Alma, Virginia
Human settlement in Page County, Virginia, United States
Alma is an unincorporated community in Page County, in the U.S. state of Virginia. The community is said to have been named, in the mid-1850s, by local doctor James Lee Gillespie. The doctor, who relocated to Page County around 1851 is said to have been a follower of events of the Crimean War, and is believed to have named the little village either for the Battle of Alma or the Alma River, in Ukraine. From that, it is believed that the word is the Crimean Tatar word for apple.
References
- U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Alma, Virginia
- James Lee Gillespie, by Robert H. Moore, II, at Southern Unionists Chronicles
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Municipalities and communities of Page County, Virginia, United States
County seat: Luray
- Luray
- Shenandoah
- Stanley
communities
- Alma
- Battle Creek
- Big Spring
- Blaineville
- Brookside
- Catherine Furnace
- Cavetown
- Comertown
- Compton
- Fairview
- Fleeburg
- Forest Hills
- Furnace
- Goods Mill
- Grove Hill
- Hamburg
- Hilldale
- Honeyville
- Ida
- Ingham
- Intersections
- Jollett
- Kimball
- Leaksville
- Marksville
- Mauck
- Morning Star
- Newport
- Oak Hill
- Pine Grove
- Rileyville
- Salem
- Shenandoah Forest
- Spring View
- Springfield
- Stony Man
- Valleyburgh
- Vaughn
- Verbena
- Westlu
- White House
- Woodland Park
- Virginia portal
- United States portal
38°35′28″N 78°33′27″W / 38.59111°N 78.55750°W / 38.59111; -78.55750
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