Photo detail

Camera Maker Canon Camera Model Canon PowerShot G5
Aperture f/4 Color Space sRGB
Exposure Value 0 EV Exposure Time 1/500 sec
Flash No Flash Focal Length 11.1875 mm
Date/Time 2004:07:17 14:19:44 Copyright © 2004 Jason O. Watson. All rights reserved.
Orientation 1: Normal (0 deg) Resolution Unit Inch
X Resolution 72 dots per ResolutionUnit Y Resolution 72 dots per ResolutionUnit
Compression Jpeg Compression Exposure Mode 0
Keywords historic marker Curles Neck and Bremo Virginia attraction display education historical marker Historical Site information landmark marker Place of Interest sign Tourist Destination Travel Destination attractive destination educating historic markers historic site info signage tourist attraction VA appealing history no people text tourism travel South attract historic nobody word daytime displays historical markers landmarks markers signs appeal color image educate historical outdoor vertical day destinations historic sites tourist attractions US colour image outside day time USA day-time U.S. words color images daylight outdoors U.S.A. verticals colour images Jason O. Watson / historical-markers.org natural light outsides United States United States of America Henrico County sign with text Caption CURLES NECK AND BREMO Curles Neck may take its name from the curls of the river or a family of that name. Richard Cocke, the Immigrant, patented land along the James River on the eastern side of the neck in 1636. There he built Bremo, the seat of the Cocke family for six generations. A descendant, John Hartwell Cock, relocated the family seat to Upper Bremo, in Fluvanna County, early in the 19th century. In 1674 Nathanial Bacon, Jr., the Rebel, settled on Curles Neck. In 1676 Bacon led a rebellion against the royal governor, Sir William Berkeley. With the failure of Bacon's Rebellion, some of his land was seized by the Crown to defray the costs of suppressing the rebellion. William Randolph purchase 480 acres of Bacon's land on Curles Neck in 1700.