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Moving - Annandale & Springfield, Virginia
In the near
future, if you are moving in or out of Annandale or
Sprinfield, VA, please give Movers USA an opportunity to
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Come read a brief history of Annandale
and Springfield, VA, which we have included for you.
A Brief History of Annandale and
Springfield, Virginia
The history of the Annandale and
Springfield areas in the Braddock District can be traced all
the way back to the pre-Revolutionary year 1695, when Col.
William Fitzhugh purchased over 24,000 acres of land,
originally named "Ravensworth."
Ravensworth was
the largest single parcel of land granted in Northern
Virginia. The land had been surveyed to include easy access
to the Accotink drainage basin via a road bed that would
later become Rolling Road. Tobacco, the most common
commodity in 17th century Virginia, had to be packed in
heavy hogshead casks and ''rolled'` to the waterways.
Upon the death of
Col. Fitzhugh in 1701, his property was divided equally and
left to his two eldest sons, William, Jr., who inherited the
southern portion (North Springfield, Ravensworth, and Kings
Park) and Henry, who inherited the northern portion (all of
the land that is now Annandale).
Annandale's main
road, Little River Turnpike (Route 236), was chartered as a
private turnpike by the General Assembly in 1795. The toll
house survived for 170 years where Route 236 intersects at
Ravensworth Road. In 1830 the area was named "Anandale" by a
Scottish settler after a village in Scotland at the mouth of
the Anan River. In later years, the name was modified to
become Annandale.
Several large colonial homes, including
the Ravensworth mansion, were built in the 1700's. The
Ravensworth mansion was home to the Fitzhughs and later the
Lee and Custis families. It was a beautiful and spacious
mansion, located in the present Ravensworth, North
Springfield area. Sadly, it fell into a state of disrepair
after the mansion was vacated by its last owner, Col. Robert
E. Lee, III and his family. In 1925 it was mysteriously
destroyed by fire and the land on which it stood was sold
for development.
The Oak Hill and Ossian Hall mansions
were built on the northern (Annandale) portion of the
Fitzhugh property. Ossian Hall was a stately colonial home
facing Braddock Road, but accessible by a private tree-lined
entrance on what is now Ravensworth Road. The mansion was
destroyed by fire in 1959 to make way for the current
Bristow subdivision. Oak Hill, near Wakefield Chapel Road,
is still standing today, a picturesque reminder of
Annandale's rich cultural heritage.

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