Notes
Owner: Soil Conservation Service
This photograph of Red Hill is one of a collection taken by the Southside Soil Conservation Service (SCS) in October 1950. They provide documentation of "Miracle Day"—a SCS demonstration project at Red Hill organized to rehabilitate the neglected farmland for the use of the Patrick Henry Boys Plantation. The original photographs were in the care of former SCS official, Eugene Morris.
On September 23, 1950, a committee from the PHMF met at Red Hill and reserved about twenty acres of property, and the rest was to be used as farmland for the boys' home.
On October 18, 1950, "Miracle of Conservation", also known as "Miracle Day", was held at Red Hill to demonstrate farming practices while renovating approximately 250 acres of land, preparing it for use by the Patrick Henry Boys Plantation program. It was sponsored by the United States Soil Conservation Service, Virginia Forest Service, Virginia Commission of Game and Inland Fisheries, Virginia Extension Service through local county agents, veterans' training classes, and farm equipment and implement dealers in the area. The event was overseen by approximately 5,000 visitors.
The event was publicized on October 12, 1950 in "The Charlotte Gazette" in Drakes Branch, Virginia in Volume 76 – number 49 and also in the "Richmond-Times Dispatch" on September 24, 1950.
The photograph depicts the following individuals standing at the graves of Patrick Henry and his wife, Dorothea Dandridge Henry:
- Susan Hill Dabney (1892–1986)
- Former Virginia Governor William Tuck (1896–1983)
- Reverend Ralph Bellwood (1895–1969)
- An unidentified man
- Dr. Thomas Stephen Buie, Regional Director of the SCS (1896–1973)
- George Ed Britton (1900–1975)
Both Governor Tuck and Dr. Buie gave remarks in the afternoon at the "Miracle Day" event talking about the importance of the Boys Plantation. Reverend Ralph Bellwood was the principle founder and first superintendent of the Patrick Henry Boys Plantation. Susan H. Dabney was a great-great-granddaughter of Patrick Henry through his son John (1796–1868) and served on the PHMF Board of Trustees.
George Ed Britton was a descendent of persons enslaved by the Henry family. He is speaking to the others in the photo about an incident in the life of Patrick Henry and related it to that of Former Governor Tuck.
The Patrick Henry Memorial Foundation borrowed the original photographs from Mr. Morris and made enlarged prints for its collection in August 2007. The original 3 1/2" x 5" photos were hand delivered back to Eugene Morris on or shortly after August 24, 2007.