Why Protect Waterford?
There are just so many Waterfords. There are just so many National Historic
Landmarks. Waterford, both the tiny village itself and its rural surroundings,
must be saved from the developers whose bulldozers even now are gunning
their engines.
Washington Business Journal, May 1988
Waterford is a unique, non-renewable resource - once changed, it will
be lost forever.
Why we live
in Waterford »
In the late 1960's, Waterford citizens and the Waterford Foundation became
concerned with the danger posed to Waterford by the threat of development
of the farmland around the village. Washington, D.C. was growing. The 45-mile
distance was no longer an effective barrier to "progress" which
translated to the subdivision of land and the building of new homes. In 1970,
the year of Waterford's designation as a National Historic Landmark, the
Foundation committed itself to the preservation of its farmland setting as
well as its buildings. Soon after, it purchased two pieces of farmland: the
Schooley Mill Barn complex and pasture land and the Water Street Meadow.
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A view showing the tightly settled village and surrounding farmland.
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During the 1980's, the real estate development world finally "discovered" Waterford.
Development pressures became so great that the National Park Service, in
charge of the National Historic Landmark program, included Waterford as an
endangered Landmark in the annual report to Congress of threatened and damaged
National Historic Landmarks.
As a National Historic Landmark, Waterford is one of only 2,000 historic
resources in the United States which have achieved Landmark designation.
The Landmark status is reserved for only those historic resources that have
a high degree of integrity, that is, they have retained an exceptional
amount of their historic form and materials, and that possess exceptional
significance in the history of the nation.
The significance of Waterford is conveyed in four qualities: 1) history,
2) topography, 3) architecture, and 4) integrity. The qualities of topography
and integrity are particularly instructive of the importance of the landscape
to the village of Waterford:
"Topography: Because of its unspoiled character Waterford's topography
- the relationship between man and land - is easily read. The steep hills
influenced the placement of roads and buildings. The rolling swales and
flat flood plain of the Catoctin Creek and its tributaries contributed
to the character of the fields as well as the placement of buildings and
agricultural and industrial uses of land. The agricultural land is composed
of historically important fields, farms, mills, and related structures.
Other resources define Waterford's topography and tie together town and
field: archaeological resources, ruins, fences, hedgerows, trees, and roads.
Integrity:
The significance of Waterford also lies in its "pristine" character.
No modern intrusions mar the dense grouping of housing and structures or
spoil the rural agricultural setting. Thus, the town maintains "hard
edges between village and outlying open space of agricultural land."
(from Antoinette J. Lee, "Waterford National Historic Landmark Its
Significance and Protection", May 1989.)
An ongoing debate within the planning and preservation communities revolves
around whether new development can be integrated within historic
communities. On one hand, a community by definition grows and changes, and
to arbitrarily stop that change is superficial On the other hand, altering
the buildings and landscape of a community removes the - opportunity to directly
experience history.
Waterford is a unique, non-renewable resource - once changed, it will
be lost forever. The village has survived from the early 1900's to the present
day with very little alteration of its basic pattern and character. It is
a life-size history book, providing visitors with a glimpse into the lives
of Virginians 100 to 200 years ago. To lose this living history book is to
lose a vision of the past.
However, the preservation challenge is a difficult one. Waterford is not
a museum, it is a living and growing community filled with private residences,
privately-owned land, working farms, and small, local businesses. Therefore,
an approach providing for sensitively-sited and limited numbers of new residential
developments within the Landmark has been chosen to attempt to meet all of
the challenges facing the preservation o this unique community.
The question facing Waterford at this time is "How can a group of volunteer
advocates work towards the preservation of a townscape, a landscape, and
a way of life? Traditionally, the Waterford Foundation has protected the
buildings within the village through out-right purchase, donations, conservation
easements, and a county historic district ordinance. These efforts have retained
modest dwellings and prevented them from being recreated into mansions. The
result is that the architectural integrity, scale and the sense of balance
essential to the original founders has been maintained. In addition, easements
have been acquired on a number of parcels of land within the village and
along the entrance corridor from Route 9, preserving the open spaces essential
to the village's character.
Funding these restorations and purchases has traditionally come from the
proceeds of the annual "Homes Tour and
Crafts Exhibit," a three-day
fair which is held within the village. Significant assistance has also come
through grants from charitable organizations and state and federal governments.
Unfortunately, with the growing threat of development, these funding sources
are no longer adequate to make outright purchases of the endangered buildings
and their lands.
The public or institutional ownership resulting from outright purchases
also has the effect of diminishing the working character of the community,
leading to a museum atmosphere rather than a living community. The majority
of the land area surrounding the village is presently privately owned and
functioning as working farms. It is this living landscape that is so important
to the character of Waterford. As the economic climate for farming worsens,
more and more of the landowners are leaving their land. In addition, as development
continues to spread outward from Washington, land prices are spiraling upward.
While a few key parcels both inside and outside the Landmark that are critical
to its integrity have been saved by individual owners and/or the Foundation,
landowner and preservation interests do not always coincide. Private, voluntary
actions continue and are vital to the preservation of the Landmark, however
the coordinated strategy of the Compact is needed to preserve the quality
of the Landmark for future generations.
From the Department of the Interior Report, "Linking
the Past to the Future, A Landscape Conservation Strategy for Waterford,
Virginia", 1992 Bibliography
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