Holland, Virginia

Holland, Virginia was an incorporated town in the southwestern section of Nansemond County, Virginia.[1] Since 1974, it has been a community in the independent city of Suffolk, Virginia following a [political consolidation which formed Virginia's largest city in geographic area.

History

Holland is located in what used to be called Old Nansemond County. In 1860, the Holland City Commission was made up of 12 members, 10 of whom were named Holland.

Holland was named for an English family headed by Capt. John Holland, who arrived in Massachusetts in 1630.(Although a record given in Hotten's List of Persons of Quality, 1600-1700, states John Holland and wife as being sought in Mass. in 1627 for taking part under the Earl of Lincoln in tax protests against the Crowns wishes.) As a ship's captain, he traveled from Nantucket Point to Virginia and out to the English-held islands of the Caribbean. He died at sea (1652) but is actually buried at Cape Charles, Virginia.

His son, John Jr.(mentioned in the Suffolk County Massachusetts wills of 1651, as heir to John Holland seniors' island known as 'Munings Moore'(? migrated to Jamestown around 1645 and was a Major in the Virginia militia in 1654 in Westmoreland County and a member of the Virginia House of Burgesses during the 1654/1655 session. He moved the family to Nansemond County.

James Holland, grandson of the original land grant holder for the area that later became Holland, Virginia, was still living in Nansemond County in 1680. He is buried somewhere on the grounds of Fighting Cock Plantation in Chuckatuck.

On May 21, 1928, the first Ruritan Club in the United States was founded in Holland, Virginia.[2]

Consolidation into Suffolk

Following voter referendums and political consolidation in the early 1970s, the former Nansemond County and the former towns of Holland and Whaleyville within it were joined in 1974 with the former county seat town and city of Suffolk to form a single independent city, which became was Virginia's largest in geographic area, and assumed the name of Suffolk for the entire area.[3]

References