This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (July 2024) |
Presquile Plantation was a plantation located in southeastern Chesterfield County, Virginia built in the mid 18th century probably by Richard Randolph II of Curles, a grandson of William Randolph the Immigrant.[1] The site of the plantation was just south of Turkey Island, one of William Randolph's earliest land holdings. Richard Randolph most likely built the house at Presquile for his son David Meade Randolph, the husband of the esteemed Mary Randolph. Unfortunately, the couple did not live at Presquile for long, as the land surrounding it was extremely swampy and did not promote good health. In 1798 they moved to Richmond and lived in a grand mansion called Moldavia.
The next owner of Presquile was Abner Osborne of Nottoway County, who bought the property for £5,000 in 1801.[2] It went through the 19th century and early 20th as a standard farm until 1952 when A. D. Williams, a Richmond tobacco magnate and philanthropist, died. In his will he gave the Presquile tract to the Virginia Commission of Game and Inland Fisheries to be used as a wildlife preserve. The following year the land was passed to the US Department of the Interior and is today managed by the National Park Service as the Presquile National Wildlife Refuge. The house at Presquile was originally used by the park staff until a new dwelling nearby was built. In 1964, a historical consultant for the park service stated that he believed that the house had been built after the Civil War (when in reality it was 100 years older) and thus the 200 year old house was demolished.[2]