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Built in 1923 and located on historic Rivermont Avenue this Bed and Breakfast eclectically furnished with family antiques, offer a step back in time to relax and unwind.
Bedrooms offer twin, full or king bed with private bath. Robes, slippers, clock radio, iron, hairdryer and in room drinks and snacks help make your stay comfortable.
On arrival refreshments and tea/coffee available at other times. Rocking chairs on the back porch with beautiful view overlooking patio and water garden offers a quiet relaxing down time or feel free to stroll the grounds or walk on the avenue and enjoy nearby shops, bookstores.
Conveniently located near colleges, shopping, restaurants, antique shops, golf and churches.
Serving: Continental Breakfast Amenities: Refrigerator, Microwave Telephone: Phone:(434)386-9225
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IF YOU ARE LOOKING TO BUY OR SELL A HOME IN THE LYNCHBURG OR SURROUNDING COMMUNITIES CHECK OUT MY WEBSITE FOR ALL THE CURRENT LISTINGS OR GIVE ME A CALL AT
(434)832-1100X320
IMPORTANT LINKS
MY WEBSITE
CLICK ON THE LINKS BELOW TO FEED A HUNGRY FURBABY
CLICK ON THE BREAST CANCER SITE TO DONATE A MAMMOGRAM
http://www.theanimalrescuesite.com/
Proud supporter of
CMN and Susan G. Komen as well as the SPCA.
A portion of every one of my real estate transactions goes to CMN
PROUD MEMBER OF THE LYNCHBURG MLS, DANVILLE MLS & CREA
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This was a recent trip to this park for our company picnic. We had a lot of fun and ate a lot of great food!
My business partner took pics of all the people in attendance so that will have to be Part 2 and 3 as there is more pics as I haven't got the pics from him and I have more as well
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"The Light Artillery Blues and the Zouaves were out in force. They made a stirring sight as they paraded across the bridge," reported Lynchburg's newspaper, The Daily Virginia, the day after the opening of the bridge linking Rivermont and the downtown business area. The time was 3 p.m. on April 17, 1891, cannon boomed, steam whistles shrieked and a crowd of cheering Lynchburgers promenaded across Rivermont Bridge - 1,157 feel long, 144 feet high, 60 feet wide.
The citywide celebration, followed by a dinner at the Opera House, was called Rivermont Day in honor of the company that financed the bridge running from the western end of Main Street across the gorge of Blackwater Creek and into Rivermont - Lynchburg's first planned community.
Leading the procession across the bridge was Maj. Edward S. Hutter, principal organizer of the Rivermont Co., and its president, C.M. Blackford.
The Rivermont Co. had put up $75,000 for construction of the bridge and Major Hutter, a civil engineer, was partly responsible for engineering the wood and steel edifice. The Daily Virginian termed it "a stupendous feat" the "brings a lovely outlying district into immediate contact and connection with the city proper."
Indeed, the sole purpose of erecting Rivermont Bridge was to bring the "lovely outlying district" into closer contact with the city.
The Rivermont Co. was at war with the West Lynchburg Land Co., which had a streetcar line to the downtown area and large holdings in what is now the Fort Hill and West End area.
The bridge was essential to the development of what was then largely farmland in the Rivermont area.
The bridge was the high point of the real estate boom that swept Lynchburg, along with the nation around 1889.
Some people were predicting that Lynchburg would be the Pittsburg of the South. More than half a dozen companies were formed to promote any enterprises that appeared to have any reason for being established within the city.
Land speculation was rampant throughout the state and excursion trains carried crowds to Salem, Roanoke, and Buchanan for real estate promotion festivities. Excursions were run to Lynchburg for the same purpose.
While both the Rivermont and the West Lynchburg Land companies ended up in receivership, they left a legacy - Randolph-Macon Woman's College
(Now Randolph College) and Lynchburg College.
The Rivermont Company donated 20 acres and $100,000 for buildings for the woman's college.
The nearby springs did not attact the anticipated tourists of the Westover Hotel, which the West Lynchburg Land Co erected as a summer resort, the company failed to pay off an 1891 bond issue, and a receiver was appointed.
The hotel later was sold to Virginia Christian College, now Lynchburg College and the old hotel, which was a rambling Victorian structure was a viable part of the college's complex of buildings and served as a women's dormitory for more than 30 years before its demolition in 1970.
The planners who build the first Rivermont Bridge wouldn't have dreamed of the area's present vitality. Today some of the most beautiful homes in Lynchburg are here and this continues to be one of the most desireable neighborhoods in Lynchburg.
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