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Bull Run Elementary
School
15301 Lee Highway
Centreville, VA 20121
Main Line: 703-227-1400
Attendance Line: 703-227-1495
Fax Line: 703-227-1497
A History of the Area Around Our School
As we look south and west from the front
entrance to Bull Run Elementary school, we see the beauty of the Bull Run
Mountains, where pioneers of the 18th century brought their vision of
prosperity and tamed the wilderness. These earliest settlers helped to define
the American dream for the many generations that were to follow, instilling in
their children a hope that, through hard work, ingenuity, and perseverance, in
a society that valued true liberty, the quality of life would be better for
them than it had been for their parents.
Just a couple of miles from this spot, Bull Run Creek
winds its way through the hills and valleys of Northern Virginia. Along this
creek, settlers peacefully planted their crops and cattle grazed, far removed
from the growing pains of politics and government. Settlement of this area
began in the 1720's, when the Treaty of Albany banished local Native American
tribes to lands beyond the Blue Ridge Mountains, and Westmoreland County
patent holders began to lease parcels of their land to subsistence farmers.
Forty years later, a small village called Newgate was thriving here, and the
Lane family, dedicated entrepreneurs, built several mills, a store, a tavern,
a distillery, and at least one saw mill. These were the amenities which the
Lane's hoped would draw more settlers to the area.
By 1792, when the Virginia Assembly authorized town
status and changed Newgate's name to Centreville, it was the largest and
busiest town in Fairfax County. As the nineteenth century began, Centreville's
citizens predicted a rosy future, but worn out land due to excessive tobacco
production and a decline in population due to emigration to the new western
states caused Centreville to fall into a decline.
Recovery began in the mid-1840's with an influx of
northern settlers and new agricultural technology. Centreville once again
became a thriving town and the center of a prime agricultural area. This
peaceful atmosphere was shattered 139 years ago this week, when the War
Between the States, or Civil War, officially began in Fort Sumter, South
Carolina. Just a few months later, near the spot on which we are gathered,
31,000 Union troops met 35,000 Confederate troops. The opposing forces, both
composed mainly of poorly trained volunteers, clashed on July 21st in what was
later called the First Battle of Bull Run, or the First Battle of Manassas.
Gentlemen and Ladies from Washington, D.C. journeyed in carriages with picnic
baskets to observe what they thought would be and entertaining skirmish. They
soon fled in horror as the Northern forces launched several assaults and
legend has it that the water of Bull Run Creek turned red with the blood of
the many casualties. During one attack, the Confederate General Thomas J.
Jackson stood his ground so firmly that he received the nickname
"Stonewall". After halting several assaults, the Confederate troops
counterattacked. The tired Union forces fled to Washington, D.C., in wild
retreat. This battle convinced both sides that they faced a long fight.
Just over a year later, in August of 1862, the
Confederate army met the Union Army on the same ground. The Union army
repeatedly attacked the Confederates, but a Confederate counterattack swept
the Union forces from the field. The beaten Northern troops plodded back to
Washington once again.
During this chaotic period of history, thousands of
troops gathered on the spot where our school stands today. Centreville has
been historically designated as the town most destroyed by the Civil War.
Homes were requisitioned for officers quarters, fences disappeared for
firewood, and livestock and crops were confiscated to feed both armies. The
troops built defenses and forts around Centreville, piling the earth in great
heaping mounds for protection. They cut all the trees to provide wood for
cooking and warmth, to build log shelters, and to corduroy the roads.
With the hills bare of trees, the rains caused
terrible erosion, and when peace finally came, Centreville farmers returned to
barren farms devoid of topsoil and etched with gullies. Poverty and debt were
commonplace. In the late nineteenth century, great flocks of sheep grazed the
gently rolling landscape of the Centreville area, including the land where
this school stands, and in the 1930's Centreville dairy farms helped make
Fairfax County the leading milk producer in Virginia.
As we look from the school to our north and east, we
see the evidence of recent decades in which Centreville was transformed from a
rural to a suburban community of explosive growth in residences, commerce, and
traffic. We are now located at the base of the Dulles Corridor and near many
of the world's most successful technology companies what is referred to as the
Silicon Valley of the East.