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Belmont Manor House

Belmont
BELMONT MANOR HOUSE, LOUDOUN COUNTY.jpg
Belmont Manor House is located in Northern Virginia
Belmont Manor House
Belmont Manor House is located in Virginia
Belmont Manor House
Belmont Manor House is located in the US
Belmont Manor House
Nearest city Ashburn, Virginia
Coordinates 39°04′9.81″N 77°29′28.83″W / 39.0693917°N 77.4913417°W / 39.0693917; -77.4913417Coordinates: 39°04′9.81″N 77°29′28.83″W / 39.0693917°N 77.4913417°W / 39.0693917; -77.4913417
Built 1799
Architect Unknown
Architectural style Federal
NRHP reference # 80004198
VLR # 053-0106
Significant dates
Added to NRHP February 8, 1980
Designated VLR September 21, 1976

Belmont Manor House, formally known as Belmont Plantation, is a two-story, five-part Federal mansion in Loudoun County, Virginia, built between the years of 1799–1802 by Ludwell Lee (1760–1836), son of Richard Henry Lee. The land surrounding the mansion, the Belmont property, was handed down to his first wife (also his first cousin), Flora Lee, from their grandfather, Thomas Lee.

Located in Ashburn, Virginia, the Belmont Manor House and property have been owned since 1995 by Toll Brothers, Inc.. It uses the Manor House as the clubhouse in a gated golf community. The property and house are listed in the National Register of Historic Places.

The plantation has been visited by many notable figures in history including President James Madison in 1812. The President was said to use the plantation as a safe haven throughout the War of 1812 after the British attacked Washington, D.C. Another figure who visited the plantation was General and diplomat La Fayette, who came to the Manor home to visit Ludwell Lee in 1825.

The Manor home is located at the highest point in eastern Loudoun County, with views of the surrounding hills and mountain ranges of the approaches to the nearby town of Leesburg, Virginia and the Blue Ridge Mountains.

In 1836 Margaret Mercer purchased the Belmont home from Lee; she intended to adapt it as a women's Christian school. Afterward the home was bought by Kansas governor Frederick Staunton, who sold it in 1907 to John Scott Ferguson, a Pittsburgh attorney and cousin of Evelyn Nesbit Thaw. In 1915, Ferguson sold it to the McLean family. The McLean family is notable as the owners of the Hope Diamond.


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