National Valley Bank

The influence of the Neoclassical Revival on America’s Main Street is well demonstrated in the façade of the National Valley Bank. Inspired by the triumphal arches of ancient Rome, the […]

Beverley Historic District

The Beverley Historic District includes approximately 150 buildings in some eleven blocks of downtown Staunton. Although the area was part of the mid-18th-century settlement founded on the land of William […]

Falmouth Historic District

Laid out in 1727 in Stafford County at the falls of the Rappahannock, across the river from the city of Fredericksburg, Falmouth was a prosperous port and regional trading center […]

Andrews Tavern

Andrews Tavern in Spotsylvania County has served at various times as an ordinary, a school, a polling place, and a residence. The brick portion was built for Samuel Andrews soon […]

R. T. Greer and Co. Building

From the early 1900s until 1968, R. T. Greer and Co. was the Appalachian region’s leading dealer in medicinal plant materials. The business was founded in 1904 in the Smyth […]

Hotel Lincoln

Designed by Eubank and Caldwell of Roanoke, the Hotel Lincoln in the Smyth County town of Marion was completed in 1927 and is one of Southwest Virginia’s few early-20th-century hotels […]

Woodstock Historic District

Woodstock’s rich and varied collection of residential, commercial, and church buildings reflects the evolution of this Shenandoah Valley linear community over more than two centuries. Established in 1761, Woodstock boasts […]

Strasburg Historic District

Strasburg was an important focus of early migration in the Valley of Virginia. Founded in 1749, the Shenandoah County town was settled exclusively by Germans, most of whom came from […]

Mount Jackson Historic District

Originally known as Mount Pleasant, the town of Mount Jackson was established in 1826 and later named for Andrew Jackson. The Shenandoah County community prospered as a commercial, milling and […]

New Market Historic District

New Market in Shenandoah County, originally called Cross Roads, is one of western Virginia’s best-preserved historic linear towns. The site was selected by John Sevier, later governor of Tennessee, who […]