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On Little River Turnpike (Virginia Route 236) at Hillbrook Drive, on the right when traveling east on Little River Turnpike.
The roadbed for the unfinished Manassas Gap Railroad was located in this immediate area and crossed Indian Run creek in Poe Terrace Park. The stone bridge abutments are still visible. Financial problems caused work to stop on the railroad in 1857, . . . — — Map (db m33512) HM
On Braddock Road at Dunleigh Drive, on the right when traveling east on Braddock Road.
On 4 December 1861, fifty-five men of the 3rd New Jersey Infantry, Col. George W. Taylor commanding, set an ambush nearby in retaliation for attacks on Union pickets. They stretched two telegraph wires across Braddock Road at the eastern end of a . . . — — Map (db m72404) HM
On Little River Turnpike (Virginia Route 236) east of Wakefield Chapel Road, on the right when traveling west.
The Gooding Tavern served Little River Turnpike travelers and stagecoach passengers from 1807-1879 and was famous for “the best fried chicken” and “peaches and honey.” For the community, the tavern served as a social and . . . — — Map (db m44097) HM
On Little River Turnpike (Virginia Route 236) at Guinea Road, on the left when traveling west on Little River Turnpike.
Ilda, a community located at the intersection of
Guinea Road and Little River Turnpike, came into existence after the Civil War and lasted into the first half of the twentieth century. It originated when two freedmen, Horace Gibson and Moses . . . — — Map (db m37906) HM
On Annandale Road at Little River Turnpike (Virginia Route 236), on the left when traveling north on Annandale Road.
The earliest private turnpike charter in Virginia was granted by the General Assembly to the Company of the Fairfax and Loudoun Turnpike Road in 1796. By 1806 the 34-mile-long road connected Alexandria with Aldie on the Little River in Loudoun . . . — — Map (db m7374) HM
On Columbia Pike (Virginia Route 244) at Maplewood Drive, on the right when traveling north on Columbia Pike.
During the Civil War, Confederate Col. J. E.B. Stuart used Mason’s Hill and nearby Munson’s Hill as outposts for the First Virginia Cavalry from late July to the end of Sept. 1861. Capt. Edward Porter Alexander of the Signal Corps established a . . . — — Map (db m6926) HM
Near Columbia Pike (Virginia Route 244) east of Oak Hill Drive, on the right when traveling north.
Early in the U.S. Civil War, Mason's Hill was strategically important because of its high elevation and good views of nearby thoroughfares, Columbia Turnpike, and Little River Turnpike. Mason's Hill, Munson's Hill, and Bailey's Crossroads were . . . — — Map (db m205386) HM
On Little River Turnpike (State Highway 236 Frontage Road) at Championship Drive, on the right when traveling east on Little River Turnpike.
Shortly before 5 A.M. on Wednesday, 24 August 1864, Lt. Col. John Singleton Mosby with about 300 Confederate Rangers and two field artillery pieces opened fire from the west side of the Accotink Creek valley on a Union stockade located in Annandale. . . . — — Map (db m35281) HM
On Braddock Road (County Route 620) at Backlick Road (County Route 617), on the left when traveling east on Braddock Road.
At the intersection of Backlick and Braddock Roads stood Price's Ordinary, established by David Price about 1773 and remaining in operation until 1802. Price's offered refreshment and shelter for travelers and a common meeting place for local . . . — — Map (db m169250) HM
On Backlick Road (County Route 617) at Columbia Pike (Virginia Route 244), in the median on Backlick Road.
This Model 1905 three inch field gun
saw service in the Mexican Campaign
against Pancho Villa, and was
originally obtained by a local veterans
organization during the mid-1950s.
In the early 1980s, American Legion
Bicentennial Post 1976, . . . — — Map (db m6919) HM
Near Little River Turnpike (Virginia Route 236) east of Wakefield Chapel Road (County Route 710).
Virginia aristocrat William Fitzhugh was granted 21,996 acres in 1694: The Ravensworth tract, which was divided into northern and southern halves in 1701 and subsequently subdivided among Fitzhugh heirs throughout the 18th and 19th centuries. The . . . — — Map (db m617) HM
Near Woodburn Road, 0.3 miles west of Gallows Road (Virginia Route 650), on the left when traveling west.
At the turn of the 20th century, a close-knit African American community was established here. The Johnson, Robinson, Sprigg and Collins families were the first to purchase lots. They cleared pine trees to enable truck farming and saw mill . . . — — Map (db m100807) HM