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Moving - Sideburn, Virginia
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Please enjoy this brief history of the Sideburn, VA,
area.
A Brief History of Sideburn, Virginia
The Sideburn Civic Association consists of
individuals from the Fairfax/Burke area. According to Nan
Netherton and Whitney Von Lake Wyckoff's Fairfax Station:
All Aboard! in 1865 there were 2,941 African Americans
living in Fairfax County: "They were mostly scattered about
except for a concentration in three communities: about 130
in Fairfax Court House, 30 in Lewinsville and 30 in Fairfax
Station." The little African American community in the
Fairfax Station area grew. Some of the families in the
Zion/Sideburn area were: the Wrights, the Roots, the Goins,
the Honestys, the Suggs, Barbers, Whites, Mundys, Halls,
Buckners, Hamiltons and Pinns. While many landowners have
sold their property for development, many descendents of the
original families remain and continue to play an active role
in the community.
During the early 1900's landowner David
R. Pinn dedicated a portion of his property for construction
of the Little Bethel Church. In the 1950's this property was
given to an organization called the Immediate Relief
Association. With the demise of that organization, the
property was used to provide a playground for youth in the
neighborhood. The property is now owned by the Sideburn
Civic Association. Area Godfather, the late James Goins, was
instrumental in establishing the David R. Pinn Recreation
Center on the site. Throughout the years, the County has
provided wonderful programs for youth and senior citizens at
the Pinn Center.
With the death of Jim Goins, the
community experienced a period of inactivity. Programs and
attendance dwindled at the Pinn Center, until in the summer
of 1999 County officials felt that it was not cost effective
to continue programs there. Faced with the potential closure
of their community center, nearby residents mobilized and
requested a one year delay. They promised that the community
center could once again be the neighborhood gathering place
that it had once been. Members of the Sideburn Community
association were true to their word and the center today is
a beehive of activity. Local civic associations joined with
members of the Sideburn association to create a
stronger-than-ever sense of community there. On Saturday,
April 21, 2001 Braddock District Supervisor Sharon Bulova
presented members of the Sideburn Civic Association and the
Zion Community with a Certificate of Recognition from the
Board of Supervisors "for a remarkable and significant
history coupled with a stronger-than-ever sense of
community."
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