Guided Tour Of Hamilton On W&OD


W&OD Mile 41-42.5. Based on research by Eugene Scheel, and by on-site research. The W&OD is represented by the green area on the upper right. Ivandale Street connects with the W&OD at the western edge of town, in the upper left.

Many houses are fine examples of Federal-style (1820's) architecture. It is a very long, narrow town. At one time Hamilton was the second-largest town in Loudoun County. In its heyday, it was a summer resort, featuring a boardwalk on which the guests would promenade. The boardwalk ran from the Harmony Methodist Church to Hughes Street. It crossed to the other side of the main street where the concrete sidewalk crosses today.

A fire destroyed most of downtown Hamilton, so one must use one's imagination. Near Harmony Methodist Church was a racetrack for horses. The town staged summer theatricals in a mill, now torn-down, next to the Baptist Church. A black fraternal organization was active in Hamilton after 1920.

 Self-Guided Tours of Towns On Trail
Barcroft
Glencarlyn
Falls Church
Dunn Loring
Vienna
Reston
Herndon
Sterling
Ashburn

Leesburg
Waterford
Purcellville
Round Hill
Home
  Hamilton
  1. Maplewood, a summer resort house, c. 1810 - 1820. Longtime residence of Gen. Fuller, Commandant, U.S. Marine Corps.
  2. Masonic Lodge and Hamilton school, lodge was on second floor, 1873 now undergoing rehab.
  3. Hamilton Baptist Church, 1889 has French Gothic windows.
  4. Ivy Hall,1895-1900 three-story brick home, now a bed-and-breakfast.
  5. Church of the Holy Scripture, 1877
  6. Catholic Distance University, 120 E. Colonial Way. Formerly Miltonia, a boarding house, c. 1850.
  7. former Farmers & Merchants Bank, 1910, bars still on windows; French mansard roof.
  8. Harmony Methodist Church and graveyard 1833, rebuilt 1893.
  9. Hamilton Station, c. 1880
  10. Waverly Vila, 1872 high-pitched roof and trim.
  11. Mt. Zion Church, 1881
  12. former toll house on Snickersville Gap Turnpike, 19th cent., ceased operation in 1870's.
  13. small store, c. 1920 formerly Laycock's, now Natural Mercantile Grocery.
  14. one-room schoolhouse, now a private residence. Clapboard and brick nogging, unusual Federal doorway. Town school in 1870's; a field-school in the 1840's and 1850's. Field schools were private, financed by subscription, and located in the most barren part of a farmer's field.
  15. Braeburn/Solomon Ruse House,
  16. Brownsville School
  17. Claude Lowe House, Conrad Bitzer/C.Y. Hall Farmhouse
  18. Earl Bell House/Gregg House,
  19. Edgewood,
  20. Jonah Sands/Esther Cowart House,
  21. Love House (1847)
  22. Hamilton Milling Company,
  23. Richard Tavenner House/Harmony Hall
  24. Irene,
  25. Katy�s Hollow,
  26. Laycock/Norton House (1880s)
  27. Mansfield, Maple Lawn,
  28. Mount Olive Baptist Church,
  29. Mount Zion Methodist Church,
  30. Nichols House (Ballenger Lane),
  31. Offley/Maplewood/McCann House (1780)
  32. Sears Roebuck House
  33. Spring House behind Firehouse
  34. George and Tabitha Tavenner/Winodee Farm (1763)
  35. Telephone Building.

 

This is under construction. Based on Eugene Scheel's map and book on Loudoun County. Also based on research on-site.

Last updated feb 9, 2007. | Send an email to the person who maintains these pages. | Guide to these pages

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