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National Historic Landmark - Brandon

A plantation with many acres of farmland, woodland, and gardens, Brandon contains a main house which is an excellent example of a brick plantation house in a variant of the English Palladian style, differing from early and middle-Georgian houses in ...

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National Historic Landmark - Berry Hill

Constructed c. 1839, this is a two-story, stuccoed, Greek revival mansion with an impressive Greek Doric octastyle portico across the front and two service pavilions with porticoes echoing that of the main house. The house is regarded as an excellent ...

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National Historic Landmark - Berkely

This rectangular 2-1/2-story Georgian house (1726) was the birthplace and lifelong home of Benjamin Harrison V (1726-1791), a member of the Continental Congress (1774-78), a signer of the Declaration of Independence, and Governor of Virginia (1782-84). It was also the ...

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National Historic Landmark-Virginia Military Institute Barracks

Formally organized in 1839, VMI has a long tradition of training military leaders. Incorporated into the present structure of this gothic style cadet barracks building, notable among the buildings on the campus, is part of the original barracks wall from ...

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National Historic Landmark - Benjamin Banneker Boundary Stone

This boundary stone commemorates the accomplishments of Benjamin Banneker (1731-1806), farmer, mathematician, inventor, astronomer, writer, surveyor, scientist, and humanitarian. Perhaps the most famous Black man in Colonial America, Banneker helped survey the District of Columbia.

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National Historic Landmark - Ball's Bluff Battlefield & National Cemetery

In October 1861, to quiet his critics, Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan ordered Union troops stationed along the Potomac between Edwards Ferry and Harper's Ferry to make "a slight demonstration" and draw out the Confederate force based in Leesburg. The ...

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National Historic Landmark - Bacon's Castle

This house, built in the 1660's, was used by colonials under Bacon as a stronghold in their 1676-1677 rebellion against British exploitation.

Information provided by the National Register of Historic Places, a program of the National Park Service.

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National Historic Landmark - Aquia Church

Completed in 1757, this is one of the finest and least-altered examples of Virginia's rural Georgian churches. Constructed of brick with quoins and door frames of locally quarried Aquia Creek sandstone, the Greek Cross plan and architectural embellishments are derived ...

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National Historic Landmark - Alexandria Historic District

From the mid-18th century until the Civil War, Alexandria was the principal seaport and the commercial center of northern Virginia. The District contains significant examples of Colonial and Federal urban architecture. Interspersed among rows of modest houses are more imposing ...

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National Historic Landmark - Yakima Park Stockade Group

Constructed between 1930 and 1943, this complex is a classic example of an exaggerated rustic style. The complex, consisting of three buildings and a vertical log "stockade" fence enclosing a utility yard, was built from a design with roots in ...

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