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Williston Historic HomeThe persistence of traditional plantation architecture and layout that lingered in rural areas of Virginia following the Civil War is embodied in Williston. The house and its ancillary structures were built circa 1867 by Joseph Hiden, an Orange Count... Read More
Willow Grove (Clark House) PlantationBuilt in the late 18th century for Joseph Clark, the original frame residence at Willow Grove was substantially enlarged in 1848 by the addition of a brick wing and a unifying Tuscan portico. It is believed some of the woodwork in this Federal portio... Read More
Willowbrook Jackson/Umberger Homestead MuseumThe nine-acre Homestead includes the decorative arts museum (located in the late R. Cecil and Seawillow Jackson family home), smoke house, Henry Umberger cabin, spring house, kitchen house, log barn and blacksmith, gunsmith and woodworking shops. The... Read More
WiltonWilton, in Middlesex County, was completed in 1763 by Col. William Churchill, clerk of the county court for nearly three decades. This finely crafted structure is one of Tidewater Virginia's most sophisticated colonial plantation houses. Private H... Read More
Wilton HouseWilton House was headquarters for the Marquis de Lafayette after the Battle of Richmond in 1781. Built for William Randolph III, the Wilton House stood as a symbol of Randolph, family power for over 100 years. The Georgian-style mansion was the seat ... Read More
Wilton House MuseumFor more than 100 years, members of the Randolph family called Wilton home. Built c. 1753 for William Randolph III, Wilton was the centerpiece of a 2,000 acre tobacco plantation and at one point was home to the largest enslaved population in Henrico.... Read More
WindsorCompleted in 1862 for Samuel Pannill Wilson, an ardent secessionist who raised troops for the Confederacy, Windsor's Italianate mansion and collection of outbuildings form the last of the elaborate antebellum plantation complexes built in Pittsylvani... Read More
WinterhamWinterham Manor House Wedding & Event Venue in Amelia County, Virginia, servicing the Richmond area, is a fine Italianate Jefferson family home built in 1855. It has been restored by Dr. M. Gary Hadfield and his wife, Kathleen, and was opened in 2003... Read More
Wolf Run ShoalsOnce one of the Occoquan River fords, today the impoundment of the reservoir has covered up the shoals, or sandbanks, that made it possible to cross here. The name derives from the creek on the Fairfax side, Wolf Run, now part of a regional park. At ... Read More
Wolftrap FarmBlack Meadow is located in the rolling Piedmont landscape just north of Gordonsville, in Orange County near its boundary with Louisa County. It was owned by James Madison, who also gave it its name, until 1830, when he sold it to Coleby Cowherd, a pr... Read More
WoodlawnOne of the finest and most prestigious historic homes in rural Southside Virginia, Woodlawn has appeared in local and regional history books. The Federal-style, two-part, story-and-a-half frame dwelling was built in two phases during the first half o... Read More
Woodlawn & Pope-Leighey HouseWoodlawn & Pope-Leighey House are two iconic, historic homes owned and operated by the National Trust for Historic Preservation and set on 126 historic acres of land that were originally inhabited by the Doeg people. Woodlawn, completed in 1805, w... Read More
Woods-Meade Historic HomeOne of the rare early landmarks of the Franklin County town of Rocky Mount, the Woods-Meade House is a vernacular dwelling with sophisticated overtones and a complex evolution. The front section was built ca. 1830 or earlier for Robert T. Woods, who ... Read More
Woodstock Historic DistrictWoodstock's rich and varied collection of residential, commercial, and church buildings reflects the evolution of this Shenandoah Valley linear community over more than two centuries. Established in 1761, Woodstock boasts the 1795 Shenandoah County C... Read More
Workhouse Arts CenterThe Workhouse Arts Center in Lorton, Virginia is a 55-acre center for the arts and arts education that, through adaptive reuse, utilizes existing structures on repurposed land in the former Lorton Reformatory - one of Virginia's recognized historic s... Read More
For more information, please contact:
Patrick Daughtry, Director of Major Gifts
(757) 936-0302 | pdaughtry@va250.org
Susan Nolan, Director of Institutional Giving
(757) 903-1060 | snolan@va250.org
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