Yancey Mills Real Estate
Yancey
Mills/Hillsboro History
The present village of Yancey Mills was formerly known
as Hillsboro.
References to Yancey Mills or Yancey's Mills which
predate about 1875 usually refer to a community located about a mile west of Hillsboio along present U.S.
250.
This first Yancey Mills was named for Charles Yancey,
who operated a mill, distillery and tannery at this location.
Hillsboro gradually became known as Yancey Mills when
the Yancey Mills post office was moved to Hillsboro in the last quarter of the nineteenth
century.
Although the post office is no longer operating, the
surrounding community has retained the name of Yancey Mills.
EARLY SETTLEMENT (1607-1750); COLONY TO NATION
(1750-1789)
Few communities in Albemarle County are as closely
linked with road transportation as Hillsboro/Yancey Mills.
One of the earliest roads in the county ran eastward
from Rockfish Gap in the Blue Ridge, through the Yancey Mills area, and on to the Mechum's River Depot
area.
It was first authorized by a road order dating to 1748,
only four years after Albemarle County was formed.
At Mechum’s River the road joined the Three Notch’d
Road, which ran west from Richmond to the Blue Ridge.
The village of Hillsboro (now Yancey Mills) stands on
land along the upper length of Mechum's River acquired by the Barksdale family, especially Jonathan Barksdale
(d. 1831).
Some of the Barksdale lands may have been purchased by
his father, William Barksdale between 1765 and his death in 1796.
The road from Rockfish Gap ran directly through the
present community of Hillsboro/Yancey Mills and encouraged the movement of settlers and businesses to this
area.
Called the Rockfish Road, the Rockfish Gap Road or the
old Staunton Road, this road was incorporated into the Rivanna and Rockfish Gap Turnpike in the early
nineteenth century.
The road leading northward from Hillsboro toward Crozet,
today's Route 684, is referred to as Buck Mountain Road in some nineteenth-century deeds.
It is not clear how early this extension of the early
Buck Mountain Road came into use.
Taverns and ordinaries were an essential featgre of the
transportation system in Albemarle County during this period.
Several taverns are known to have been built in the
Hillsboro/Yancey Mills vicinity during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
Black's Tavern, located one mile west of
Hillsboro/Yancey Mills along present U.S. 250, is said to date from the 1760s.
A two-story frame house, long known during the
nineteenth century as Yancey's Tavern, stands on the south side of present Route 749 in Yancey
Mills.
It may date from as early as 1800.
As happened in other parts of the county, the original
Yancey Mill village grew up around a grist mill. Hugh Alexander built a mill on Stockton Creek "not far from
the foot of the hill west of Hillsboro" sometime during the eighteenth century.
This mill was probably located along present U.S. 250
near the house now known as the Cedars between Greenwood and Hillsboro/Yancey Mills.
This mill later was called Keye's Mill and still later,
Humphrey's Mill.. It was "at one time ... a noted centre in that section; roads were made to it from every
quarter.".
This mill was probably the same, or at least on the same
site, as that later owned by the Yancey family.
EARLY NATIONAL PERIOD
(1789-1830)
A post office was established at Keye's Mill around
1804.
Salma Keys was appointed its first postmaster in July
1804. For a brief period this community was called Keys' Mills in postal records.
One source says the name of the post office was changed
to Yancey's Mills in November 1813.
Hall reported Yancey's Mills listed in postal
directories beginning in 1805 through 1859 and beyond.
Yancey Mills is named for Charles Yancey, who operated a
tavern, store, mill and distillery in the early years of the nineteenth century (this has no relation to the
previously mentioned Yancey Tavern, which was operated by a different Yancey somewhat later in the nineteenth
century).
Charles Yancey's enterprise was also known as May's
Tavern and, after 1827, as Cocke's Tavern.
Some sources say these enterprises were operated by a
Robert Yancey.
The site of the mill and tavern was on the south side of
U.S. Route 250, just east of the historic building now called "Long House" and across the road from the
Cedars.
Presumably the Charles Yancey mill was the same one
formerly called Keys or Keyes's mill.
Both Hillsboro and Yancey Mills grew rapidly during this
period.
Mount Pleasant Methodist Church was built in 1828 on a
hill "three or four hundred yards west" of Hillsboro.
Thomas Bowen purchased the old Isaac Hardin property
near Greenwood in 1837.
He taught school in a building next to this church when
he first came to the county.
Construction began on the Rivanna and Rockfish Gap
Turnpike in 1829.
This toll road connected Brook's Tavern at the foot of
Afton Mountain with several shipping points on the Rivanna.
It followed the routes of the former Rockfish and Three
Notch'd roads through Charlottesville and on to Meriwether's Bridge across the Rivanna at the Woolen
Mills.
The turnpike stimulated further growth in both Yancey
Mills.
ANTEBELLUM PERIOD
(1830-1860)
The antebellum period was characterized by increased
economic activity in both Yancey Mills and Hillsboro, due in large part to road traffic along the
turnpike.
In 1835, the community of Yancey Mills is described as
being on the Rivanna and Rockfish Gap Turnpike "between Charlottesville and Staunton, 16 miles from the
former, and 24 from the latter....
It contains a tavern, one mercantile store and a
blacksmith shop.
Liberty Meetinghouse, in the neighborhood is free for
all denominations (Martin 1835: 126).
There was, however, no mention of the community of
Hillsboro, and this description should be applied to the earlier location of Yancey's Mills.
Several buildings still standing in Hillsboro (now
Yancey Mills) date from the antebellum period, although most have been added onto over their
history.
The original part of the building now known as the Green
Teapot Hotel probably dates from the 1830s.
The log portion of the Apperson-Boswell House also dates
from the 1830s, and is a rare example of log domestic architecture in this part of the
county.
A small house standing on U.S. Route 250 just east of
the present village of Yancey Mills, may also be log and appears to date from the antebellum
period.
In October 1839, Hillsboro Baptist Church was founded at
its present location, although the current church building dates from 1905.
It replaced the original church destroyed by
fire.
Hillsboro Church was an important focus for the
community throughout the nineteenth century.
Among the residents known to have lived in Hillsboro
during the antebellum period is Peter McGehee, who was a merchant in Hillsboro for a time and Addison Gentry,
who taught a school for girls near the village.
The railroad arrived in western Albemarle County in the
1850s, drastically changing the transportation patterns in this area.
Traffic along the Rivanna and Rockfish Turnpike declined
sharply, as farmers turned to the cheaper and quicker service offered by the railroad.
In 1857, the turnpike was sold to Albemarle County,
which administered it for the rest of the century.
CIVIL WAR (1860-1865)
Relatively little military action occurred in either the
Hillsboro/Yancey Mills area or Albemarle County during the Civil War.
Hillsboro supplied men for its own company on the
Confederate side.
Men from Hillsboro made up Company K, the "Blue Ridge
Rifles," one of ten companies which brought the 19th Virginia Regiment to full strength.
(A company averaged eighty-three men).
Company K was mustered into service in late May of
1861.
RECONSTRUCTION AND GROWTH
(1865-1914)
A comparison of the two maps of Albemarle County
published in 1866 and 1875 illustrates the shift of population and economic activity from Yancey Mills to
Hillsboro, with the latter appropriating the former's name by the 1870s or 1880s.
The 1866 Hotchkiss map of Albemarle County shows both
Hillsboro and the postal village called "Yancey's Mills" located one mile west, next to "Cox's
Tavern."
The 1875 Peyton map indicates about thirteen buildings
clustered along the road at Hillsboro.
The church shown at this location is Hillsboro Baptist
Church. Neither the former community of Yancey Mills or the gristmill are shown on this later
map.
Sometime between 1875 and 1885, the post office was
moved from its location at the old Yancey Mills to Hillsboro.
To avoid confusion with the town of Hillsboro in Loudoun
County, the post office retained the name of Yancey Mills.
Chataigne's gazetteer of 1884-85 lists four general
merchants, one florist, one corn mill and one wool dealer in Yancey Mills as well as twenty-six principal
farmers in the surrounding countryside .
Because Yancey Mills was bypassed by the railroad in the
nineteenth century, the town grew little in the period between the Civil War and the early
1900s.
By 1911, the village's population was estimated at
twenty-five.
One nearby resident described Yancey Mills in the early
years of the twentieth century as "a quiet spot ... with only a few houses, a church, a country store and an
inn on one village street".
Several older houses in Yancey Mills were remodeled
during this period.
A few houses, such as the Monger House and the Brown
House were built in the first decade of the twentieth century.
The local Masonic lodge built a hall across from the
Hillsboro Baptist Church sometime around 1910 which was used for other local gatherings as
well.
It is now owned by the Veterans of Foreign
Wars.
Even though late nineteenth-century gazetteers referred
to the village as Yancey Mills, the name of Hillsboro continued in use for some time, undoubtedly causing
confusion.
In providing directions for motorists, the 1908
Automobile Blue Book refers to "Hillsbury," meaning Hillsboro, with no mention of the name Yancey
Mills.
WORLD WAR I TO WORLD WAR II
(1914-1945)
The automobile brought numerous changes to Yancey
Mills.
The present U. S. Route 250 was is the result of highway
department efforts to bypass communities with new highways.
At Yancey Mills, this occurred between 1932 and
1948.
Automobile tourism also increased in this area in the
1920s, as visitors traveled to the area's numerous historic monuments and scenic - beauty
spots.
During the 1920s, a house in the village was converted
to an inn or guesthouse called the Green Teapot.
It was operated by two sisters from Philadelphia and the
inn gained a reputation for its fine food and international clientele, among them several artists, actors, and
writers.
The Dutch Garden Restaurant and Motel was another local
landmark.
The establishment was opened and operated by a Dutchman
in the 1920s and continued in business until he returned to Holland during World War II.
The three frame tourist cabins to the rear of the
restaurant are among the earliest associated with the automobile era in Albemarle County.
Most of the houses still standing in Yancey Mills date
from this period.
Such houses as the Bollendorff House and the Otis
Shifflet House display features typical of the 1920s and 1930s.
The Bollendorff may be a "catalogue" house, ordered from
a manufacturer such as Sears & Roebuck or- Montgomery Ward and assembled on site.
Most of Yancey Mills' importance as a commercial center
declined after World War II.
Albemarle County's economy changed from one based solely
on agriculture and small towns, to a service and trading economy centered in
Charlottesville.
The construction of Interstate 64 in the late 1960s
removed much commercial and tourist traffic from U.S. 250, further contributing to Yancey Mills'
decline.
Today Yancey Mills is an exclusively residential
community.
The surrounding area is comprised of open agricultural
fields, residential dwellings, hedgerows, and patches of forest.
Adjacent to King Family Vineyards to the east is Half
Mile Branch, which approximates a westernmost boundary of the Crozet Development Area.
The village of Yancey Mills, dating to 1748, is located
one mile to the south of the site.
Formerly predominated by rural farm land and rural
villages like Yancey Mills, the immediate area is in flux with Half Mile Branch serving as a divide between
suburban development and rural land to the west.
A temporary event implies that the overall context will
remain constant with only short term interruption.
The impact of this event will be minimal and would
contribute to a sense of local community and support a focus on rural activities.
From one-room school to athletic
field
When Stephanie Lynch walks down the Lawn May 18 to
receive her U.Va. degree, her 90-year-old grandmother, Nancy Liady, who graduated from U.Va. with a teaching
degree in 1933, will be there to watch.
But Lynch is not exactly following in her grandmother’s
footsteps.
Nancy Liady (left), a 1933 U.Va. alumna, saw her
granddaughter, Stephanie Lynch, graduate from high school. Now, three years later, Liady, who is 90, will
watch Lynch walk down the University’s Lawn.
In her first job, Liady, née Apperson, taught 54
children ranging from first- to seventh-graders in a one-room schoolhouse near the Albemarle County hamlet of
Batesville.
Her granddaughter concentrated on athletic training in
what is now the Curry School of Education.
"I’m just glad I’ll be able to watch her graduate," said
Liady of Lynch, who is one of her six grandchildren.
Despite their different paths in life, Lynch says her
grandmother influenced her by example, as did her mother, Anne Liady Lynch, who attended Mary Washington
College because U.Va. didn’t admit women undergraduates to all schools then.
They helped her believe in herself, she said, and that
she could do whatever she set out to do.
That confidence has served her well in a field dominated
by men.
Stephanie will be a graduate student and teaching
assistant at UNC-Chapel Hill this fall in exercise and sports science.
She recently was awarded the Max Crowder Atlantic Coast
Conference Scholarship, given to an outstanding student athletic trainer.
Liady grew up in Yancey Mills west of Charlottesville
and first went to the College of William and Mary. When her younger sister decided to go to U.Va., Liady
transferred so the two could commute together.
It wasn’t only the Curry School’s reputation that
brought Stephanie Lynch across country from Arizona where she grew up; it was partly her
memories.
She regularly visited her grandmother in the summer, and
she loved it here, she said. Compared with Phoenix in July, Central Virginia was delightful.
"They’re some of my favorite childhood memories,
catching fireflies in a jar, and all that," she said.
Stephanie’s interest in athletic training began when she
was in high school in Phoenix. Because there was only one certified athletic trainer for all the teams, Lynch
was often on her own aiding track and field athletes or the soccer team.
As a part-time job and as part of her major in sports
medicine in the Curry School’s kinesiology program, Lynch has worked with lacrosse players and swimmers, and
even the football team.
She doesn’t know yet which teams she’ll be assigned to
at UNC, where she will also teach physical education classes to undergraduates.
Stephanie’s mother said, in her unbiased view, she
thinks her daughter will be "an excellent teacher, just like her grandmother." By Anne
Bromley

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