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Nansemond County, Virginia

1646 establishments in Virginia1974 disestablishments in VirginiaFormer counties of VirginiaNansemond County, VirginiaPopulated places disestablished in 1974
Populated places established in 1646Suffolk, Virginia
Lost Counties of Virginia on the mouth of the James River
Lost Counties of Virginia on the mouth of the James River

Nansemond is an extinct jurisdiction that was located south of the James River in Virginia Colony and in the Commonwealth of Virginia (after statehood) in the United States, from 1646 until 1974. It was known as Nansemond County until 1972. From 1972 to 1974, a period of eighteen months, it was the independent city of Nansemond. It is now part of the independent city of Suffolk. English colonists named it for the Nansemond, a tribe of Native Americans who had long been living along the Nansemond River, a tributary of what the English later named as the James River. They encountered the English colonists after they began arriving in 1607 at Jamestown. Although disrupted by being forced off their land and through armed confrontation with colonists, the Nansemond Indian Nation continues to be based in Virginia and was granted state (1985) and federal recognition (2018).

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Nansemond County, Virginia (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Nansemond County, Virginia
Colonel Meade Drive, Suffolk

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Wikipedia: Nansemond County, VirginiaContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 36.739323 ° E -76.609379 °
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Address

Colonel Meade Drive 844
23434 Suffolk
Virginia, United States
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Lost Counties of Virginia on the mouth of the James River
Lost Counties of Virginia on the mouth of the James River
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