Church Hill, Richmond, Virginia
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- For the city in Maryland, see Church Hill, Maryland; for that in Tennessee, see Church Hill, Tennessee; for the neighbourhood, see Church Hill, Edinburgh.
Church Hill is a historic district of Richmond, Virginia. This district encompasses the original land plat of the city of Richmond. It is known as the site where Patrick Henry gave his "Give me liberty or give me death" speech in St. John's Episcopal Church, Richmond, Virginia, and for Chimborazo Park, where the largest American Civil War Hospital was located. Douglas Wilder, the first African American to have been elected governor of a U.S. state1, was born and raised in Church Hill.
Church Hill is the eastern terminus of Broad Street, a major east-west thoroughfare in the Richmond Metropolitan Area, and one of the longest, which carries U.S. Route 250.
On Friday, October 2, 1925, a 4,000-foot Chesapeake and Ohio railroad single track tunnel built during Reconstruction collapsed under Church Hill. The Church Hill Tunnel collapse occurred during refurbishment works, killing 3 or 4 and engulfing a work train in complete with a 4-4-0 engine #231 and 10 flat cars. The tunnel was closed and filled-in after the collapse. In the July 2006, a coalition of officials and historical groups made plans to remove the buried engine. If recovered, it would be displayed at the Virginia Historical Society in Richmond. Some borings were made into the tunnel from above for examination by camera. Only murky water was found, whereupon further work was delayed by city permitting issues. The bricked-in entrance of the collapsed tunnel can still be seen at the south east end of the alley just north of Marshall Street, on 18th Street.
The name Church Hill is often used to describe both the specific historic district and the larger general area encompassing other neighborhoods such as Union Hill, Chimborazo, Fairmount, Peter Paul, Woodville, etc.