Virginia Assembly Establishes Tobacco Inspection Ports

To regulate and improve the quality of its most lucrative cash crop, the Virginia General Assembly passed the Tobacco Inspection Act of 1730. It required all tobacco to be inspected at designated warehouses before export. One such inspection site would later be established along Hunting Creek—laying the economic foundation for Alexandria’s founding in 1749. These ports became focal points for trade, labor, and plantation agriculture in colonial Virginia.