The center of WaterfordCapture Date: Jun 14, 2014 11:17 AM•Views: 12No comments yet. All fields are required, fill in the form. Comment successfully added. Comment
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Birdhouse pole, WaterfordCapture Date: Jun 14, 2014 11:18 AM•Views: 13No comments yet. All fields are required, fill in the form. Comment successfully added. Comment
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17th century cottage, WaterfordCapture Date: Jun 14, 2014 11:19 AM•Views: 13No comments yet. All fields are required, fill in the form. Comment successfully added. Comment
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Some local Civil War historyCapture Date: Jun 14, 2014 11:21 AM•Views: 12No comments yet. All fields are required, fill in the form. Comment successfully added. Comment
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A classic Virginia homeCapture Date: Jun 14, 2014 11:22 AM•Views: 13No comments yet. All fields are required, fill in the form. Comment successfully added. Comment
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The outskirts of WaterfordCapture Date: Jun 14, 2014 11:22 AM•Views: 14No comments yet. All fields are required, fill in the form. Comment successfully added. Comment
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The Old Mill, Waterford
In 1928, the octogenarian Mary Dutton Steer wrote in her Early Memories of Waterford, "The ever-changing owners of the ever-busy mill." As one examines the records of ownership, the truth of her statement becomes apparent. Amos Janney settled in the Loudoun Valley in 1733 and soon after built a log mill on Catoctin Creek, not far from the present location of the Old Mill. His son, Mahlon, developed this family mill into a larger operation by 1762, when he erected a larger mill of wood on a stone foundation, at the site of the present mill. Mahlon's new mill was a custom mill, grinding not only wheat grown on his own land but also providing services for other farmers settling around "Janney's Mill."
Capture Date: Jun 14, 2014 11:23 AM•Views: 13
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Farm near WaterfordCapture Date: Jun 14, 2014 11:25 AM•Views: 13No comments yet. All fields are required, fill in the form. Comment successfully added. Comment
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Morven Park Grounds, LeesburgCapture Date: Jun 14, 2014 11:49 AM•Views: 13No comments yet. All fields are required, fill in the form. Comment successfully added. Comment
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Morven Park, Leesburg
Morven Park is an estate in Leesburg, Virginia, USA, that includes the Westmoreland Davis Mansion and the Winmill Carriage Museum. The gardens are open to the public at no charge. The park is also home to the Museum of Hounds and Hunting, with displays of art, artifacts and memorabilia about the sport of foxhunting. Opened in 1985, the museum is located in the north wing of the Westmoreland Davis Mansion, owned by Westmoreland Davis, Governor of Virginia from 1918 to 1922. The Westmoreland Davis Mansion is on the National Register of Historic Places and is a Virginia Historic Landmark. The Westmoreland Davis Memorial Foundation operates the property and offers tours.
Capture Date: Jun 14, 2014 11:58 AM•Views: 13
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Morven Park, Leesburg
The first structures on the site of Morven Park date to about 1780. A fieldstone house built by Wilson Cary Seldon is now a part of the north wing of the main house, stuccoed over to match the rest of the mansion. Judge Thomas Swann acquired the property about 1808. Around 1830 Swann built the center two-story portion of the house, with flanking pavilions. It is not known whether the pavilions were initially linked to the house, but the renovations included the prominent tetrastyle Greek Revival portico that dominates the front. While the brick structure remains, now stuccoed, none of the Swann interiors exist. Judge Swann's son, Thomas Swann Jr., began a remodeling program around 1850, using the Baltimore firm of E.G. Lind and William T. Murdock as architects, converting the Palladian house to the Italianate style with four towers, including one that was to be five stories tall, stated by The Buildings of Virginia to resemble Queen Victoria's Osborne House on the Isle of Wight.
Capture Date: Jun 14, 2014 11:58 AM•Views: 13
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Gatehouse, Morven ParkCapture Date: Jun 14, 2014 11:58 AM•Views: 13No comments yet. All fields are required, fill in the form. Comment successfully added. Comment
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Front Portico, Morven Park, Leesburg
Westmoreland Davis bought the house in 1903 and expanded it again. Davis raised the height of the hyphens to two stories and reworked the interior. Davis, a New York lawyer, had roots in Virginia and made Morven Park into an agricultural showpiece, while his wife developed formal gardens near the house. In the 1970s, Morven Park was home to the Morven Park International Equestrian Institute. The Institute was a training center for advanced dressage, 3-day eventing, and show jumping. More than one rider trained at Morven Park went on to international equestrian competition. In its day, Morven Park and the Potomac Horse Center were considered the two most prestigious riding schools in the United States. Today, the barns still stand and the gift shop is located in what used to be a student dormitory.Beginning in 2013, the turkeys pardoned in the National Thanksgiving Turkey Presentation have been sent to Morven Park to live out the rest of their natural lives; Davis, in his lifetime, farmed turkeys.
Capture Date: Jun 14, 2014 11:59 AM•Views: 22
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Elaborate chimney, Morven ParkCapture Date: Jun 14, 2014 11:59 AM•Views: 13No comments yet. All fields are required, fill in the form. Comment successfully added. Comment
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The Museum of Hounds and Fox Hunting, Morven ParkCapture Date: Jun 14, 2014 12:09 PM•Views: 13No comments yet. All fields are required, fill in the form. Comment successfully added. Comment
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