Explore Dinwiddie County, Virginia with this interactive street and satellite map. Browse all 2 cities and towns in Dinwiddie County below.
| County | Dinwiddie |
| State | Virginia (VA) |
| County Seat | Dinwiddie |
| Country | United States of America |
| Latitude | 37.032372 |
| Longitude | -77.654852 |
| Cities & Towns | 2 |
| Area Codes | 804 |
Dinwiddie County unfurls across the southern Piedmont of Virginia, a landscape shaped by the slow persistence of water and earth. The terrain, generally low-lying, slopes gently toward the Atlantic drainage, punctuated by the meandering arteries of rivers like the Appomattox and the Nottoway, which, with their tributaries, have etched their courses through the land over millennia. These waterways, often shadowed by thickets of hardwood and pine, lend a certain damp, fertile scent to the air, particularly after a summer shower, and their banks have long guided the settlement and commerce of the region. To the north, the county’s boundary with Chesterfield County is largely defined by the broader expanse of the Appomattox, while to the south and west, its contours are more subtly drawn by the diminishing elevations and the fainter hum of distant communities. The land itself, a rich loam, promises bounty, a promise that has been answered by generations who have worked its soil.
The genesis of Dinwiddie County can be traced to the early colonial era, a time when the burgeoning population of Virginia pressed westward from the tidewater settlements. Officially formed in 1752 from a portion of Prince George County, its establishment marked a formal recognition of the growing agricultural communities that had taken root along the rivers and creeks. The county’s early life was deeply entwined with the cultivation of tobacco, a crop that dictated the rhythms of labor and the accumulation of wealth, shaping its social structure and its relationship with the wider world. The county seat, named in honor of a prominent colonial governor, emerged as a focal point for governance and trade, a place where planters gathered to conduct business and where the nascent legal and administrative functions of the county took shape, a quiet hub amidst the dispersed plantations.
Today, Dinwiddie County’s economy continues to draw sustenance from the land, though its agricultural base has diversified beyond the historical dominance of tobacco, embracing a broader range of crops and livestock. The present-day character of the county is a blend of enduring rural traditions and the quiet hum of contemporary life, where the pace often feels attuned to the changing light of dusk rather than the urgency of a metropolis. While industry has found its place, particularly along transportation corridors, much of the county retains a palpable sense of open space and a connection to the natural world, a feeling amplified by the expansive skies that often stretch from horizon to horizon. Its landmarks are often understated, found in the quiet dignity of historic farmsteads, the enduring presence of old churches, and the enduring beauty of the river valleys, places that speak of continuity and the subtle, enduring strength of the Old Dominion’s heartland.
This page provides an interactive map of Dinwiddie County, Virginia alongside links to detailed street maps for 2 cities and towns. The county seat is Dinwiddie. Each city and town map page includes live weather, local news and precise GPS coordinates.
Location data is sourced from the USGS GNIS database and verified by coordinates, not name matching alone.
| Page generated | June 2026 |
| Location data | USGS GNIS database; coordinates matched to 2020 US Census records |