Unincorporated area in Virginia, US
Smoky Ordinary is an unincorporated area in Brunswick County, Virginia.[1]
The ordinary that stood on this site catered to travelers on the north-south stage road as early as 1750. During the American Revolution local warehouses were burned by British Colonel Tarleton,[2] and legend says that it was from that occurrence that the ordinary derived its name.
During the Civil War the post office (1832-1964) and inn were spared when a Union officer recognized the inn's owner, Dr. George M. Raney, as being a former classmate at the University of Pennsylvania.[3]
History
"Ordinary" is sometimes used to refer to a tavern or a place where food is sold to the public.[4] The name of this location was sometimes spelled as "Smokey Ordinary".[1] A post office called Smokey Ordinary was established in 1832, and remained in operation until 1964.[5] The town's first name was "Ordinary", but after it burned during the Revolutionary War, the name was prefixed with "Smok(e)y".[6]
References
36°49′44″N 77°44′17″W / 36.8287594°N 77.7380468°W / 36.8287594; -77.7380468