Biographical Sketch: Twenty miles north
of Richmond and five miles east of Ashland, in Hanover County,
is the old Virginia plantation
known as Hickory Hill. This was the home of the late Williams Carter
Wickham, brigadier-general of cavalry, C.S.A., and is now the residence
of his son, Henry Taylor Wickham, a member of the State Senate,
who began his public life as a young member of the House of Delegates
in December, 1879. Hickory Hill was long an outlying appendage
to Shirley-onthe-James, much of it having come into possession
of the Carter family by a deed dated March 2, 1734, released in
consideration of one ear of Indian corn payable annually on "the
feast of St. Michael the Arch-Angel."
The dwelling house was built and the garden
begun in 1820, when William Fanning Wickham-son of John Wickham
of Richmond-and his
wife, Anne Carter of Shirley, made their home on her share of the
estate of her father Robert-after whom General Robert E. Lee was
named-son of Charles of Shirley, son of John of Shirley, son of
Robert of Corotoman, known as "King" Carter. The original
house was destroyed by fire in 1875, and the present dwelling then
erected.
The grounds and garden were laid out by Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Wickham
in 1820, on broad and long lines. The avenues of cedar and box,
as originally planned, are still standing and in vigorous growth.
The garden is a rectangular plot 355 feet by 440 feet, approximately
four acres.
The principal feature is the old Box Walk, an avenue of sempervirens
boxwood, 307 feet in length, the box trees varying between thirty
and forty feet in height and forming an arch above the fifteen-foot
walkway. To the right of the entrance extends a walk one hundred
feet in length, flanked by lines of suffruticosa box which adjoins
the maze of suffruticosa. To the left of the entrance the walk
extends 340 feet. At intervals other broad walks appear.
The cherished ornaments are the magnolias and some of the original
roses brought by Anne Carter from Shirley in 1820 and planted by
her, and many of the offspring of those old-time beautiful and
fragrant roses, such as the Noisettes, Champney, La Tourtrelle,
White Rose of Province, River's George the Fourth, La Reine, Giant
of Battles, Baron Provost, Seven Sisters and the ever-blooming
pink daisy.
The War Between the States brought desolation in its train. When
General William Henry Fitzhugh Lee, desperately wounded, was taken
prisoner, his brother Robert E. Lee, Jr., made his escape, as graphically
described in his Recollections and Letters of General R. E. Lee.
Here Rooney Lee parted forever with his wife and two children,
going to the prison at Fortress Monroe. Here an angel from heaven,
immortalized by the Southern poetess, Margaret J. Preston, in Agnes
is Gone, parted with her lover. It was to Hickory Hill that J.
E. B. Stuart came on the night of June 12, 1862, to grasp the hand
of a desperately wounded soldier then a paroled prisoner, and near
here Stuart fought his last battle. Twice each year during 1863
and 1864 both armies swept over Hickory Hill, its gardens, it grounds
and its plantation-but it has survived, and the bloom of its beauty
has not faded. |