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Moving Destinations in Virginia
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Moving - Lorton, Virginia
The Mason Neck peninsula is steeped in natural and
cultural history. Encompassing 1,804 acres, the park
is bordered by the Mason Neck National Wildlife
Refuge. Pohick Bay Regional Park and Gunston Hall
manor. Combined, these areas provide 5,600 acres
dedicated to recreation and wildlife management.
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Here is a little piece of history about Lorton,
VA, and how it was named.
A Brief History of Lorton, Virginia
Mason Neck Park, Lorton, VA
The first recorded history of Mason Neck was by
Captain John Smith in 1608. He wrote of his meeting
with the Dogue Indians and charted the chief's
village of Tauxenent on his map of Virginia. The
area was referred to as Doggs Island and Doeg Neck
originally. Later, the neck received its current
name from the Mason family. (George Mason IV, father
of the Virginia Declaration of Rights which grew
into the U.S. Bill of Rights, owned a 5,500 acre
plantation on the neck called Gunston Hall. The
original building, constructed in 1755, is still
standing and is administered by the Board of Regents
of the National Society of the Colonial Dames of
America as a National Historic Landmark. You can
tour the stately brick manor, gardens, and other
areas for a fee. The current Mason "holdings" are
now less than 500 acres.)
During the 1800s and early 1900s, logging was the
area's primary industry. The removal of mature pine
and hardwood, and use of the pesticide DDT lead to
the decline of the American Bald Eagle in the
region.
In 1965, the Conservation Committee for Mason
Neck formed to preserve the area from increasing
development pressures. In July 1967, the Nature
Conservancy made its first purchase of land to
protect areas of Mason Neck until funds were
appropriated to federal, state, and local agencies.
The Commonwealth of Virginia purchased its first
parcel of what is now Mason Neck State Park in
August 1967.
The park is now managed for passive recreation,
environmental education and the protection and
preservation of habitat for the American Bald Eagle
and other animals in the area. Animals that frequent
Mason Neck include: bald eagles, hawks, white-tailed
deer, fox, bobcat, and over 200 species of songbird.

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