This is a somewhat disappointing read in that the author either spends significant amounts of time on national subjects not directly related to Virginia (explaining the American Revolution, the Civil War, and so forth) or, in later chapters, on "firsts" (the first woman or minority at this or that college or hospital). When the author focuses on major changes to Virginia's society and government the story can be fascinating.
One of the most surprising events to me was the 1799 repeal of the "glebes," or landed supports for Episcopal clergy in Virginia, and the 1802 law for the sale of them. In a 1815 US Supreme Court case, Terrett v. Taylor, from Alexandria County and thus from what was then DC, the sale was declared invalid, based on no specific provision of the Constitution, but Virginia ignored and thus nulified the case. This was a disestablishment similar to the 1530s in England. Also, Henry Ruffner became famous in 1847 for his "Address to the People of West Virginia" where he condemned slavery for its bad economic effects and proposed both black education and black colonization. In the 1870s his son, William Henry Ruffner, became the first superintendent of Virginia's new public school system and an important proponent of what became Virginia Tech, founded in 1872 as the land-grant school for the state, which was matched by designation of the Hampton Institute for African-Americans. The adoption of the "Gray Plan" for massive resistance in 1955, which allowed a local option for or against segregation, won in a referendum to the people 2-1, but the Byrd Organization took that as a mandate to forbid any local options at all the next year (the "Stanley Plan"), which led to closing of schools until it was struck down by courts in 1959 (Governor Lindsay Almond won state-wide elections the same year to help keep the schools open too).
The history of Virginia is indeed fascinating and distinct. I wish it had a more focused telling.