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Middleburg was established in 1787, but the historic district includes a few 18th-century structures, with most dating to the mid-19th century. The district includes the Red Fox Inn & Tavern, the oldest building in town and listed individually on the National Register of Historic Places.
Ewell was named for Benjamin Stoddert Ewell, who was a U.S. and Confederate army officer, and civil engineer. A local farmer, he is best remembered for his presidency of the College of William and Mary in nearby Williamsburg during turbulent times for the school before and after the American Civil War .
The Red Fox Inn & Tavern, also known as the Middleburg Inn and Beveridge House, is a historic inn and tavern located in Middleburg, Loudoun County, Virginia.According to the National Register of Historic Places placard on the building, the Red Fox Inn was established circa 1728.
The oldest building in town, the Red Fox Inn & Tavern, [8] was originally established in 1728 by Joseph Chinn as Chinn's Ordinary and is billed as the oldest continually operated inn in the U.S. The oldest known house still in use as a residence, "Middleburg House," was built in 1779.
Red Fox Inn & Tavern, a historic inn and tavern located in Middleburg, Virginia. Red Fox Inn (Horton Bay, Michigan) , a historic inn and store located in Horton Bay, Michigan. Topics referred to by the same term
The cemetery is centered around a Hopewell mound. The mound measures seven feet high and about fifteen feet in diameter. It is the largest of the remaining earthwork mounds discovered in West Virginia's Eastern Panhandle. The city of Romney has never allowed the mound to be excavated.
Ewell 151, the former choir room, seen after hours in October 2023. J. A. C. Chandler, the President of William & Mary, proposed the construction of Phi Beta Kappa Memorial Hall in 1919 and the college's Board of Visitors approved the plan in 1923. [1] Phi Beta Kappa is the United States' oldest honor society and was founded at William & Mary ...
It is also part of the 78.5-hectare (194-acre) Lydden Temple Ewell National Nature Reserve [4] [5] and the 90-hectare (220-acre) Lydden Temple Ewell nature reserve, which is managed by the Kent Wildlife Trust. [6] It is in the North Downs Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. [7] This site has some of the richest chalk downland in the county.