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Broadway Landing: Union Army Installation

Nicholas Bolash, a Jamestown High School senior, has been researching the history of the lost town of Broadway, focusing primarily on the landing area used by the Union Army during the Petersburg campaign of 1864-65. The ultimate goal of Nick's research is to reconstruct the layout of Civil War-era Broadway Landing as a guide for future archaeological research. By searching primary and secondary sources, including the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies and some rare books, Nick has found a great deal of information pertaining to this important period of the town's history. Period photographs and maps indicate the locations of military and civilian structures that once occupied the land along the Appomattox River. The site of a pontoon bridge, the town of Broadway had about five recorded houses at the time of the Union occupation. The research has also uncovered details about the men who called this town home for about ten months. Nick's research has included visits to the Broadway Landing site and review of tax records on microfilm at the Library of Virginia. Also emerging from this research is a better understanding of how important this now-unknown town was during the siege of Petersburg as a transportation, communication, and supply center.

Read Nick's paper about Broadway Landing.

Photos: (L) Nick Bolash, on right, compares copies of Civil War era maps with a modern topographic map as part of his research. (R) Nick has also visited the Broadway Landing site with local archaeologist/historian Steve Thomas (seen below) in an effort to situate features of the Union installation on the landscape.

Nick Bolash (right) compares copies of Civil War era maps with a modern topographic map as part of his research.     Nick has also visited the Broadway Landing site with local archaeologist/historian Steve Thomas (below) in an effort to situate features of the Union installation on the landscape.