Rassawek
Rassawek is an archaeological site in Fluvanna County, Virginia, located at the confluence of the James River and its tributary, the Rivanna River, near Columbia. The site was previously a village that served as the capital for the Monacans, a Native American tribe, during the early period of British colonization of the Americas.
British colonists were first made aware of the village during a 1607 expedition from Jamestown up the James River, though there is no evidence that any Europeans ever visited the village. By the early 18th century, the village was seemingly abandoned and British, and later American, establishments were created around the area, including the Point of Fork Arsenal and the nearby community of Columbia. While the exact location of the Rassawek village is not known with complete certainty, archaeological digs conducted by the Smithsonian Institution in the 1880s and during construction of a gasoline pipeline in the 1980s indicate that the village was most likely on the right bank of the Rivanna, in the strip of land separating the two rivers.
In the early 21st century, the county governments of both Fluvanna and Louisa made plans to construct a water pumping station at the Rassawek site, prompting outcry from the Monacan Indian Nation, which had gained federal recognition in 2018. Over the next several years, the Nation and other individuals and organizations, such as Preservation Virginia, pushed back against the development plans, and in 2020, the National Trust for Historic Preservation added the site to its 2020 list of America's Most Endangered Places. Following this, in 2022, the counties agreed to pursue a new location and develop the station at a site upstream of Rassawek.
Site
The site is located near the community of Columbia, in Fluvanna County, near where the Rivanna River flows into the James River. This area is also known as the "Point of Fork". It is located approximately west of the state capital of Richmond, which is roughly a 1-hour drive from the city. According to a 1930 article by historian David I. Bushnell Jr., the exact location of the village was unknown, though it was likely been situated on the right bank of the Rivanna, near the river mouth, at the confluence of the two rivers. In the 1880s, archaeological excavations at the location by researchers from the Smithsonian Institution uncovered burial grounds and evidence of buildings, and further digs in the 1980s unearthed several Native American artifacts at the site. According to a 2024 article in The Daily Progress of Charlottesville, this later dig, conducted by the Virginia Department of Historic Resources in 1980, "officially pinpointed Rassawek's location" at the Point of Fork.History
Early history
The establishment was first recorded by British colonists during a May 1607 expedition that started at Jamestown and followed the James River to the Atlantic Seaboard Fall Line, at what is today the city of Richmond. Based on descriptions from Powhatan's son, Captain John Smith created a map, published in 1612, showing what is now Central and Western Virginia, including the location of five Monacan villages. The Monacans were a large Native American tribe with a population of roughly 10,000 that at the time inhabited a large swath of modern-day Virginia, stretching from the Blue Ridge Mountains in the west to the Fall Line in the east.One of the villages identified on the map was Rassawek, the capital of the Monacans to which all other Monacan villages in the area paid tribute, which was described as being a roughly 1.5-day march from present-day Richmond. According to Bushnell, a common alternative spelling of the village is "Russawmeake". At the time of Smith's expedition, the village was home to roughly 1,500 people and was a major center for regional trade and commerce, and was a central meeting point of the Monacan tribe, which is estimated to have had around 15,000 people, according to . The village was home to a longhouse and a minimum of a dozen roundhouses. Radiocarbon dating shows evidence of human occupation of the site dating back 5,340 years from 2019, as early as around 3000 BCE, while articles published on VPM.org in 2022 describe the village as having been the capital of the Monacans for several hundred, or possibly several thousand, years.
Colonial era through the 19th century
During the European colonization of the Americas, the Monacans were dispersed from their traditional homeland and resettled in other locations, including modern-day North Carolina and Tennessee. The site was abandoned before white people settled the region near the fork, and it is not known if any Europeans visited the site while it was still an active Monacan village. According to Bushnell, Rassawek was an important Monacan village through the early 17th century but had "ceased to be important " by the beginning of the 18th century. Around this time, the land including the point was owned by Dudley Diggs, who built slave quarters there. As a teenager, Thomas Jefferson recruited several landowners in the region to clear channels as part of a project to improve navigability on the Rivanna. By the time of the American Revolution, the land was owned by David Ross, a Scottish-born merchant, who continued agricultural operations there. During the American Revolutionary War, the government of Virginia established the Point of Fork Arsenal at the fork, which operated as the state's main arsenal until its closure in 1801. Following the war, the nearby community of Columbia became a hub for bateau transport, though periodic river floods contributed to a decline in the settlement's fortune. In the 1880s, archaeological excavations conducted by the Smithsonian Institution unearthed several burial grounds at the site.Late 20th century
In 1980, construction work on a gasoline pipeline through the area unearthed several Native American artifacts, prompting the state government to temporarily halt the construction while the area was surveyed. Archeological testing during the 1980s revealed human remains. According to several historians, the discoveries confirmed the location of Rassawek, similar to how, in 1977, the site of the Powhatan capital of Werowocomoco was discovered in Gloucester County. Speaking of the Rassawek site, Jeffrey Hantman, a historian from the University of Virginia who specialized in Native American history, said, "It is highly likely that there are many more burials associated with this Chief's village". However, whereas the Werowocomoco was preserved, construction on the supposed Rassawek site was allowed to recommence, leading to the destruction of many Native American artifacts. By the 1990s, the VDHR had erected a state historical marker for Rassawek along Virginia State Route 6, roughly west of Columbia.Proposed water pumping station
In 2014, the James River Water Authority, a joint venture entity chartered by the county governments of both Fluvanna and Louisa County in 2009, announced plans to construct a water pumping station on the supposed site of Rassawek. The project was designed to supply water to Zion Crossroads, a nearby community situated in both counties near Interstate 64 that was at the time experiencing a development boom. As part of the project, the counties purchased the land around the fork and constructed a nearby water treatment plant on the other side of the Rivanna River. However, the construction of the pumping station required planning permission from the United States Army Corps of Engineers. By mid-2019, JRWA had received permission to store any bones that are discovered as part of the station's construction and was applying for permits to excavate any burial sites on the premises. Additionally, the authority had received several construction permits from the state government. According to reporting from The Washington Post, the JRWA had "kept the tribe informed" regarding the project, but the Monacans "had no official seat at the table". Marion Werkheiser, an attorney for the tribe, stated in 2019 that the Monacan Indian Nation had been in contact with JRWA and other governmental agencies concerning the project since 2017.Opposition from the Monacan Indian Nation
In January 2018, United States President Donald Trump signed into law a bill that extended federal recognition to the Monacan Indian Nation, granting the tribe the right to self-governance. At the time, the tribe had a membership of over 2,000 people, including 500 in Amherst County. With their recognition by the federal government of the United States, the Monacan Indian Nation became an official consulting party in the Corps of Engineers' permit process for the pumping station. Initially, the tribe had been seeking financial compensation to assist with the reclamation of any artifacts and the reburial of any Monacan corpses discovered during the station's construction, but after getting more involved in the permit process, the tribe discovered that there were several other possible locations that the JRWA could choose for the station and began to push against any construction on the Rassawek site.JRWA stated that the Rassawek site was the most optimal site for the pumping station due to existing infrastructure and the water purity at that location, stating that any other location along the Rivanna would not provide enough water for the station and any other location along the James downstream of the confluence would be too sediment-laden. Additionally, the authority stated that choosing a new site could set the project's schedule back by several years and either double or triple the cost. With regards to the tribe, the water authority offered to allow the Monacan Indian Nation oversight over all excavations performed at the site, grant them ownership of any Monacan artifacts exposed, and provide $125,000 in funding for improvements to the tribe's museum. Hantman, critical of the offers, called the water authority's actions "scientific colonialism".
In June 2019, acting Chief Pamela Thompson of the Monacan Indian Nation wrote an opinion piece for The Daily Progress advocating preservation of the Rassawek site. In July, at the behest of the tribe, Virginia Governor Ralph Northam visited the Rassawek site and listened to several Monacans' concerns regarding the project, and on August 13, several members of the Monacan tribe attended a public forum hosted by the water authority where they voiced their opposition to the site of the pumping station.