A Guide to the Black Section of Union Cemetery, Waterford, VA, 2003
A Collection in the
Thomas Balch Library
Collection Number SC 0006
Thomas Balch Library
Thomas Balch Library208 West Market Street
Leesburg, Virginia 20176
USA
Phone: (703) 737-7195
Fax: (703) 737-7195
Email: balchlib@leesburgva.gov
URL: http://www.leesburgva.gov/departments/thomas-balch-library/
© 2006 By Thomas Balch Library. All rights reserved.
Processed by: Rebecca Ottinger
Administrative Information
Access Restrictions
Open for research
Use Restrictions
No physical characteristics affect use of this material.
Preferred Citation
Black Section of Union Cemetery, Waterford, VA (SC 0006), Thomas Balch Library, Leesburg, VA.
Acquisition Information
Adam Anderson, Lovettsville, VA
Alternative Form Available
None
Accruals
2004.0059
Processing Information
Processed by Rebecca Ottinger, 5 June 2006
Historical Information
Waterford, Virginia was founded by Quakers who moved from Pennsylvania. Although Quakers did not believe in slavery, the Union Cemetery in Waterford laid out in the early nineteenth century was strictly segregated.
The "black section," located at the rear of the cemetery has some fine marble headstones, but many graves are marked with field stones. The wooden markers sometimes used have rotted away, leaving gaps in the rows of graves. Much of the cemetery has fallen into disrepair and many of the headstones (or footstones) have become almost unreadable. The graves of seven individuals not previously documented were found in section 1.
Scope and Content
The collection contains the results of research performed by Adam Anderson as an Eagle Scout Service Project in 2003. The purpose of the project was to map the "black section" of Union Cemetery in Waterford, VA and to record the information inscribed on the tombstones.
Graves showed births from 1776 and deaths until 1941
Related Material
Thomas Balch Library Cemetery Database
Other Finding Aid
None