The precise origin of the name is uncertain, although it likely was borrowed from one or more of several features in Scotland, as "Morven" has a lengthy and varied history of use as a place-name in other areas settled by Scots, especially in Virginia.[5] The name was given to a large Amelia County estate just north of the crossroads before it was used for the town itself.[6][7] The hamlet, originally noted as Eanes (or Eenes) Crossroads, was a post village by the mid-1800s;[8][9] by 1855, its post office was listed as Morven.[10] The name was well-established at the turn of the 20th century,[11] and the Morven post office appeared in gazetteers at least as late as the 1920s[12] – although apparently it had closed before then,[1] one of the thousands of small "fourth class" facilities that were shut down in the early 1900s after the advent of rural free delivery.[13] The area is now served by the post office 10 miles southeast at the county seat, Amelia Court House, ZIP code 23002.
Civil War
On April 5, 1865, during the final days of the Civil War, as GeneralRobert E. Lee and his exhausted, hungry, and depleted Army of Northern Virginia continued their westward retreat, Union cavalry intercepted and destroyed a Confederate wagon train that had just traveled through Morven.[14] The wagons, carrying desperately needed supplies sent from Richmond for the Rebels, had been delayed because wet weather had rendered the Appomattox uncrossable at the Genito bridge, forcing the caravan to take a longer route to the north and cross the river at Clement Town. The engagement was one of the few, if not the only one, to involve Black Confederate troops.[15] The surrender to Ulysses S. Grant took place at Appomattox Court House on April 9.
Morven School was built as a one-room public schoolhouse around 1915.[17] Located on Route 616, with 2 acres of land, it was among several public school properties in Amelia County put up for auction in the late 1960s.[18] Although all the properties advertised were of similar description and most are documented to have been Rosenwald Schools,[19] it is unclear whether Morven School was itself a Rosenwald. During the early 20th century, the Rosenwald project was a collaborative effort that constructed thousands of facilities across the South primarily to improve the education of African American children. After desegregation, the Rosenwald model became obsolete, and many former Rosenwald properties were demolished or sold.
Historic structures
Existing historic structures around Morven include:
Shrum House, 2/3 mile south on Route 681,[20] built just after the American Revolution and restored around the late 1960s.[21]
Union Baptist Church & Cemetery, established 1833[22] and a prominent local landmark by the time of the Civil War,[6][8] on modern-day Route 616 halfway between Morven and Paineville.
Little Union Baptist Church (pictured), established 1874,[23] on Route 681 just north of the crossroads.
^"Old Homes Of Amelia County", The Farmville Herald, Volume 72, Number 85, 3 August 1962, page 4C. Retrieved from Virginia Chronicle, Library of Virginia, August 2, 2023.
^ ab"Amelia County" (map). Confederate States Of America. Army. Dept. Of Northern Virginia. Chief Engineer's Office & Henderson, D. E. (1864). [S.l.: Chief Engineer's Office, D.N.V.] Retrieved from the Library of Congress, January 5, 2022.
^ Gibson Jefferson McConnaughey. "Amelia Old Homes: Shrum House", The Farmville Herald, Volume 92, Number 82, 4 June 1982, page 4B. Retrieved from Virginia Chronicle, Library of Virginia, August 2, 2023.
^Henry Gannett. A Gazetteer of Virginia, U.S. Geological Survey, Bulletin No. 232, Series F: Geography, 40, page 103. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1904. Retrieved December 8, 2021.