Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Oak Hill (Annandale, Virginia)

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Built
  
1790

NRHP Reference #
  
04000478

Opened
  
1790

Added to NRHP
  
19 May 2004

Architect
  
Macomber, Walter M.

VLR #
  
029-0028

Area
  
1 ha

Oak Hill (Annandale, Virginia)

Location
  
4716 Wakefield Chapel Rd., Annandale, Virginia

Architectural style
  
Georgian, Colonial Revival

Similar
  
Ravensworth, St Mary's Church, Ossian Hall, William Gunnell House, Munson's Hill

Oak Hill in Annandale, Virginia is a Georgian style home built in 1790. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2004.

It was extensively renovated in the 1930s and is significant for its architecture after that renovation.

History

From The Washington Post:

The house was one of three mansions built during the 18th century on Fitzhugh's enormous Ravensworth estate, named for a family estate in England. The tract was the largest single landholding in the history of what would become Fairfax County in 1792. It stretched from Fairfax City to Springfield and Falls Church, and south to Pohick Church....

Oak Hill was likely the oldest of the mansions, built by Major Henry Fitzhugh, another of William's sons, for Lund Washington, his land agent, according to records. Lund was a cousin of George Washington. Washington met the Fitzhugh family when, as a young surveyor, he made a map of the Ravensworth estate.

On the night of November 5, 1861, a shootout occurred at Oak Hill between members of the units later involved in the Bog Wallow Ambush, in an area of much probing and patrolling between Union and Confederate forces. All three of the Fitzhugh estates were protected by orders from both sides throughout the war.

David and Amanda Scheetz purchased the home in 2008, after a foreclosure, for $1.15 million. The home is open to tours periodically.

References

Oak Hill (Annandale, Virginia) Wikipedia