Waterford Virginia Land Purchase Is Threat To Historic Status, 2003
By Margaret
Morton, LeesburgToday, March 12, 003
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View of the hills to the West
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The Waterford
National Historic Landmark is facing
its biggest development threat, according to the Waterford Foundation
which has acted as guardian for the historic assets within the village
since 1943.
On March 5, Historic Fields LLC went to settlement on a 144-acre
parcel on the western flank of the historic village, purchasing the
property
for $2.208 million—almost $200,000 less than an offer made by
the Waterford Foundation in October 2001.
On hearing the news, dismayed Waterford Foundation leaders met immediately
and sent a letter of intent to Paul MacMahon, a realtor with Sheridan
MacMahon in Middleburg who handled the sale, offering to purchase the
property for $2.5 million from the new buyers. That offer was turned
down with the intimation that a much higher figure would be required
for the buyers’ consideration. Foundation representatives said
Wednesday they would be undertaking some serious fundraising, with
a minimum goal of $3 million.
MacMahon said Wednesday he could not reveal the names of the owner
or principals in Historic Fields LLC and would only describe the purchaser
as “an investor.”
The registered agent for the limited liability corporation is David
H. Moyes, of Leesburg firm of Moyes and Levay. No principals of the
corporation, which was formed on Feb. 25, are listed with the State
Corporation Commission, according to an SCC spokesman. David Dobson
is registered as manager of the corporation. Moyes could not be reached
for comment by press time. Court documents show that a Deed of Trust
accompanying the Deed of Sale provides a credit line of up to $2.4
million.
MacMahon said no decision has been made on development plans, MacMahon
said, but he acknowledged “We generally try to engineer things
to obtain the optimum value.”
“
The property is not for sale ... But if the foundation wants to have
a discussion with us, we’re open to discuss,” MacMahon
said Wednesday.
The 222-acre property received a subdivision waiver Jan. 6 allowing
the Brown family to retain the southern-most portion of the property
while selling the remaining 144 acres. Jan. 6 was the day the Loudoun
Board of Supervisors adopted its new zoning ordinance that significantly
lowered density in western Loudoun. Under the current zoning, the property,
which contains about 56 acres in floodplain and steep slopes, could
be developed with 14 single-family homes if clustered or seven if not
in a cluster. Waterford Foundation Executive Director Eric Breitkreutz
said he was unsure whether the steep slopes’ topography had been
factored into that number.
This week, the foundation was moving to shore up support for renewed
purchase negotiations. Both National Trust for Historic Preservation
President Richard Moe and Congressman Frank R. Wolf (R-VA 10) have
expressed dismay at the possibility of development within the landmark
and support for Waterford, according to Waterford Foundation Board
Member and Development Committee Chairman Cate Magennis Wyatt. It was
Wyatt who was instrumental in working with Wolf’s office to obtain
$1 million for the landmark’s preservation just over a year ago.
Wyatt said it was not just a question of the economic value of the
property. “It’s what would be lost,” in historic
value, she said, adding that the low-lying part of the property along
the North Fork of Catoctin Creek was part of the reason why settlers
came to the village in the first place. “This swathe of land” along
the creek and the mill race is the “center of a thriving agrarian
history,” she said. The need to repair the crumbling mill that
stands at the northwestern edge of town and other buildings was among
the catalysts involved in the creation of the Waterford Foundation,
which celebrates its 60th birthday on March 22.
The property is known locally as the Travis Brown Farm, although
on official documents it is termed the Phillips Farm. Travis Brown
and
his wife Ann had owned the farm for about 40 years, and Travis Brown
Jr. and his family lived on a portion of the farm. In October 2002,
Travis Brown Sr. died, and the property passed to his widow.
The landmark status represents the nation’s highest historic
designation. The 1733 village northwest of Leesburg along with 1,400
surrounding acres was recognized in 1970 by the Secretary of the Interior
for the unspoiled relationship between the 18th and 19th century Quaker
village and the agricultural landscape that surrounds it. In the intervening
30- plus years, the Waterford Foundation, has worked aggressively to
protect that relationship and the landmark itself, with some success,
particularly on its northern, eastern and southern borders. But, the
most scenic and most vulnerable viewscape is west to the Blue Ridge
Mountains, and foundation board members and villagers have long expressed
concern over possible development encroachment.
The Waterford Foundation has been working with the Brown family since
December 2001, when it was approached by Ann Brown, according to Foundation
President Claude C. “Cary” Gravatt. The family’s
intent was to sell to the Waterford Foundation, according to Gravatt,
and “we were asked to deal only with the Brown’s representative,
John Ward, in Washington, DC.” Over the ensuing months, discussions
continued as to the best way to subdivide the land while preserving
it. In April last year, the Waterford Foundation told the Browns it
would offer $2.4 million, but that offer never received any response.
Contact was lost over the summer and in the fall Travis Brown Sr. died.
During the autumn, following rumors the property had been sold to another
buyer, the foundation was informed by MacMahon that a ratified, non-contingent
contract had been executed, with settlement anticipated for early 2003.
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