

By Candace Rondeaux
Washingto n Post Staff Writer
January 26, 2007
There are lots of things folks in Waterford will always remember about
the Old School. The way the sun streamed in the high windows in the
middle of an afternoon concert. The New Year's parties, the weddings
and the craft fair that was held there for 64 years.
The school has long been the social center of Waterford, a small hamlet
in western Loudoun County that was settled by Quakers in the early
1770s and was named a national historic landmark in 1970. Yesterday,
despite the efforts of dozens of firefighters, the 97-year-old schoolhouse
was all but destroyed by a fire.
"It's like losing part of your own house," said John J.
Kornacki, executive director of the Waterford Foundation, the nonprofit
organization that maintains the school and several other historic buildings. "The
school for us here was a gathering place for the community."
Officials
said the fire, which caused an estimated $300,000 in damage and appeared
to be accidental, started about 6:30 a.m. near a furnace in the basement
of the building. A resident on his way to work saw flames shooting
from the wood structure at Fairfax and High streets, a short distance
from Waterford Elementary School, and dialed 911, said Mary Maguire,
a spokeswoman for the Loudoun Department of Fire, Rescue and Emergency
Management.
More than a dozen firetrucks and about 80 firefighters --
some from as far away as Brunswick and Frederick in Maryland -- rushed
to save the building. But by the time the first trucks arrived, much
of the back half of the school was engulfed in flames, said Loudoun
Battalion Chief Kevin Wright.
Fire officials said controlling the blaze
was especially difficult because Waterford, like many towns in rural
parts of Loudoun, does not have fire hydrants. Six tankers took thousands
of gallons of water to the scene from Catoctin Creek about a half-mile
away and from an underground tank at Waterford Elementary.
In all, firefighters
doused the building with about 50,000 gallons of water before the fire
was contained about 8:45 a.m.
"It is a lot more challenging to
work in a rural setting because of the water situation out here," Wright
said. "Fire had pretty much taken
over the building. It was burning real good when we got here."
No one was in the building when the fire started. One firefighter was
injured while fighting the blaze and was taken to Loudoun Hospital
Center in Leesburg for treatment. He was released yesterday.
Flames swept through the school, which is used primarily as a community
center and concert hall, blowing out all of the windows in the front
building and destroying the recently renovated auditorium and its contents,
which included a grand piano.
Fire officials and local preservationists
said that the building dates to the 1880s but was rebuilt in 1910 after
a fire. They said restoration costs could run into the tens of thousands.
Kornacki
said most of the damage will be covered by insurance. He had already
received dozens of calls from people offering help, he said, and the
foundation has set up a restoration fund.
The absence of a water supply
in the more remote parts of the county, one of the most affluent in
the country, has become a more acute problem as rapid growth has nearly
doubled Loudoun's population to more than 250,000 in the past decade.
Developments are sprouting up in largely rural areas once sparsely populated,
taxing precious water sources, straining a dwindling force of volunteer
firefighters and creating the need for new equipment and stations, according
to county fire and government officials.

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