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  <title><![CDATA[braddockheritage.org/]]></title>
  <subtitle><![CDATA[History and memory are intertwined. A Look Back at Braddock District is a local history, the story of a rural region in the heart of Fairfax County, Virginia, transformed over time into a sprawling suburb of Washington, DC. The memories of more than 50 Northern Virginia residents are captured in oral histories. Photographs, documents, maps and artifacts amplify these personal experiences and document growth and change in the area.

Braddock is one of nine magisterial districts in Fairfax County, Virginia. During the twentieth century, housing developments and highways overtook fields and one-lane roads. Educational complexes overgrew three-room schoolhouses, and shopping centers and malls replaced general stores. Residents of Braddock District shaped the changes in their lives; their memories shape the history of their communities.]]></subtitle>
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    <name><![CDATA[Unknown]]></name>
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  <updated>2020-07-01T14:08:58-04:00</updated>
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  <entry>
    <id>http://braddockheritage.org/items/show/10</id>
    <title><![CDATA[Burke United Methodist Church]]></title>
    <summary><![CDATA[The Burke United Methodist Church opened in a former Southern Railway train station in 1929.  Former school teacher and neighborhood handyman, Willie Harlow, made the steeple and the cross, although he did not attend church services there. The congregation moved to a new location in 1979, and the former depot and church became a commercial building.<br />
<br />
General J.E.B. Stuart had raided the old train station in 1862, and a historic marker denotes the event.]]></summary>
    <updated>2011-09-14T18:11:49-04:00</updated>
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    <category term="burke"/>
    <category term="civil war"/>
    <category term="historic site"/>
    <category term="jeb stuart"/>
    <category term="railroad"/>
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                                    <div class="element-text">Burke United Methodist Church</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">The Burke United Methodist Church opened in a former Southern Railway train station in 1929.  Former school teacher and neighborhood handyman, Willie Harlow, made the steeple and the cross, although he did not attend church services there. The congregation moved to a new location in 1979, and the former depot and church became a commercial building.<br />
<br />
General J.E.B. Stuart had raided the old train station in 1862, and a historic marker denotes the event.</div>
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                <div id="dublin-core-source" class="element">
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                                    <div class="element-text">Photograph from Fairfax County Public Library, Virginia Room, Photographic Archive</div>
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  <entry>
    <id>http://braddockheritage.org/items/show/9</id>
    <title><![CDATA[Silas Burke House]]></title>
    <summary><![CDATA[Silas Burke, a businessman and landowner, built the Silas Burke House circa 1824.  His wife lived there for 41 years after his death in 1854.  The property includes an ice house, root cellar, and a restored slave house. The Burke mansion is on Burke Lake Road, Burke, Virginia.<br />
<br />
In 1891, John Marshall, who owned the general store in Burke, purchased the home.  The Copperthite family followed, builders of a racetrack and hotel in Burke.  In 1925, the Simpson family purchased the property and renamed the house &quot;Top o&#039; the Hill, and it is owned by their descendants, the Fowlers, today.]]></summary>
    <updated>2011-09-14T18:13:05-04:00</updated>
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    <category term="burke"/>
    <category term="historic site"/>
    <category term="silas burke"/>
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                                    <div class="element-text">Silas Burke, a businessman and landowner, built the Silas Burke House circa 1824.  His wife lived there for 41 years after his death in 1854.  The property includes an ice house, root cellar, and a restored slave house. The Burke mansion is on Burke Lake Road, Burke, Virginia.<br />
<br />
In 1891, John Marshall, who owned the general store in Burke, purchased the home.  The Copperthite family followed, builders of a racetrack and hotel in Burke.  In 1925, the Simpson family purchased the property and renamed the house &quot;Top o&#039; the Hill, and it is owned by their descendants, the Fowlers, today.</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">Photo by Gilbert Donahue</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">Copyrighted material, not to be reproduced without permission of owner, Gilbert Donahue</div>
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