Uploaded by ProjectSilverPlate on Feb 26, 2008
Powder Magazine in Williamsburg On 21 April 1775 the House of Burgesses vehemently protested actions taken by a group of royal marines led by Lieutenant Henry Collins. Under orders from Governor John Dunmore, the marines moved fifteen half-barrels of gunpowder stored in Williamsburg's powder magazine to the ship Fowey on the York River.
Although the removal was carried out in the early morning hours, word of the marines' action quickly spread throughout the town. Alarmed citizens demanded that Dunmore return the supplies, but Peyton Randolph, Robert Carter Nicholas, and Mayor John Dixon calmed the public and requested an explanation from the governor. Dunmore claimed he moved the powder to protect the town from an impending slave insurrection, and he promised to return it if needed. The governor later admitted that he feared an uprising among the colonists and that this anxiety resulted in his order to relocate the powder.
Patrick Henry raised 150 volunteers from Hanover County and threatened to march into Williamsburg unless Dunmore gave back the gunpowder. The men agreed to return to Hanover after the governor paid Henry £350 as reimbursement for the seized powder. The situation continued to deteriorate, and on June 8 Dunmore left the governor's palace for the Fowey. This, along with the ensuing war, ended British rule in Virginia.
Although a landmark in the history of the American Revolution, the powder magazine in Williamsburg has a story that begins years earlier. In 1714, Governor Alexander Spotswood and the General Assembly agreed to erect a structure to store military supplies given to the colony by Queen Anne. The powder magazine was completed by 1716, with a protective brick wall and guard house added in 1755. Uses for the magazine varied throughout the years, including a market place, church, and storage space for military supplies during the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, and the Civil War. When the historic structure was purchased by the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities (APVA) in 1889, it had recently been used as a livery stable and was in peril of being lost. The structure was restored with help from the APVA and Colonial Williamsburg. Today, the powder magazine serves as an exhibit space for Colonial Williamsburg.
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