The Brawdus Martin Visitors Center was dedicated in July 2000.
This page is a record of some of the highlights of the history, construction,
and views of the completed Center. |
|
| The Beginning |
R. Brawdus Martin
Descendant of Johann Kemper 1879-1977
In 1949, R. Brawdus Martin, a Johann Kemper descendant, initiated the first
meetings of Germanna descendants as an annual picnic which became an
annual event scheduled for the 3rd Sunday in July at Germanna in Orange
County, Virginia. As a result of these early meetings, the Memorial Foundation
of the Germanna Colonies in Virginia, Inc. was officially founded in 1956.
|

R. Brawdus Martin and Evelyn C. Martin. This photograph was
taken in St. Petersburg, Florida, Sunday, June 24, 1973. |
|
| Construction |
|
|
|
|

|
|
Grant Application: Germanna Historic Site Improvement Project: A Visitor Center, Entrance
Drive and Interpretive Trail
An ISTEA Project of the Virginia Department of Transportation
The Germanna Historic Site Improvement Project is intended to bring an influx
of tourists, historians, and research students to this Historic Site to
rediscover the history shaping events that occurred at this western outpost
of 18th-century Virginia. Located on Route 3, the Germanna Highway, fifteen
miles east of Culpeper and twenty miles west of Fredericksburg, the Germanna
Historic Site remains largely unknown to the traveling public. Expansion
of Route 3 into a four lane freeway in the 1980's removed convenient access
to the site, so that today it can only be approached via a poorly marked
gravel road. This rich historic place is virtually lost in the 20th-century
Virginia landscape.
To increase public awareness, this project's first objective is to create
a convenient automobile access road to the Historic Site. By constructing
a new Entrance Drive, the Germanna Historic Site will become easily accessible
and also convenient to the neighboring Germanna Community College facilities.
Cars and tour buses will have clear and convenient access in and out of
the Germanna Historic Site, with safe transition to Route 3.
The project's second objective is to establish a Visitor Center and
Library at the entrance
to the Germanna Historic Site so that tourists can become acquainted with
the historic significance of the setting, use the restroom facilities,
research their genealogy and history, and
begin their Interpretive Walk around the multifaceted Historic Site. Artifacts
uncovered by ongoing archaeology work at the Enchanted Castle dig will be
displayed and interpreted at the Visitor Center. Germanna's fascinating
history will be presented in exhibits, in artifacts, and in orientation
talks. The Visitor Center will provide the historical overview to tourists
before they begin the Interpretive Walk. The Visitor Center will also
include a Library to house the Germanna Collection of over 400
published and over 1000 non-published books, and research collections. The
Library will be open to all with an interest in Germanna and its
people.
The project's third and final objective is to construct an Interpretive
Trail that will wind around the Germanna Historic Site, touching on ten
"Points of Historic Interest". At each of these destinations an interesting
exhibit will present a piece of the Germanna story. These exhibits will
highlight the original Germanna Fort Settlement of 1714, the "Knights of
the Golden Horseshoe" Expedition to the Shenandoah Valley of 1716, and the
construction of Governor Spotswood's "Enchanted Castle" Mansion in 1724.
For military historians, the crossing of both Lafayette and Grant's Armies
at the Germanna Ford will be marked at the precise points of crossing on
the Rapidan. Reenactment of the Union cavalry building a pontoon bridge
at Germanna Ford is under consideration as an embellishment to this Interpretive
Trail marker. As the interest in the Civil War continues to grow on an international
level, the dramatic river crossing by Grant's Army of the Potomac at the
Germanna Ford will attract many who are drawn to Virginia to retrace that
war's great campaigns. The Interpretive Trail will encompass two expansive
centuries of Virginia history. It will tell a compelling story of this early
colonial settlement, its westward expansion, and its ultimate demise after
suffering the ravages of the Civil War.
Construction Completed
|
 |
The R. Brawdus Martin Germanna Visitor Center was dedicated at the Germanna
Annual Reunion on Sunday, July 16, 2000.
|
Interior Views
 |
Visitors Center
Museum area showing spiral stairway to observation deck. |
|
|
Evelyn C. Martin Library |
 |
|
|
 |
German Iron
Assayist - antique, bronze sculpture from Siegen, Germany.
. |
| Back to What's New |
|
|
|