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Driving Tour of Arthurdale
Item 27 of 27

To your right behind the wooden split rail fence is the final resting place for Colonel John Fairfax, a prominent local politician, his first wife Mary Byrne and second wife Anne Franklin. Col. Fairfax was told by George Washington to "go west and grow up with the country," prompting him to move to this area of western Virginia at the time. Alongside the Fairfaxes lay about 200 unmarked graves for Black men and women who were enslaved by the family in the early to mid-1800s. These enslaved people lived on and worked the land that would become Arthurdale decades later.


Fairfax headstone

Rectangle, Font, Tints and shades, Artifact

Fairfax Cemetery Today

Natural landscape, Branch, Wood, Tree

Did you know the land Arthurdale sits on was once part of an early American plantation? In 1790, after working for 7 years as Superintendent of George Washington's Mount Vernon, Col. John Fairfax of Charles County, MD purchased about 2000 acres in what is today Preston County. Fairfax was a prominent figure, serving as a Justice of the Peace, member of the Virginia House of Delegates, Sheriff of Preston County, and Colonel of the 104th Regiment of the Virginia Militia during the War of 1812. His 1818 Georgian stone mansion still stands outside Kingwood. Richard M. Arthur purchased part of the Fairfax land in the late 1800s. He later sold his land to the federal government and Arthurdale was named after his farm.

Fairfax and his two wives, Mary Byrne (d.1803) and Anne Franklin (d. 1850), plus other family members and an untold number of their enslaved people are buried at the Fairfax Cemetery on H Road.

Arthurdale Heritage, Preserving Arthurdale, WV – Eleanor Roosevelt's New Deal Community. Arthurdale Heritage Inc.. Accessed March 20, 2017. http://www.arthurdaleheritage.org/.

Haid, Stephen Edward. "Arthurdale: An Experiment in Community Planning, 1933-1947." Master's thesis, West Virginia University, 1975.

Hoffman, Nancy. Eleanor Roosevelt and the Arthurdale Experiment. Linnet Books, 2001.

Maloney, C. J. Back to the Land: Arthurdale, FDRs New Deal, and the Costs of Economic Planning. John Wiley & Sons, 2013.

Patterson, Stuart. “A New Pattern of Life: The Public Past and Present of Two New Deal Communities.” Doctoral Thesis, Emory University, 2006.

Penix, Amanda Griffith. Images of America: Arthurdale. Arcadia Publishing, 2007.

Thomas, Charles. Images of America: Preston County. Arcadia Publishing, 1998.

Ward, Bryan. A New Deal for America. Arthurdale Heritage Inc., 1995