OldHouses.com logo

Listing No. 3361

located in Virginia
Prev Next # 23 of 50

Back to List

New Search

Nearest Listings

From The Archives

c. 1850 Colonial

Rollingwoods Estates
Fairfax, Virginia 22032

Ashford House, Circa 1850

Front
Front


Scroll down below the map for more information
Two Story Foyer
Two Story Foyer
Exposed Chestnut Beams
Living Room
Living Room
Wide Plank Flooring
Dining Room
Dining Room
Kitchen
Kitchen
Kitchen
Kitchen
Porch
Porch
Master Suite
Master Suite
Side of home
Side of home
Storage Home
Storage Home
Bedrooms 4
Full Baths 2
Half Baths 2
Acres 0.6

No Contact Information.

This listing is archived and is not for sale.

Contact information is not available for archived listings.

Residence

Dating back to the 1700’s the Ashford House was originally two chestnut log cabins. Later in the 1800’s John Ashford a captain in the Civil War joined the log homes together to build the stunning colonial home that stands today. Sitting on almost an acre, adjacent to state park land, the Ashford House has been totally renovated to accommodate today’s modern demands, while maintaining the beautiful historic features of the past. The house features a two-story grand foyer, exposed chestnut beams, original wide plank flooring, colonial crown molding, four working fire places with original brick hearths, large chef's kitchen with granite, adjacent screened-in porch overlooking beautifully landscaped back yard, four generous sized bedrooms, and multiple living areas. With over 3000+ square feet of sun-drenched living space, this home is ideal for family living. Simply stunning!

History of the Ashford House

From Memories of Beautiful Burke Virginia, by Nan Netherton and Ruth Preston Rose, Burke Historical Society, Burke Virginia, published 1988:

The Ashford House dates itself to the original land patents and grants made by three different authorities of the colony of Virginia, the Proprietor of the Northern Neck, and the British crown- in the area of Burke (a historical town in Fairfax County), to grantees with English, Scottish, and Irish names in the 17th century. The largest grant ever to be given in what was to become Fairfax County was the Ravensworth plantation of 21,996 acres. It was made to William Fitzhugh more than half a century before Fairfax County’s first town, Alexandria was established in 1749. Following the Revolutionary War, many large landholdings were divided, sometimes among heirs, and/or sold.
The oldest part of the Ashford House, made of chestnut logs, was likely on the place in 1830, when William Henry Fitzhugh (great great grandson of the original William Fitzhugh) left it to his adopted daughter, Mary Caroline Goldsborough of Talbot County, Maryland, whom, at a very early period of her life, “I adopted in the spirit of the sincerest affection as my daughter”, Fitzhugh states in his will. In 1850, Mary sold twenty of the 1300 acres which had been left to her to William Ashford. Ashford was head of a road crew which worked to keep Fairfax roads clear. In March of 1866, he worked on the Guinea Road from Little River Turnpike to the Orange and Alexandria, before willing the land and two log cabins to captain John Ashford, when they were combined in creating the original house that stands today. The immaculately preserved corner timbering and other interior walls of U-notched construction and hand-hewn mortised log beams, as well as dressed stone foundation in the Old Ashford House on Guinea Road clearly demonstrate that the house is made of the two log houses joined together by a hallway. In 1878, when G.M. Hopkins prepared the first official map of the Burke area, the Ashford family had been added to the earlier names of the 13 original local grantees, including Fitzhugh, Washington, Lee, Harrison, and Fairfax. Points of interest include the Ashford schoolhouse near the home of William Ashford, which was used as a meeting place for the Episcopal congregation of the Church of the Good Shepherd.

Archived in November, 2012

Comments & Feedback

All information deemed reliable but not guaranteed and should be independently verified. All properties are subject to prior sale, change or withdrawal. OldHouses.com is not responsible for any typographical errors, misinformation, misprints and shall be held totally harmless.

Listing No. 3361

located in Virginia
Prev Next # 23 of 50

Back to List

New Search

Nearest Listings

Your Feedback

Help & Support.

Pinterest
[X]