Civil War Sites, Western Half Of W&OD Trail

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Mile 15 - Mile 19 Mile 19 - Mile 21 Mile 21 - Mile 23 Mile 23 - Mile 27 Mile 27 - Mile 30 Mile 32 - Mile 33 Mile 38 - Mile 41 Mile 41 - Mile 44 Mile - Mile Click on area of interest. This feature is under construction.
Buildings, above, keyed to numbers: 6.) Kitty's Kitchen, meeting spot of Union officers;
7.) Miskel's Farmhouse, site of skirmish where Union forces almost captured Mosby;
8.) Harrison House, 200 block N. King St., Lee's Headquarters during week before Antietam. On Sept. 5, 1862, Lee, Longstreet, Jackson and Stuart held a conference here; See also Union Cemetery, two blocks north of Harrison House. Despite its name, it is the final resting place of hundreds of Confederate dead. Also, the Leesburg United Methodist Church served as a hospital after the Battle of Ball's Bluff, for both Union and Confederate soldiers, as did many of the houses and buildings in Leesburg.
9.) Conrad's Ferry (now White's Ferry), still crossing after all these years;
10.) Waterford Baptist Church, site of a skirmish. Bullet holes visible in brick outer wall.

Of the three Confederate forts, all are on private land. The ramparts of the western most are clearly visible today.

Waterford Baptist Church
At Waterford Baptist Church, White's Confederate Calvary attacked the Loudoun Rangers, the only official Northern unit from Virginia.  
 More On This Railroad in The Civil War
  In The Civil War -- Eastern Half
  This Railroad In The Civil War
 More on The Western Half Of W&OD
  Trestles and Arches -- Western Half
  Train Stations -- Western Half
  Parking Lots -- Western Half
  Water Fountains -- Western Half












Related Sites

Where do these guys buy their authentic-looking Civil War paraphenalia?
Village of Waterford During the Civil War.
The roster of the 43rd Virginia Cavalry, which was the official name of Mosby's Rangers.
Mosby's Confederacy, the area of northern Fauquier and southern Loudoun Counties.
Battle of Balls Bluff.
Mile Hill Skirmish, in Leesburg not far from the trail at Mile 34.6, and also in Movren Park, a destination in its own right.
Thirteen miles beyond the western terminus of the trail, Cool Spring Battlefield is worth a visit. It was a flanking battle during the raid on Washington in 1864.
Loudoun County, VA. studies the preservation of Civil War sites, from The Washington Post
Loudoun County Civil War Roundtable
Efforts to preserve Balls Bluff battlefield from The Washington Post
Fairfax County, VA. studies the preservation of Civil War sites. From The Washington Post
Springdale, a bed-and-breakfast in Lincoln, served briefly as a hospital during the war.
Confederates In The Attic when Civil War re-enacting goes too far.
Mosby Heritage Area

This page was last modified June 29, 2002.

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