the lives of enslaved people at Chatham.

These recommendations and updates at Chatham Manor demonstrate how National Register documentation is a tool in landscape preservation, but it’s not the final decision. Even at a park that has been part of the NPS since 1933, the preservation focus can be adjusted as more is discovered about the landscape.


Related Documentation

National Register of Historic Places

Cultural Landscape Reports

Period of Significance

  • 1768 - 1965

Part of a series of articles titled Overview of Cultural Landscape and National Register Documentation.

Fredericksburg & Spotsylvania National Military Park

Last updated: December 19, 2023