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Moving Destinations in Virginia
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Moving - Ashburn, Virginia
If you are looking for a local moving
company to relocate you in or out of Ashburn, VA, we can
help you. Movers USA's moving services include packing,
crating, moving, and storage if you need some time to
search for your new home.
To help familiarize you with this fine neighborhood,
please read our brief history about Ashburn, VA. It's
interesting.
A Brief History of Ashburn, Virginia
"Ashburn is a railroad town on the Bluemont division of
the Washington and Old Dominion railway... Ashburn is a
busy and prosperous place." J. Harry Shannon, The
Washington Star, November 3, 1918
Ashburn's beginnings trace back to the 1720s, when Thomas
Lee and Robert Carter tried to outwit each other by buying
up strategic pieces of the Virginia countryside. Each
sought to control the commercial destiny of the colony.
Lee, influenced by Britain's success on the seas, held the
theory that control of the waterways equaled control of
the colony. Belmont, Lee's grandson's Ashburn estate, is
situated near the Potomac River and Goose Creek.
Carter, nicknamed "King" because he owned vast quantities
of land, felt destiny would reward the man who controlled
land transportation, so he purchased land that controlled
the approaches to mountain passes. For example Oatlands,
built by one of Carter's descendants, stands at the foot
of Mount Gilead.
In the early 1700s, the Lees appeared to be winning and
owned most of the tobacco warehouses along the Potomac .
Carter, meanwhile, was forced to roll his lots of tobacco
down to Lee's warehouse at present-day Chain Bridge. It
didn't take long for Carter to feel that Lee was
overcharging him for storage and loading.
Carter told his servants to build a road from his tobacco
warehouse at Occoquan to Vestal's Gap Road (later known as
Route 7). The Ox Road, (alternatively, Frying Pan Road
from Carter's Frying Pan copper mines), was started in
1728 near present-day Occoquan/Woodbridge and was finally
connected to Vestal's Gap Road in the late 1740s by
Carter's son, "King" Carter having died in 1732.
Just wide enough for an ox cart, the Ox Road likely passed
through Herndon on what is now Frying Pan Road and entered
the Ashburn area via present-day Shellhorn Road, then
swung north on what is now Ashburn Road (Route 641) and
then east on Stubble Road (Stunkle Road or Route 647),
crossing Goose Creek at Hough's Mill around the year 1765.
Ox Road let Carter's Loudoun County tobacco plantations
send tobacco down to Occoquan by land, bypassing Lee's
warehousing and shipping concerns on the Potomac , thus
granting the Carter family the last laugh. Until 1820,
that is, when Leesburg Turnpike sent Ox Road into dusty
oblivion as a major east-west trade route.
Ashburn was originally called Farmwell (alternative names
Old Farmwell, Farmwell Station) after a nearby mansion of
that name owned by George Lee, great-grandson of Thomas
Lee. The name Farmwell first appeared in George's October,
1802 will and was used to describe the 1,236 acre
plantation he inherited from his father, Thomas Ludwell
Lee II.
Thomas Ludwell Lee II was the brother of Belmont owner
Ludwell Lee and owned an equally magnificent mansion,
Coton, on property north of Route 7 now occupied by Xerox
Document University and Lansdowne. The boys inherited
their land from father Thomas Ludwell Lee I, who obtained
the 4,700 acre tract ("the remainder of all my lands
between Goose Creek and Broad Run") from his father,
Thomas Lee.
George Lee, originator of the Farmwell name, died in 1805
and his property passed to son Doctor George Lee
(1796-1858). Doctor Lee married Sarah Moore Henderson in
1827. Sarah is reputed to have given birth to 23 children,
the eldest of which, George III, inherited Farmwell upon
his father's death and granted a right of way across the
plantation to the Alexandria, Loudoun & Hampshire Railroad
(later the Washington & Old Dominion) in 1859.
The agricultural village changed into a commercial village
when the railroad arrived in 1860 at Farmwell Station,
although the Civil War (1861-1865) and the depression
which followed delayed the change.
The section of Farmwell plantation west of Ashburn Road, a
580 acre tract, was purchased in 1841 by lawyer and almost
vice-president John Janney, a Quaker, as a summer home. He
called the property Ashburn Farm (first known written use
is 1870 when he sold the property). The term ashburn
apparently refers to a grove of ash trees by a burn, an
Old English word for spring or stream. The stream in
question was likely Beaverdam Run.
In 1895, Ashburn Farm was purchased by Senator William
Morris Stewart. Stewart was known as the "Silver Senator"
because of the half-million he made in 1856 defending
claimants of Nevada's Comstock silver lode and because he
was a strong supporter of silver currency. Senator Stewart
represented Nevada from 1862-1875 and 1887-1905 and lived
at Ashburn Farm from 1895 until retirement from the Senate
in 1905.
Local Legend has it that the village, known until then as
Farmwell or Farmwell Station, got a new name after
lightning struck an ash tree on Senator Stewart's farm in
1896. The ash tree is rumored to have burned and smoldered
for a week and attracted spectators from miles around.
Since the Post Office had been pressing for a new name for
the village (to avoid confusion with Farmville in Prince
Edward County), and the Senator was the area's leading
citizen, the villagers renamed the village after the ash
burn.

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