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A faltering historic area of Petersburg has lost its main advocate, but a novice developer has a plan for Pocahontas Island

The home of William N. Stevens, who was born in 1850 to a Petersburg family that had been free for three or four generations. The home is now owned by Richard Stewart, the proprietor of the Pocahontas Island Black History Museum. Stewart, the honorary mayor of the island, died in April.

Having devoted the latter part of his life to preserving Pocahontas Island in Petersburg, Richard A. Stewart, the island’s honorary mayor, is gone, dead at age 79. In the wake of the stalwart community historian’s death, though, the island lives on, primed for its second wind.

As it did during his lifetime, Stewart’s presence looms large on Pocahontas Island, a community of some 70 acres bordered on three sides by the Appomattox River, just over the bridge from mainland Petersburg.

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The island’s documented roots reach back to 1732, when enslaved people were first taken there to work in tobacco warehouses. By 1800, more than 300 free Black people lived and worked there, making it one of the largest communities of its kind in America.

Stewart owned and operated the island’s Black history museum, founded in 2006. The two-story yellow clapboard house trimmed in brown today is stuffed with artifacts he collected during his lifetime, including old-fashioned agricultural tools, 19th-century horseshoes, photographs and art, a Ku Klux Klan robe and a set of shackles likely used in the restraint of enslaved people.

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Richard Stewart is the proprietor of the Pocahontas Island Black History Museum on Pocahontas Island. On display are these shackles that were used during the slave trade years in nearby Petersburg. Stewart, the honorary mayor of the island, died in April.

Stewart’s funeral was observed at Petersburg’s Tabernacle Baptist Church on April 22. The day before, on a balmy Friday afternoon, a “Sorry, we’re closed” sign hung above the green chalkboard where Stewart had previously scrawled the museum’s tour hours. It felt like he had just stepped away and would be back any minute, eager to educate anyone who’d listen about Pocahontas Island’s history.

That history is evident in more than just the museum. The island is home to the Jarratt House, built in 1820 and at one time a stop on the Underground Railroad; Stewart and other island residents led the push for the house to be preserved, recognizing it as a portal to freedom for Black people fleeing bondage in the Petersburg area before the Civil War.

Stewart also consistently spoke of the area’s days as a manufacturing and railroad hub, and as a haven for free Black tradespeople, artisans and farmers in antebellum Virginia. Stewart’s neighbor Dorothy Kelley, who has lived on the island for more than 50 years with her husband and his family — who were born and raised there — said the museum was one of several buildings Stewart owned on the island. It is unclear what will become of the museum with his death.

“And he made sure that grass stayed cut, too,” she said. “I don’t know what’s going to happen with the museum now.”

Pocahontas Island resident Dorothy Kelley shows the inside of the local chapel.

“What happens next?” is a fair question, about the museum and about the island itself. Over the years, the number of residents on Pocahontas Island has steadily shrunk to about 100, Kelley said. Several of the homes are dilapidated and need repair; some stand vacant. There are no employment prospects on the island, and nearby Petersburg faces a 10.5% annual unemployment rate.

“A lot of the younger people are gone; we don’t have as many children around,” said Kelley, 76, as she led me around the island on an impromptu tour. She showed me the community’s tiny chapel, which had to be rebuilt after a tornado tore through the island in August 1993, damaging or destroying 80% of the homes.

She introduced me to Mary Bragg Cox, 98, the daughter of a man who, before Stewart took up Pocahontas Island’s banner, advocated for the paving of the neighborhood’s streets and the laying of its sidewalks. Cox later donated land to create a park in her father’s honor, up the street from her home. She nodded as Kelley told me what she sees as the solution to sustaining the island for the next generation:

“What we need is for families, for people to come back here, help us build this place up again.”

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Enter Marlo Green.

In March, Green broke ground on the first in a series of homes she’s developing on the island, slated to be priced right for area families looking to settle down. Green, a certified public accountant and first-time developer who works at Virginia State University, has lived in Petersburg since 2016 and believes the homes will bring more people to Pocahontas and help families build wealth through homeownership.

Her vision is to “help close the wealth gap locally and bring more resources to the island,” she said as she showed me the first home of the project, which she will live in when it is completed in another few months; as we spoke, workers were nailing on its siding.

The homes in Marlo Green's plan will range from $250,000-$400,000. The first home — hers, pictured here in April — is slated for completion in July.

Green began the effort by purchasing an acre plot from the city and plans to buy more soon. Before she started, she introduced herself to her future neighbors on the island, including Kelley, who said she feels “completely positive” about the undertaking. Another neighbor took a little more convincing.

“One of the first people I met was Mr. Stewart. He was kind of skeptical because he had seen a lot of people come to the island with a lot of hopes and dreams, but nothing had been done,” Green said. One such dream was the much-hyped Pocahontas Island Neighborhood Plan, a set of social, economic and aesthetic goals with suggested strategies for how to meet them, prepared by the Wilder School of Government at Virginia Commonwealth University in 2014.

Residents participated in the creation of that and other plans but have yet to see much of it brought to reality, Green said. Despite his initial caution, Green said, Stewart came to support her vision for revitalizing the island and was working to help her realize it before his death.

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The homes in Green’s plan will range in price from $250,000-$400,000. As Green’s project unfolds, other recent developments are reasons to hope Pocahontas Island and the surrounding area will soon see better days. Last year Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced Partnership for Petersburg, a set of 42 initiatives designed to boost the economic and social outlook of the city that is no stranger to struggle. Though some pointed out that most of these initiatives were already underway because of General Assembly action or federal funds, a bipartisan group of state and local leaders welcomed the fresh attention Youngkin’s plan placed on Petersburg.

Virginia Business reported last year that work had begun to make Petersburg “a pharmaceutical manufacturing hub and ingredient reserve, bringing economic investment, jobs and ancillary investment to the long-distressed area.” A maternal and infant health center opened in Petersburg a few weeks ago, offering support to expecting and new parents as well as early childhood education opportunities. Multiple efforts are underway to fight food insecurity and teach kids how to grow food.

Green is also creating a nonprofit to support the renovation of homes in need.

“It will mean so much to have our elders age in place more comfortably,” said Green, who grew up in public housing in Henrico County. Referring to communities in Richmond, she said, “I saw firsthand how neighborhoods like Church Hill and Jackson Ward will gentrify and push out the residents that have been there all along. That’s the polar opposite of what we’re trying to do here.”

Samantha Willis wrote this piece for the Virginia Mercury, virginiamercury.com.

Richard Stewart tells students from Cultural Roots Cooperative about the history of Pocahontas Island inside his Black History Museum on the island, on May 3, 2021, in Petersburg, Va. Stewart, the honorary mayor of the island, died in April. (Sean Jones/The Progress-Index via AP)

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