About me
Founded in the Spring of 1940 to coordinate the work of local history enthusiasts here in Central Virginia, the founders of our organization were motivated to discover and preserve important historic documents, as well as to conduct original research and to share their findings. The information below, with highlights of our story, has been excerpted and adapted in part from an article that first appeared in the 2015 edition of the Magazine of Albemarle County History, on the occasion of the 75th anniversary of our founding.
In retrospect, it is most surprising that a local historical society was not formed in the area until 1940, though the idea had been circulating as early as February 7, 1829, when the editor of the local newspaper the Virginia Advocate, printed a letter signed only “P.Q.” of Albemarle, urging that a historical society be formed in the county. Though there were lyceum groups, library associations, and music clubs in Charlottesville and Albemarle County, not to mention the many literary, oratorical and scholarly societies at the University of Virginia, there was no organization devoted exclusively to the history of Central Virginia.
It was not until many years later that P.Q.’s suggestion finally began to take shape. During an informal meeting in the office of the University of Virginia Archives at Alderman Library (which had only opened two years before), Lester J. Cappon, Glenn Curtis Smith and Mary Hamilton explored the proposal for establishing a historical society. Cappon was then the Archivist of the University and later served as Director of the Institute of Early American History. Smith was working at Alderman with the archives of historic newspapers and was later a professor at Madison College (now James Madison University) in Harrisonburg. Hamilton was then serving as secretary to the Director of Rare Books and Manuscripts Division in Alderman Library.
On February 23, 1940, Cappon hosted a second organizational meeting in his office, this time joined by a larger group of like-minded supporters which included University Librarian Harry Clemons, who had led the effort to build Alderman Library and modernize the University’s holdings. It was at that second meeting that the idea of a regularly published Society magazine was discussed— underscoring the priority these founding members placed on scholarly research. The group also agreed that their work should include the gathering of historic manuscripts, to be preserved as a unique collection at the University of Virginia Library. Hamilton, who took the minutes of that meeting, also noted, “Everyone agreed that the more publicity the Society could get the better.”