Aquia Episcopal Church, Stafford, VA Established 1667

Aquia Landing in 1861 when the Confederates still controlled it.
This 1864 photograph shows the supply landing for the U.S. Army Quartermaster with the Richmond, Fredericksburg, Potomac railroad tracks leading up to the landing and sailing ships in the distance. This was a strategic coordination for the Union Army to move troops, food, clothing, arms and other equipment to the army in the field.
The attack upon the batteries at the entrance of Aquia Creek, Potomac River, by the United States Vessels, “Pawnee,” “Yankee,” “Thomas Freeborn,” “Anacosta,” and “Resolute,” June 1st 1861
Action between U.S. Sloop Pawnee and Gunboat Thomas Freeborn and the rebel batteries at Aquia Creek June 1st 1861. Shows Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac Railroad Depot and Long Dock.
  • Charles McCally of Company F, 5th Texas Infantry
  • Benjamin Wickliffe Bristow of Company C, 5th Texas Infantry
  • George W. Starnes of Company F, 5th Texas Infantry
  • George Julian Robinson of Company A, 5th Texas Infantry (who carved only his initials, GJR)
  • Charles Wilson Van Epps of Company A, 9th New York Cavalry
  • Benjamin Dull of Company G, 17th Pennsylvania Cavalry
  • Peter Pass of Company G, 17th Pennsylvania Cavalry
  • H. Smith of the 21st New Jersey Infantry (there are 3 possible authors of that graffiti, Henry, Henry C. and Humphrey)
  • William Albert Jellison of Company H, 6th Maine Infantry


Peter HedgmanBenjamin Strother
John MercerThos. Fitzhugh
John LeePeter Daniel, Warden
Mat DoniphanTravers Cook, Warden
Henry TylerJohn Fitzhugh
William MountjoyJohn Peyton
Gen. Fitzhugh LeeGeo. V. Moncure
Wm. E. Moncure, Warden.Hugh Adie
R. C. L. Moncure, WardenN. W. Ford
Powhatan MoncureE. A. W. Hore
Col. Thomas WallerBenjamin A. Bell
Jas. AshbyWalter Bozzell
Powhatan MoncureSec’y and Treas
Hugh AdieE. D. Moncure
Geo. V. Moncure, Jr.Frank Blackburn
Geo. V. Moncure, Sr.R. Minor Moncure
J. M. AshbyWm. P. Patterson
R. A. Moncure 


During the Civil War in November 1862, White Oak Church became the center, for seven months, of an encampment of the Army of the Potomac. Around 20,000 soldiers of the VI Corps camped in the immediate area. At this time, the church served as a military hospital, a United States Christian Commission station, and as a photographic studio.
Union Church on Hill, Falmouth, Stafford County, Virginia between 1927-29
  1. Historic Resources Survey Stafford County Virginia – Stafford County Planning Department and Virginia Department of Historic Resources – Page 38 ↩︎
  2. “Colonial Churches in the Original Colony of Virginia”, Publ. 1908. By the Rev. John Moncure, D. D. ↩︎
  3. “Colonial Churches in the Original Colony of Virginia”, Publ. 1908. By the Rev. John Moncure, D. D. ↩︎
  4. An advertisement that appeared in the Virginia Gazette of June 6, 1751. ↩︎
  5. The contract to build Aquia Church was awarded to Mourning Richards of Drysdale Parish, King and Queen County, master builder and architect.  The unfortunate accident befell the new church as it neared completion is recorded in the Virginia Gazette of March 21, 1755 ↩︎
  6. Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom ↩︎
  7. Historic Resources Survey Report of Stafford County June 1992 TRACERIES Page 39 ↩︎
  8. Virginia Statute for Establishing Religious Freedom (1786) ↩︎
  9. The Disestablishment of the Church of Virginia – Aquia Episcopal Church Website ↩︎
  10. Holmes, David L. The Decline and Revival of the Church of Virginia Up from Independence: The Episcopal Church in Virginia, The Interdiocesan Bicentennial Committee of the Virginias, Orange, Virginia, 1976, p 57. ↩︎
  11. Historic Resources Survey Report of Stafford County June 1992 TRACERIES Page 39 ↩︎
  12. Historic Resources Survey Report of Stafford County June 1992 TRACERIES Page 33 ↩︎
  13. Historic Resources Survey Report of Stafford County June 1992 TRACERIES Page 34 ↩︎
  14. Historic Resources Survey Report of Stafford County June 1992 TRACERIES Page 34 ↩︎
  15. Mover, H. P. History of the Seventeenth regiment, Pa. volunteer cavalry or one hundred and sixty-second in line of Pa. volunteer regiments, war to suppress the rebellion, 1861-1865, Sowers Printing Company, Lebanon, PA, page 34. ↩︎
  16. Everett, Donald E. Chaplain Davis and Hood’s Texas Brigade, LSU Press, Apr 1, 1999, pg 47. ↩︎
  17. Everett, Donald E. Chaplain Davis and Hood’s Texas Brigade, LSU Press, Apr 1, 1999, pg 49.
    ↩︎
  18. Everett, Donald E. Chaplain Davis and Hood’s Texas Brigade, LSU Press, Apr 1, 1999, pg 54. ↩︎
  19. Conway, Moncure Daniel Autobiography: Memories and Experiences of Moncure Daniel Conway, Volume 1 Houghton, Mifflin, The Riverside Press, Cambridge, 1905, p 17. ↩︎
  20. National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet – Aquia Church Section 7 Page 3 ↩︎

2 Comments Add yours

  1. Ivana C Nazar O's avatar Ivana C Nazar O says:

    I

    Like

  2. I love your blog, David and Mary.

    Like

Leave a comment