Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
John Gunnell House, also known as the George Coleman House, is a historic home near Great Falls, Fairfax County, Virginia. It was built in 1852, and is a two-story, five-bay, T-shaped frame dwelling in a vernacular Greek Revival style. It has an English basement, attic, and intersecting gable roofs with brick chimneys at each of the three gable ...
Cornwell Farm is a historic home located in Great Falls, Fairfax County, Virginia. It was built in 1831, and is a two-story, five-bay brick dwelling with a hipped roof in the Georgian style. It has a 1 + 1 ⁄ 2 -story addition connected by a gambrel roofed hyphen built in 1936–1937.
William Gunnell House, also known as Gunnell's Run, is a historic home located in Great Falls, Fairfax County, Virginia.It consists of a frame dwelling built in two stages and dated to about 1750, together with its compatible and unobtrusive 20th-century additions.
Towlston Grange is located at 1213 Towlston Road in Great Falls. There is a photograph of Bryan Fairfax's Towlston Grange in its unrestored state, taken by "The Rambler" of the Washington, D.C. Evening Star newspaper in 1918, that shows a 1 + 1 ⁄ 2 -story clapboarded house built in the English tradition.[4]
Great Falls is located at (38.9981653, −77.2883157) at an elevation of 344 feet (105 [2] [7] Located on Virginia State Route 7 in Northern Virginia, Great Falls is 15 miles (24 km) west-northwest of downtown Washington, D.C., and 10.5 miles (16.9 km) north of Fairfax, the county seat.
The Great Falls Grange Hall and Forestville School are two historic buildings that served as a Grange meeting hall and as a school located in Great Falls, Fairfax County, Virginia. The Forestville School was built in 1889 as a one-room school, and expanded in 1911 with the appendage of the Floris School. It is an L-shaped wood-frame structure ...
1909 - Great Falls and Old Dominion Railroad extends to Great Falls Park. 1920 - Great Falls Grange established. [8] 1942 - Community fire department is formed. [8] 1945 - Community members begin referring to the Forestville area as "Great Falls" and encourage the name change. [8] 1955 - Area formally renamed Great Falls in local organizations ...
Matildaville is a ghost town located along the Patowmack Canal near present day Great Falls, Virginia, United States.It was named for the wife of Light Horse Harry Lee, on 40 acres of land owned at the time by Bryan Fairfax, 8th Lord Fairfax of Cameron, and served as headquarters for the Patowmack Company from 1785 until 1799. [1]