Parallel Histories: Ravensworth and Buckland, Fitzhugh and Love Families

Ravensworth, the largest colonial land grant in Fairfax County, and Buckland, Prince William County’s pioneer inland town which thrived despite its distance from the era’s primary commercial waterways, offer a glimpse into the history and genealogy of Northern Virginia.

 

Ravensworth

William Fitzhugh purchased the enormous plantation (24,112 acres (37.7 square miles)) in 1685 from the proprietors of the Northern Neck Grant. To put its size into perspective, the same area in the year 2000 was home to approximately 138,355 people, encompassing much of modern-day Northern Virginia’s suburbs. For the first century of its existence, Ravensworth was primarily worked by enslaved individuals, focusing on tobacco cultivation under the supervision of overseers. The Fitzhugh owners largely remained absentee landlords during this period. It wasn’t until around 1790 that their descendants built homes and settled on inherited portions of the estate.

 

Buckland

Twenty-five miles west, Buckland was established in 1798 on land owned by John Love. The town became an important commercial and technology center in America’s early industrial revolution. It was a key link In the flow of commerce between Alexandria’s river port and commercial center and western towns and farms. Bypassed by 19th-century railroads and 20th-century suburban expansion, Buckland now is a model of historic preservation. The small village of owner-protected properties offers a unique glimpse into early American life and industry

Buckland, Fitzhugh family, Love family, Ravensworth

Competing for Huguenot Settlers

I recently spoke at the Huguenot Society of Virginia’s Spring meeting about the Ravensworth landgrant and its role in early Huguenot settlement.

 

In 1685 the King of France cancelled the Edict of Nance, which had protected Huguenot rights and religious freedom of conscience for nearly a hundred years. This triggered a mass migration of French Huguenots to England and other Protestant countries. That same year William Fitzhugh bought the 24,000 acre Ravensworth plantation in today’s Fairfax County. About the same time, the 30,000 acre Brent Town landgrant, on the border of today’s Prince William and Fauquier counties, was purchased by 3 London merchants – Nicholas Hayward, Richard Foote and Robert Bristow – plus Virginia colonist George Brent, a Catholic and neighbor of Fitzhugh’s. The London merchants successfully lobbied England’s King James II to establish Brent Town as a religious sanctuary for people of all faiths. They advertised and strenuously promoted Brent Town to Huguenots for migration to Virginia. Fitzhugh’s relationship with Brent and business ties with Hayward spurred him to also promote Ravensworth for Huguenot migration. He sought 100 to 200 settlers, writing Hayward in 1686 that his land was “more proper for frenchmen, because more naturally inclined to vines,” 

Fry Jefferson map focused on locations of Ravensworth and Brent Town in area of Virginia that became Fairfax and Prince William counties, inland to east of the Potomac River.
Ravensworth and Brent Town outlined in red on zoomed in view of the Fry-Jefferson map, published in 1753 by Joshua Fry and Peter Jefferson (Thomas Jefferson’s father)

The title of the map is “A Map of the Most Inhabited Part of Virginia.” In the 1680s and until well after 1753, most inhabitants in Colonial Virginia were located on major waterways for reliable transportation and tobacco shipment in that era of few and poor roads – especially the Chesapeake Bay and tidewater Potomac and Rappahannock rivers.

 

Brent Town and Ravensworth were in the wilderness, away from population centers, and therefore more exposed to Native American hostility. They were commercial endeavors not backed by the Virginia colonial government, as was the Huguenot’s successful Manikin Town settlement west of Richmond, chartered later in 1700.

 

To fulfill their own obligations in purchasing landgrants, the owners needed for the land to be seated, that is, populated with residents, built upon and planted.

The Brent Town owners promised

  • Free exercise of religion
  • A 1 acre town lot and a 100 acre farm
    • Purchase option: £10 plus 4 shillings annual quitrent
    • Lease option: £1 annually
  • The town would provide mutual safety with a block house for defense
  • First-year provisions free, including nails and hardware to build a house and 15 bushels of Indian corn for subsistence

For Ravensworth Fitzhugh offered

  • To naturalize at £ 3 per head, so heirs could inherit purchased land 
  • To sell land for £7 per 100 acres
  • To lease land: 200 acres for the duration of “three lives” (typically tenant, their spouse, and a named child) for annual rent of 20 shillings, or a hogshead of tobacco
  • First year provisions, including corn and nails for building, to be repaid from crop yields

So, what did settlers sign up for besides emigrating to Virginia and residing on their parcel of land?

At Brent Town

  • Build a dwelling 26-28 feet by 14-16 feet

At Ravensworth

  • Build a dwelling 20 by 16 feet
  • Build a tobacco house 32 by 20 feet
  • Plant an orchard of at least 300 fruit trees

Were these recruiting efforts and offers successful in attracting Huguenots to emigrate and settle at Brent Town and Ravensworth? There’s little evidence, and it is inconclusive.

Brent Town – very doubtful

  • The land was not surveyed until 1737-38. If settled, parcels would have been surveyed and deeds recorded proving ownership or lease.
  • Fitzhugh himself observed in a letter that the town suffered from a “thin supply” of people.
  • Historians believe that landowners with French names who held small grants on Cedar Run near Brent Town came in a later migration, about 1700.

Ravensworth – maybe but only briefly

  • The earliest recorded leases found are dated in 1750.
  • In a 1686 letter Fitzhugh excused a delayed tobacco shipment by noting that “my Plantation its made upon is so far above me and consequently out of my Kenn that they have not got it ready,” indicating actively working the remote land. However, the work may have been by enslaved workers supervised by an overseer, as was the practice in 1750 and later.
  • In 1690, Fitzhugh recorded he had “come accidentally upon a French minister, a sober, learned and discreet Gentleman,” whom he employed to tutor his sons.
  • The most definitive evidence of a temporary settlement comes from an October 1701 letter by George Mason to the Virginia Governor, which stated, “ye ffrench Refugees is most of them gone to Maryland and have left an ill distemper behind them, the bloody flux, which has effected Some of our neighbours.”

Sources and more information

The Story of Ravensworth  and especially the landgant parcel description 

Landmarks of Old Prince William, Fairfax Harrison, Chapter 13: “Brent Town, Ravensworth and the Huguenots” 

Mrs. Patricia Holbert Menk. “Notes on Some Early Huguenot Settlements in Virginia.” The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 52, no. 3 (1944): 194–96 

Manakin Town Colony 

Fry Jefferson Map at the Library of Virginia 

Postscript

I learned in researching for this talk that George Washington was descended from Huguenots through his paternal grandmother’s line to a French immigrant named Nicolas Martiau (1591–1657). Martiau migrated in 1620 and was a pioneer who played an instrumental role in the survival of the Jamestown colony. Working as a military engineer, he helped design the original fortifications at Yorktown. In poetic historical coincidence, his descendant George Washington would later on October 19, 1781 accept the British surrender on that exact same land, ending Revolutionary War military action and securing American independence.

Fitzhugh family, Ravensworth

Unearthing the Roots of Northern Virginia: Broad Run’s Early History

For historians and residents alike, understanding the foundation of our communities is a fascinating journey. My current research projects are focused on the lands and people who developed the area encompassing modern-day Buckland, Gainesville, Haymarket, and New Baltimore.

The Land's Beginning

The story begins with the 1724 Broad Run grant—a massive 12,285-acre parcel. Robert “King” Carter, Lord Fairfax’s land agent for the vast Northern Neck Proprietary, acquired this land as an investment for his infant sons, John and Charles Carter.

However, significant settlement was slow to arrive. It wasn’t until about 50 years later, in the 1770s, that two Marylanders purchased large adjacent parcels straddling Broad Run:

    • Samuel Love: Purchased the 1,120-acre Buckland Farm on the west side in 1774.
    • Reverend Isaac Campbell: Purchased 3,560 acres on the east side in 1775.

Population growth eventually led to the establishment of the region’s first towns: Buckland in 1798 and Haymarket in 1799.

An Empty Map

The sparse settlement of the region in 1759 is starkly illustrated by a historical map drawn for the boundary line when Fauquier County was carved out from Prince William County.

Historical 1759 hand drawn boundary line between Prince William County and newly created Fauquier County, showing then resident's names and locations
Historical 1759 hand drawn boundary line between Prince William County and newly created Fauquier County, showing then resident's names and locations

The early history of these Broad Run and Fairfax grants is further detailed in a short, informative video.

Seeking Research Pointers

I would greatly appreciate any tips and pointers to research sources to help expand on this history! I am particularly interested in information regarding the early area families named Campbell, Tyler, Macrae, and Hunton.

Uncategorized

Virginia Population 1820 to 2020

I moved from Fairfax County (2020 population 1,150,292) to Fauquier County (72,964) to escape the congestion and gridlock of Virginia’s most populous county. However, the demographics of 1820 paint a different picture entirely. Back then, Fauquier boasted the largest population in Virginia, 34,270, while Fairfax’s 16,077 was far down the list at thirty-eighth.

Two centuries later the relative population size of the two counties has reversed. Fauquier’s population has increased just 113 percent and has been bypassed and dwarfed in size by Fairfax’s 7,054 percent growth, driven by the expansion of the Washington, DC suburbs since World War II.

How have the populations of Virginia’s other counties and cities changed between 1820 and 2020?

Uncategorized

Eppa Hunton: A Life Forged in Law, War, and Politics

Echoes of the Civil War still resonate throughout Northern Virginia. To truly understand this pivotal period in our history, look no further than the life of Eppa Hunton. A prominent figure in our region, Hunton played a key role in the Secession Convention, commanded troops in battles fought on our very soil, and later served in Congress. His autobiography provides a firsthand account of the events that transformed Northern Virginia, offering invaluable insights into the challenges and sacrifices of those who lived through those times. This brief sketch of Eppa Hunton’s life is drawn from the Autobiography of Eppa Hunton, which is free to read and download at the Internet Archive.

 

Roots and Early Development

Eppa Hunton’s story begins on September 22, 1822, on his father’s farm, “Springfield,” in Fauquier County. His father, Eppa Hunton, and grandfather, James Hunton, were descendants of English settlers who arrived in Lancaster County, Virginia, around 1700. Hunton’s father, born January 30, 1789, was a man of considerable energy, serving as an officer in the War of 1812 and twice elected to the Virginia Legislature. He married Elizabeth Marye Brent and purchased “Mount Hope” in 1829 to be closer to the academy in New Baltimore. Young Eppa received his early education in the New Baltimore Academy, setting the stage for his future intellectual pursuits.

biography, Buckland, Civil War, Congress, elections, War of 1812, Washington, DC

Testing AI for Transcribing Handwriting

My research often involves transcribing handwritten deeds, wills and other historical documents. It’s a painstaking task made even more difficult when documents and scanned images of documents have poor penmanship, are faded or damaged.


I’m finding artificial intelligence (AI) applications increasingly helpful in other areas. See especially the articles “Lafayette’s 1825 Visit to Northern Virginia” and “History of Virginia’s Culpeper Basin.” So I decided to test AI in transcribing a handwritten 1866 deed with Transkribus optical character recognition (OCR).

 

Transkribus is an online application that uses OCR and AI algorithms to transcribe handwritten characters into digital text. It faces the same challenges I do in dealing with faded, poorly written and otherwise difficult to read documents. Transkibus offers free credits to process a limited number of pages, and paid plans for higher use.

artificial intelligence, research, software

Lafayette’s 1825 Visit to Northern Virginia: An AI-Powered Audio Journey

There are two stories here. One is the exceptionally detailed and vivid news account of Lafayette’s August 23-24, 1825, visit to Jeffersonton, Warrenton, New Baltimore and Buckland. The other is the creation by AI of a simulated audio podcast discussion of the event based on the news report.

 

As background, Marquis de Lafayette returned to America 40 years after the Revolutionary War at the invitation of President James Monroe. From August 1824 to September 1825, he toured through all 24 states then in the Union, receiving a hero’s welcome and accolades everywhere along the way. His visit here was one of the last tour events before returning home to France.

artificial intelligence, Buckland, Revolutionary War, video

Revolutionary War Patriots: The Parallel Lives of John Love and William Payne

The stories of Buckland’s John Love and Ravensworth’s William Payne remind us that the history of Northern Virginia is woven into the fabric of our nation’s founding. Their intertwined paths, from the battlefields of the Revolution to the halls of government and the development of our communities, offer a glimpse into the rich tapestry of our local history.

 

In 1777 at just 17, John Love enlisted as a Private in the 1st Virginia State Regiment, under the command of Captain William Payne. Payne, 26 years old, organized and recruited to fill the ranks of his new company in the regiment. It’s important to note that this regiment was distinct from the 1st Virginia Regiment of the Continental Army; the state regiment was initially intended for local defense but was swiftly thrust into the broader conflict in the Continental Army.

 

Love and Payne found themselves in the thick of the fight at the Battles of Brandywine and Germantown in the Philadelphia Campaign. They witnessed firsthand the devastating loss of the 9th Virginia Regiment at Brandywine. This loss underscored the urgent need for the state regiment’s continued service within the Continental Army.

Buckland, Ravensworth, Revolutionary War

Happy Birthday John Mosby

Mosby's gravestone, inscription: 43RD Battalion VA Cavalry, Col. John S. Mosby Born Dec. 6, 1833, Died May 30, 1916
John S. Mosby's gravestone in Warrenton Cemetery
Historical marker inscription: HERE APRIL 21, 1865, COL. JOHN S. MOSBY DISBANDED HIS GALLANT PARTISAN RANGERS - THE FORTY-THIRD BATTALION VIRGINIA CAVALRY
Historical marker in Marshall, VA near where Mosby disbanded his command

Friday December 6 was John Singleton Mosby’s birthday. Known as the Gray Ghost, he is a popular figure in Northern Virginia Civil War history, remembered especially for Mosby’s Raiders guerrilla tactics against Union forces. After General Lee’s surrender at Appomattox Court House, rather than surrender his command he disbanded the 43rd Battalion, Virginia Cavalry near Marshall and sent the troopers home.

biography, Civil War

When Washington, DC was a work in progress

The U. S. Capitol building was in the early stages of construction when the seat of government moved from Philadelphia to Washington, DC in 1800. Only the north wing was ready to house the Senate, House of Representatives, Supreme Court and Library of Congress. John Love took his seat in the House in 1807 and served through 1811. According to the Architect of the Capitol: ” … construction on the south wing was sufficiently advanced that the House was able to occupy its new legislative chamber, and the wing was completed in 1811.” (Helping Build America: The Love Family of Buckland, Virginia, pp 61-62)

 

Except for fire damage from the August 24, 1814, British attack on Washington, the image below depicts the building as it appeared during Love’s two terms in Congress.

Image of print of U.S. Capitol building damaged by fire on August 24, 1814 in British attack on Washington, DC
View from southeast of fire-damaged U.S. Capitol building, a result of the War of 1812 (Library of Congress) https://www.loc.gov/item/2006692267/
Congress, Love family, video, Washington, DC

Election News Now and in 1807 in My Congressional District

Current reporting has Democrat Suhas Subramanyam winning Virginia’s District 10 election to the U. S. House of Representatives by 51.9 percent of 207,138 votes cast.* In 1807 Buckland’s John Love, like Mr. Subramanyam, was a first-timer. He won election in Virginia’s 9th Congressional District, which included Fauquier and Culpeper Counties, with 60.5 percent of the 1312 votes cast. He was a Democratic Republican, the party of Thomas Jefferson, who was then in his second term as President. Two years later, Love won reelection, apparently without serious opposition, but lost his bid for a third term.

Congress, elections, Love family, War of 1812

“No Taxation Without Representation”

An early (1789) act of the first U.S. Congress provided for the creation of a permanent seat of government on the Potomac River, and there “prior to the first Monday in December, in the year one thousand eight hundred, provide suitable buildings for the accommodation of Congress, and of the President, and for the public offices of the government of the United States.”
The District of Columbia was established on land ceded by Maryland and Virginia. The Virginia land included Alexandria with its thriving river port and commercial center. Administration of affairs in Alexandria changed little until the federal government took residence in December 1800.

Alexandria, Love family, Washington, DC

161st Anniversary of the Battle of Buckland Mills

Thinking of driving out Route 29 to enjoy the fall color on Skyline Drive this weekend? Consider this picture instead: It’s Saturday afternoon, October 19, 1863. As you travel west from Gainesville to Warrenton on the road, known then as the Warrenton Turnpike, a frantic Union Cavalry regiment is racing toward you. Behind them Confederate Cavalry in hot pursuit is closing in, guns blazing. A couple of minutes ago, passing through the Vint Hill Road intersection, you didn’t notice a second Confederate regiment moving into position to block the Union retreat.

Buckland, Civil War, map, video

History of Virginia’s Culpeper Basin

The phrase “older than dirt” labels something as exceptionally old. Deep time is the term scientists use for the billions of years of Earth’s history. Both terms proved apt In researching the geography of my home in eastern Fauquier County. It is situated in the Culpeper Basin, a geological formation created about 200 million years ago by the forces that also created the Atlantic Ocean: plate tectonics. I created this short video to visualize the history of the Culpeper Basin.
artificial intelligence, geology, map, software, video

In the footsteps of Beth Mitchell

Nothing could be more appropriate for the lead article kicking off this site than an account of my debt to Beth Mitchell. Her body of work is the best example I could offer of mapping history and sharing it with others. The Fairfax County History Commission honors her memory with it’s Beth Mitchell Prize, which recognizes “pure research that consolidates and indexes primary source materials into a format that can be used to support further understanding and interpretation of Fairfax County history.”
biography, map, research