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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/richmond_skyline.jpg]]
2%%[[caption-width-right:350:some caption text]]
3Richmond is the capital of the U.S. state of Virginia and its fourth-largest city by population. It is located at the fall line of the James River, from which its name--specifically a view of the James from Church Hill which is reminiscent of a view of the River Thames from Richmond Hill in London[[note]]which itself took its name from UsefulNotes/HenryVIII's ancestral hometown of Richmond, North Yorkshire[[/note]]--is derived. Despite not being as prominent a state capital as Denver or Atlanta, as the political center of what began as one of the original thirteen colonies Richmond has played a significant role in American history since the nation's founding, most notably as the capital of the Confederacy during UsefulNotes/TheAmericanCivilWar.
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5As Virginia has politically trended more leftward, Richmond has increasingly become considered a "northern" city (at least to people from the more conservative western parts of the state). It is known as "RVA", the "River City" (owing to its proximity to the James), and "the 804" (after its area code). If Richmond is known for anything not history-related by outsiders, it's for being the center of the American tobacco industry. In truth, Big Tobacco has become less prominent in recent years as engineering and technology companies have established a presence in the area. Richmond has also become an attractive shooting location for film and television productions.
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7In the realm of sports, Richmond has a AA baseball team, the Flying Squirrels[[note]]the name being chosen in a public contest, making the team the "Boaty [=McBoatface=]" of baseball[[/note]]. Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU), a.k.a. [[StrawmanU "The Berkeley of the South"]], which is a sprawling public university located close to downtown, is known for its Rams athletic program; the Rams men's basketball team made the Final Four in the 2011 NCAA Tournament.
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9Some notable neighborhoods and districts in Richmond include:
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11* Church Hill, a historic district which sits on the original land plot of the city of Richmond and is one of the largest extant 19th Century neighborhoods in the U.S. The location of St. John's Church, where Patrick Henry gave the original "GiveMeLibertyOrGiveMeDeath" speech. An abandoned railroad tunnel that once belonged to the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad that ran under the district still sits there, with a steam locomotive, ten rail cars and several bodies sealed inside as the result of a collapse from 1925, which are still the subject of extraction attempts.
12* Downtown, at the center of which is the Virginia State Capitol, of which UsefulNotes/ThomasJefferson was one of the architects. Having served as the Confederate Capitol during the Civil War, the building remains the home of the Virginia General Assembly, the oldest elected legislative body in North America. A few blocks to the east of the Capitol is VCU's medical campus (formerly the Medical College of Virginia, or MCV), which includes the "Egyptian Building", one of the finest Egyptian Revival-style buildings in the country.
13* The Fan District, an upscale residential neighborhood so named for the "fan" shape of the array of streets that extend west from Belvidere Street, on the eastern edge of Monroe Park, and westward to Arthur Ashe Boulevard. Best known in recent years for Monument Avenue, a street lined with equine monuments of Confederate historical figures (Robert E. Lee, J. E. B. Stuart, UsefulNotes/JeffersonDavis, Stonewall Jackson, and Matthew Fontaine Maury) and [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking black tennis star Arthur Ashe]][[note]]which predictably pissed off the local racist community when his monument was announced[[/note]]; the Confederate monuments were dismantled in 2020--2021 after the George Floyd protests. Also includes [[GayBorhood Carytown]] and its movie palace, the Byrd Theatre, which hosts an annual French film festival each March which is attended by prominent French actors and directors.
14* Jackson Ward, a historically black neighborhood that in its heyday was known as the "Harlem of the South" and was the original home of tap dancer/actor/singer [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Robinson Bill "Bojangles" Robinson]], a statue of whom stands in the neighborhood today. Also the home of Maggie L. Walker, the first woman of color to charter and serve as president of an American bank, whose house is a U.S. National Historic Site.
15* Oregon Hill, a historic working-class neighborhood adjacent to Hollywood Cemetery (the former Confederacy's answer to Arlington National Cemetery), which these days serves as an unofficial student quarter for VCU while non-student residents tend to be on the poor end of the economic spectrum.
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17[[folder:Richmond in fiction]]
18[[AC:Comics]]
19* The third arc of the comic book ''ComicBook/{{Local}}'' is set here.
20* [[Characters/TheWalkingDeadComicMagnasGroup Magna's group]] in ''ComicBook/TheWalkingDead'' were originally based in a Richmond nursing home and were forced to flee when the leadership became tyrannical.
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22[[AC:Literature]]
23* [[TheCoroner Dr. Kay Scarpetta]], a character in the novels of Patricia Cornwell, is Richmond's chief medical examiner and solves murders in and around the city, at least until she relocates to Florida.
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25[[AC:Live-Action Film]]
26* ''Film/DeepImpact'': Leo (Creator/ElijahWood) and Sarah (Creator/LeeleeSobieski) are from Richmond.
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28[[AC:Live-Action TV]]
29* ''Series/TheXFiles'': The second season episode "[[Recap/TheXFilesS02E23SoftLight Soft Light]]" concerns a physicist in Richmond who finds himself on the wrong end of an active particle accelerator and has his shadow [[ArtisticLicensePhysics turn into destructive dark matter]]. An example of CreatorProvincialism on the part of Creator/VinceGilligan, a Richmond native, who made the city the setting of his first script for the series.
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31[[AC:Video Games]]
32* Is the central setting (though they get the skyline laughably wrong) of the third season of the ''[[VideoGame/TheWalkingDead Walking Dead]]'' video game, serving as the home base of the [[Characters/TheWalkingDeadVideoGameANewFrontierCharacters New Frontier]].
33[[/folder]]
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35[[folder:Famous Richmonders]]
36* [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_Ashe Arthur Ashe]]
37* Creator/ChrisAyres
38* Creator/GregAyres
39* Creator/DavidBaldacci
40* Creator/WarrenBeatty
41* Creator/LeslieBibb
42* Wrestling/JukeJointLucasCalhoun
43* Creator/ChadLColeman
44* Creator/VinceGilligan: Born in Farmville, Virginia, but raised in Richmond's suburbs in Chesterfield County.
45* Music/{{GWAR}}
46* Music/LambOfGod
47* [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_List John List]]: Notorious family annihilator and fugitive who was found living in the suburb of Midlothian after almost twenty years on the lam.
48* Creator/ShirleyMacLaine (sister of Warren Beatty)
49* Music/PigDestroyer
50* Creator/EdgarAllanPoe: Poe first entered the national consciousness as the editor and [[CausticCritic notoriously harsh literary critic]] for a Richmond-based periodical, the ''Southern Literary Messenger'', from 1835 to 1837. A museum dedicated to the writer is located at the "Old Stone House", located on E. Main Street in Stockhoe Bottom, in the city's oldest original residential building. Poe's mother, Eliza, was a prominent theater actress in Richmond at the time of her death in 1811.
51* [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Robinson Bill "Bojangles" Robinson]]
52* [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Verlander Justin Verlander]]: Born and raised in Goochland County.
53* Creator/TomWolfe
54* Creator/ConstanceWu

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