On Grove Lane (Virginia Route 185), on the right when traveling west. Reported damaged.
Just north stood the home of William and Ann (Neville) O’Bannon, where their son, Lt. Presley Neville O’Bannon, was born about 1776. O’Bannon, a Marine, was the first American to command U.S. forces on foreign soil and the first to raise the . . . — — Map (db m1359) HM
On West Main Street / John Marshall Highway (Virginia Route 55), on the right when traveling east.
Near here Stonewall Jackson, after a march of twenty-six miles on his way to Bristoe Station, halted for a few hours to rest his men, August 25-26, 1862 — — Map (db m1358) HM
On West Main Street / John Marshall Highway (Virginia Route 55), on the right when traveling east.
(Six miles southwest of this location), on the morning of 27 Aug. 1862, Gen. Robert E. Lee rested at the head of Lt. Gen. James Longstreet’s corps as it marched toward Thoroughfare Gap to join Lt. Gen. Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson’s . . . — — Map (db m1357) HM
On East Main Street (John Marshall Highway) (Virginia Route 55) at Rectortown Road (Virginia Route 710), on the right when traveling west on East Main Street (John Marshall Highway).
At Rectortown, four miles North, General George B. McClellan received the order relieving him from command of the Army of the Potomac, November 7, 1862. As Burnside, his successor was present, McClellan immediately turned over the command to him. — — Map (db m91288) HM
On Rectortown Road (Virginia Route 710), on the right when traveling north.
Unable to extend a truce with the Union army, Col. John S. Mosby assembled his command, the 43rd Battalion Virginia Cavalry, in a field just west of here on 21 Apr. 1865. As Mosby sat astride his horse, his final order was read aloud. It stated in . . . — — Map (db m1174) HM
On John Marshall Highway (Virginia Route 55) west of Whiting Road (County Route 622), on the left when traveling east.
After the Civil War, the constitution of 1869 established a statewide system of free public schools in Virginia. Several new schools in Fauquier were identified by an assigned number. Number 18 was built on land donated by Samuel F. Shackleford. . . . — — Map (db m20645) HM
On Grove Lane (Virginia Route 185) at Justice Lane, on the right when traveling west on Grove Lane.
Thomas Marshall, the father of future Chief Justice John Marshall, built Oak Hill about 1773 and relocated his family there from The Hollow, their former home nearby. John Marshall resided at Oak Hill for two years until he entered the Continental . . . — — Map (db m1362) HM
The Village of Salem (renamed Marshall in 1882) was in the heartland of Col. John Singleton Mosby’s Confederacy. His 43rd Battalion of Partisan Rangers was summoned by the grapevine when needed and executed successful raids, often under the cover . . . — — Map (db m1183) HM