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Greenway Court, Virginia

Greenway Court
GreenwayCourt.jpg
Early-19th-century engraving
of the main house at Greenway Court
Greenway Court, Virginia is located in Northern Virginia
Greenway Court, Virginia
Greenway Court, Virginia is located in Virginia
Greenway Court, Virginia
Greenway Court, Virginia is located in the US
Greenway Court, Virginia
Location 1 mi. S of White Post on VA 658, White Post, Virginia
Coordinates 39°2′46″N 78°7′9″W / 39.04611°N 78.11917°W / 39.04611; -78.11917Coordinates: 39°2′46″N 78°7′9″W / 39.04611°N 78.11917°W / 39.04611; -78.11917
Area 5 acres (2.0 ha)
Built 1748
NRHP Reference # 66000829
VLR # 021-0028
Significant dates
Added to NRHP October 15, 1966
Designated NHL October 9, 1960
Designated VLR September 9, 1969

Greenway Court is a historic country estate near White Post in rural Clarke County, Virginia. The property is the site of the seat of the vast 18th-century land empire of Thomas Fairfax, 6th Lord Fairfax of Cameron (1693-1781), the only ennobled British colonial proprietor to live in one of the North American colonies. The surviving remnants of his complex — a later replacement brick house and Fairfax’s stone land office — were designated a National Historic Landmark in 1960.

Greenway Court is located down a long private drive on the west side of White Post Road south of the village of White Post. The property now consists of about 5 acres (2.0 ha), although it was in the 18th century at the center of landholdings in excess of 5 million acres (20,000 km2). Its principal feature today is a brick farmhouse built in 1828, the original plantation house having been demolished c. 1834. The main historic structure surviving from the period of the Fairfax residency is the Land Office, a c. 1762 single-story gable-roofed limestone structure, and there is also a timber smokehouse dating to the 18th century.

Greenway Court was the center of the "Northern Neck Proprietary" or "Fairfax Grant", which passed to Thomas Fairfax, 6th Lord Fairfax of Cameron from his mother's family, the Culpepers, who had taken proprietorship of the land in 1673. Fairfax laid out the Greenway Court estate in 1747, intending it to be a much larger establishment than it became. The main house was a 1-1/2 story timber structure with long sloping roofs and corbelled brick chimneys. It was originally intended to house the land steward, but it was occupied by Fairfax with his nephew, Thomas Bryan Martin, until his death in 1781. Fairfax employed a young George Washington as a surveyor on his extensive land holdings.


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