Sweet Hall (also known as Sweethall) is an unincorporated community on the northern bank of the Pamunkey River in southeastern King William County, Virginia, United States.
[1][2] In none of the information easily available online about Sweet Hall is there mention that the owners were slaveholders, and that the structures were probably built and renovated by enslaved persons.
Weevils in the Wheat was "an expression used by slaves to communicate to one another that their plans for a secret meeting or dance had been discovered and that the gathering was called off.
[3] The small community includes two properties listed on the National Register of Historic Places: Sweet Hall and Windsor Shades.
The Sweet Hall Marsh (part of the Chesapeake Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve)[4] is located just south-southeast of the community.