Advertisement

Header Utility Menu

  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Events

LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Instagram Get Our App

  • Login

Virginia Business

Mobile Menu

  • Issues
  • Industries
    • Banking/Finances
    • Business Law
    • Commercial Real Estate
    • Economic Development
    • Education
    • Energy/Green
    • Federal Contracting
    • Government
    • Healthcare
    • Hotels/Tourism
    • Insurance
    • Ports/Trade
    • Small Business
    • Technology
    • Transportation
  • Regions
    • Central Virginia
    • Eastern Virginia
    • Northern Virginia
    • Roanoke/New River Valley
    • Shenandoah Valley
    • Southern Virginia
    • Southwest Virginia
  • Reports
    • Best Places to Work
    • Business Person of the Year
    • CEO Pay
    • Coronavirus 2020
    • Generous Virginians Project
    • Legal Elite
    • Most Influential Virginians
    • Maritime Guide
    • Site Locator
    • The Big Book
    • Virginia CFO Awards
  • Company News
    • For the Record
    • People
  • Opinion
  • Lists
  • Awards/Events
    • Diversity Leadership Series
    • Vote Now for Women in Leadership
    • Virginia 500
    • Legal Elite
    • CFO Awards
    • Big Book of Lists
    • 100 People To Meet
    • Best Places To Work
  • Virginia 500
    • Read the issue
    • Order a copy
    • Buy an award plaque
    • Nominate execs for 2021

Advertisement

Header Primary Menu

  • virginiabusiness.com
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Home Opinion Letters to the Editor Letters to the Editor – September 2013

Letters to the Editor – September 2013

Published August 28, 2013 by Virginia Business

Danville should preserve ruins and cemetery on plantation site

To the Editor,

Descendants and advocates of the Fearn Plantation’s families are working together to save the historic ruins and slave cemetery on the Fearn Plantation in Danville [“Danville gets a new look,” August issue]. The city of Danville has failed to recognize the importance of the African-American, Native-American and white families associated with the plantation and their contributions to the region’s and Virginia’s history.

Danville wants to convey the entire 158-acre site to a Chinese company — and the site is planned to be developed as a furniture-assembly plant.  We do not know the long-range impact of such a business on the furniture and related industries. Many American jobs have been lost because of foreign companies.

As the nation commemorates the 150th anniversaries of the Emancipation Proclamation and many milestones of the Civil War, destruction of such an important piece of American and Virginian history is an outrage and a disservice to the memories of Danville’s pioneer families and  the enslaved people who made the city  “the World’s Best Tobacco Market.” The Virginia Tobacco Commission awarded a million dollar grant to help GOK International develop its showroom at the Cane Creek site in Pittsylvania County.  A great deal of help is going to GOK International, while little effort is made to preserve and protect the historical resources on the Fearn Plantation.

The Virginia Department of Historic Resources has recommended that the cemetery not be moved, and recently Preservation Virginia included the entire Fearn Plantation site, encompassing the cemetery and the ruins of the plantation residence, on its 2013 List of Endangered Sites.   The site has also been registered with the Remembering Slavery, Resistance and Freedom Project, a partnership between the College of William and Mary and the Martin Luther King Memorial Commission of the Virginia General Assembly.

Descendants and advocates are in support of economic development in the Danville area but urged Danville to consider an alternative design for the industrial park that would preserve and incorporate the historic resources at the periphery.

Anne Evans, Fairfield, Calif.

Evans, a Danville native, is a descendant through marriage of Thomas Fearn, the founder of the Fearn Plantation.

Editor’s note:
GOK International’s U.S. headquarters are in Danville’s River District, and its plant is in Cane Creek Centre in Pittsylvania County. The company has performance agreements with the city and the Tobacco Commission that include options to use a portion of a new industrial park if the company meets all requirements and needs to expand.

Related Stories

Virginia Business logo

Full effects of the sequester’s damage are yet to be seen

Virginia Business logo

Letter to the Editor – August 2016

Virginia Business logo

Don’t forget the environment in listing Virginia’s assets

Trending

Finance/Insurance: STEPHAN Q. CASSADAY

Finance/Insurance: PAUL B. MANNING

Federal Contractors/Technology: JASON PROVIDAKES

Education: ANNE M. KRESS

Artemis I to launch with help from Va. contractors

Sponsored Stories

Why is my Less Than Truckload (LTL) freight pricing going up and my service level going down?  

Beyond Juneteenth – How Capital One is Commemorating and Implementing Change

How We Help Your Business Operate Better

Before the Breach: Get Serious About Cyber Resilience

Professionals are Discovering What it Means to Live Uniquely in the Alleghany Highlands of Virginia

Riverside Logistics Celebrates 25th Anniversary!

Girls for a Change Empowers Black Youth for the Future Workforce

The Jackson Ward Collective is equipping Black-owned small businesses with the tools for success

Advertisement

Advertisement

Trending

Finance/Insurance: STEPHAN Q. CASSADAY

Finance/Insurance: PAUL B. MANNING

Federal Contractors/Technology: JASON PROVIDAKES

Education: ANNE M. KRESS

Artemis I to launch with help from Va. contractors

Sponsored Stories

Why is my Less Than Truckload (LTL) freight pricing going up and my service level going down?  

Beyond Juneteenth – How Capital One is Commemorating and Implementing Change

How We Help Your Business Operate Better

Before the Breach: Get Serious About Cyber Resilience

Professionals are Discovering What it Means to Live Uniquely in the Alleghany Highlands of Virginia

Riverside Logistics Celebrates 25th Anniversary!

Girls for a Change Empowers Black Youth for the Future Workforce

The Jackson Ward Collective is equipping Black-owned small businesses with the tools for success

Get Virginia Business directly on your tablet or in your mailbox!

Subscribe to Virginia Business

Advertisement

Advertisement

Footer Primary Menu

  • virginiabusiness.com
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Footer Secondary Menu

  • Industries
  • Regions
  • Reports
  • Company News
  • Events

Sign Up For Our Newsletter

Sign Up

LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Instagram Get Our App

Privacy Policy Cookie Policy

Footer Utility Menu

Copyright © 2023 Virginia Business. All rights reserved.

Site Maintained by TechArk