upHerndon
Open to all sites related to Herndon, Fairfax County, Virginia.
Entries
Network Solutions http://www.networksolutions.com/Official domain name registration services for .com, .net, .org, .edu and many international domains.
Herndon Community Television http://www.hctv.org/Company profile, list of shows, photo and video gallery, and volunteer information.
Wikipedia - Herndon http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herndon%2C_VirginiaView information and statistics from Wikipedia.
The Herndon Web http://herndonweb.com/Local directory of community businesses, services, and organizations in Herndon, Virginia.
Marine Spill Response Corporation http://www.msrc.org/Protecting the maritime environment. Providing marine oil response, news articles, and client information.
Herndon Observer http://www.observernews.com/herndon.shtmlWeekly community newspaper covering local sports, schools, government, and business news.
Subcategories
Arts and Entertainment Open to all sites providing information on the arts and entertainment in Herndon, Virginia.
Business and Economy Open to all businesses located in Herndon, Virginia.
Education Submissions may include but are not limited to: Colleges and Universities Home Schooling Public and Private Elementary and Secondary
School Districts Vocational, Technical, and Trades
(less...) Government Government oriented sites in Herndon, Virginia.
Health Health businesses and organization in Herndon, Virginia.
Recreation and Sports Open to recreation and sports related website in Herndon, Virginia.
Society and Culture This category is open to sites such as (but not limited to) the following - religious organizations, churches, and places of worship local police, fire and rescue community events seniors
resources social clubs genealogy history personal home pages
(less...) TransportationTravel and Tourism Open to travel and tourism related businesses or organizations in Herndon, Virginia.
Real Estate Open to all real estate related businesses in headquartered in Herndon, Virginia.
Shopping This category is for shopping websites for businesses specifically located in Herndon. Businesses that offer only online, phone, or mail order sales will not be listed in Regional Shopping categories.
Please note that this category does not contain sites of businesses without storefronts. Those businesses are listed instead in the Online Shopping section of the directory.
(less...)Related categories
Fairfax "Fairfax" and "Culpeper" are names closely linked in the formation of Virginia, though the counties today are not adjacent to each other. The civil war in England in the mid-1600's led to King Charles
I having his head chopped off and his son fleeing to France. While in exile, and before the tables turned and he was crowned Charles II in 1660, the son rewarded his few allies (a grand total of seven) with grants of land in the Northern Neck of Virginia in September, 1649, although of he didn't ensure legal title until he regained the throne eleven years later. The Virginia colonial government resisted the grant because it reduced the control of the House of Burgesses over the land between the Rappahannock and the Potomac rivers. In 1675 Lord Culpeper became Governor of Virginia and brought together all the claims to the grant. When Lord Culpeper died, his daughter Katherine Culpeper inherited 5/6th of the "proprietorship." Her mother retained 1/6th ownership until her death. Katherine Culpeper married Thomas, Fifth Lord Fairfax, and their son Thomas, Sixth Lord Fairfax, ultimately inherited it all in 1719. The Culpepers and Fairfaxes had been on opposite sides of the English Civil War, but the Restoration in 1660 had put that dispute behind them. (There are far more twists in the story. See The Fairfax Family in Fairfax County: A Brief History, by Kenton Kilmer and Donald Sweig for a straightforward explanation of the details.) Thomas, Sixth Lord Fairfax, allowed Virginia agents (primarily Robert "King" Carter) to manage the proprietary until the early 1730's. Continued legislative threats to his legal rights, plus the death of Rober Carter, triggered Fairfax to get the Privy Council in London to order a final survey of the boundaries of his ownership. The 1688 patent had described the western boundary as the "first heads or springs" of the Rappahannock and Potomac rivers, and Robert Carter had claimed in 1706 that this included all the area between the Rapidan and Rappahannock rivers. Virginia claimed the Fairfax grant was limited to the area between the confluence of the Shenandoah and the Potomac (Harpers Ferry today), and the falls of the Rappahannock (Fredericksburg today). For the 1736 survey, Governor Gooch of Virginia appointed three commissioners, Lord Fairfax appointed three - and then each side also appointed three surveyors. (Lord Fairfax had George Washington surveying his western lands starting in 1748, years later...) Not surprisingly, separate maps were created by the two sides after the survey, and it took eight years before officials in England decided finally in favor of Lord Fairfax. A year later, in 1746, a "back line" was surveyed between the headwaters of the Rapidan and the Potomac. The Fairfax Stone was set at the north end, and this time all the surveyors agreed on the boundary - which set aside over 5 million acres of Virginia for Lord Fairfax. Lord Fairfax had come to Virginia in 1735 to defend his claim to the land, returned to England in 1737 to negotiate with the Privy Council, and then returned again to Virginia in 1747. In 1742, while Lord Fairfax himself was in England, the colony carved out a new county from Prince William and named it after Lord Fairfax. Lord Fairfax was a life-long bachelor. After he returned to Virginia in 1747, he lived at his cousin William Fairfax's home, Belvoir (now the site of Fort Belvoir), before building a hunting lodge he titled grandly "Greenway Court" - far away from the settled Tidewater, west of the Blue Ridge. He added a stone house and settled there permanently in 1761, essentially on the frontier. Though his reasons will never be known for sure, there is some evidence that he was rejected by a woman he intended to marry before he came to Virginia in 1735. He stayed neutral during the Revolutionary War, and died in December, 1781 (after Cornwallis's surrender at Yorktown). After 10 years of negotiating and lawsuits, the new Commonwealth of Virginia acquired title to the Fairfax lands that had not already been granted to anyone, and a real estate syndicate purchased Greenway Court and other properties clearly owned by heirs of Lord Fairfax.
(less...) Northern Virginia Web site oriented to Northern Virginia.
Neigbour categories
Halifax Village in Halifax County.
HalliefordHamilton Sites in or for Hamilton; zip code 20159.
Hampton Hampton, Virginia, winner of the All-American City Award in 2002, was founded in 1610 with the establishment of the St. John's Episcopal Church. Located on the southeastern edge of the Virginia
Peninsula at the intersection of Interstates 64 and 664, Hampton is a city with 140,000 citizens. Hampton is home to numerous large institutions including Langley Air Force Base, Hampton University, NASA Langley Research Center, Fort Monroe (established 1819), and Fort Wool. Hampton boasts many tourist attractions including downtown Phoebus, downtown Hampton, and Buckroe Beach. Hampton merged with the town of Phoebus and Elizabeth City County to take on its present form in 1952.
(less...) HanoverHarbortonHardyHarman Web sites relating to the town of Harman, located in Buchanan County, VA.
HarrisburgHarrisonburg Harrisonburg, "The Friendly City," is located in Virginia's Central Shenandoah Valley between the Blue Ridge and Allegheny Mountains. Harrisonburg has been a First-Class City since 1990. Home of James
Madison University and Eastern Mennonite University, the city was settled in 1778 when Thomas Harrison claimed 12,090 acres which is today's Rockingham County. The City was recognized in 1780 as "Rocktown," and over the years many people of English, Scotch-Irish, and German origins made their way to Harrisonburg. Harrisonburg grew over the 19th and 20th Centuries, annexing its surrounding areas. Harrisonburg is deemed "A City with a Planned Future," as it successfully implements planned government. Referenced http://www.ci.harrisonburg.va.us for description.
(less...) Hartfield Sites related to, or located in, Hartfield, Virginia.
Hayes Open to all sites related to Hayes, Gloucester County, Virginia.
HaymarketHaysi Web sites related to the town of Haysi, VA in Dickenson County.
Heathsville Open to all sites related to Heathsville, Northumberland County, Virginia.
Henry Web sites located in or about Henry, in Franklin County, VA.
Highland Springs Open to all sites featuring Highland Springs, Henrico County, Virginia, an eastern suburb of Richmond, the capital of the Commonwealth.
HillsvilleHinton Companies and organizations in Hinton, Virginia.
HonakerHopewell Open to sites related to the independent city of Hopewell Virgina, which is physically located within northwest Prince George County near Petersburg. From the Hopewell-Prince George Chamber of
commerce: The City Point area of Hopewell is one of the oldest continually occupied English settlements in the United States. It was visted by Captain Christopher Newport in 1607, a few days after the first settlers arrived in Jamestown and has been continuously occupied since 1613. The area was the site of an Indian massacre in 1622 and the scene of Revolutionary fighting in 1781. During the Civil War, City Point served as headquarters for Ulysses S. Grant. Many historic buildings and sites remain in Hopewell. The area's population skyrocketed in 1915 when DuPont established war-related production facilities in the City. The population declined substantially when World War I ended and the company closed its production facility. Hopewell was incorporated in 1916 and annexed City Point in 1923.
(less...) Hot SpringsHuddleston For sites pertaining to Huddleston, Bedford County, Virginia.
HumeHuntington Web sites for the Huntington community in Fairfax County, Virginia.
Hurley Web sites for the town of Hurley, in Buchanan County, VA.
Hurt Sites about the town of Hurt, Virginia.
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