Country Zest & Style Winter 2024 Edition

Page 16

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Saving Belmont’s Burial Ground for the Enslaved

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By Laura Longley

ust east of Leesburg near the crossroads of busy Route 7 and Belmont Ridge Parkway are two cemeteries. One occupies a prominent place near an imposing Federal mansion, built in 1799, which now serves as the Manor House of Belmont Country Club. Enclosed within its brick walls is the grave of the home’s first owner, Ludwell Lee, whose father, Richard Henry Lee, signed the Declaration of Independence. Farther afield, in a woodland on the remote, northernmost edge of the original, 400-acre Lee plantation, is the second cemetery. Here on 2.75 acres are the graves of 44 enslaved Pastor Michelle Thomas speaks persons, representing but a few of the African with a group of Loudoun County Americans owned by the Lee family in the students about the Belmont period before the Civil War. The 1810 census, Cemetery for enslaved people. for example, shows they owned 69 individuals. This cemetery for the enslaved lay untended for decades after 1865, even though its existence had been recorded by the county in the 1850s. Indeed, it had gone unnoticed until 2015 when Michelle Thomas, an electrical engineer with a calling to preach and in search of a site for her new, nondenominational church, stumbled upon the small overgrown parcel. The owner, Toll Brothers, was preparing to develop the entire property into a gated golf community. Protecting the burial ground meant acquiring it, Thomas realized. Anyone who has ever met Pastor Michelle Thomas knows that nothing will stand in her way. Just dealing with the county would mean navigating the planning and development departments and convincing the county attorney, historic preservationists, the Loudoun Heritage Commission, and the Board of Supervisors that hers was the right course of action. There also was the small matter of who would take ownership and responsibility for the cemetery. Fortunately, by 2017, Pastor Michelle had launched the Loudoun Freedom Center, a nonprofit organization dedicated to African American heritage that could serve as the cemetery’s trustee. Once the transaction was finalized and the burial ground rededicated, the Loudoun Freedom Center was ready to move forward with plans for walking paths and educational programs. Then the unimaginable happened. On a lovely spring day in June 2020, Michelle Thomas’s middle child, 16-year-old Fitz Alexander Campbell Thomas, drowned while swimming in Goose Creek near the Potomac River. Pastor Michelle decided to lay him to rest in the Belmont burial grounds that had been entrusted to her Freedom Center. Fitz, she said, would be “the first African American person who was born free to be buried in this cemetery.” He won’t be the last. In the process of obtaining permission from the Loudoun County Board of Supervisors to restore those hallowed grounds to active use, she and her husband arranged to be buried there as well, beside their son. Around the same time Thomas began exploring the transfer of the Belmont burial ground to the Loudoun Freedom Center, another African American cemetery came to her attention. Located near Leesburg Executive Airport, the historic Sycolin Community Cemetery had been uncovered on a lunch-hour walk by historian Jim Koenig. Koenig alerted Thomas to the cemetery’s existence. Because the town had purchased the land with federal grant funding, FAA approval was needed, complicating what seemed like a simple transaction. Ultimately, it took Thomas four years to complete the transfer. Visions for both historic cemeteries began taking shape in the summer of ’21 when two Virginia Tech students in the university’s landscape architecture program dedicated themselves to the creation of master plans. The students, Jacob Morris and Megan Lester, presented their concepts to Thomas and representatives of Loudoun County, the Town of Leesburg, and Toll Brothers in a virtual presentation to enthusiastic approval. The plans for both cemeteries incorporate scatter gardens for spreading cremains, columbaria, or cremation walls, and space for new burials.

MIDDLEBURG SUSTAINABILITY COMMITTEE| Winter 2024 55 E. Colonial Highway (Old Rt 7) Hamilton, VA 20158 Parking in rear


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Seeking Lost African American Stories

4min
page 74

PROPERTY Writes High Acre Farm Has It All

2min
pages 72-73

Ida Lee Park Has a Rich History

3min
page 71

The Confusing State of the Potomac River

3min
page 70

A GIRL, A DREAM, AND A HORSE

2min
page 69

Carry Me BACK The Real Gatsby, And Moore

2min
page 68

A Wedding Night To Remember, And Research

4min
pages 66-67

Berryville Antique Dealer Never Met a Stranger

3min
page 65

The Blue Mountain Songbird Strikes All The Right Chords

4min
page 64

Clarice Smith’s Big Race

2min
page 63

CELEBRATIONS

2min
page 62

A New Black Alliance Expanding Its Impact

3min
page 61

SEEN & SCENE

3min
page 60

MODERN FINANCE The Halving

3min
page 58

SURVIVAL

9min
pages 56-57

New York, New York For 20 Seconds

5min
page 54

It’s All About Health for MARK NEMISH

4min
pages 52-53

HUMAN INTELLIGENCE

3min
page 51

Perspectives on Childhood, Education, and Parenting What Constitutes Success for a Child

3min
page 50

For Riverdee Stable, A Year To Fondly Remember

4min
pages 48-49

JK Community Farm Feeding The Food Insecure

3min
page 46

Where's The Beef? Try Ovoka Farm in Paris

4min
pages 44-45

A “Hiking Itch” Is Scratched on the Appalachian Trail

4min
page 43

Aldie Ruritan Club is a Local Institution

3min
page 42

BOOKED UP

2min
page 41

A Lineback Blitz On A Berryville Field

1min
pages 38-39

Heroes Making an Impact

3min
page 36

A New Book Celebrates Historic Huntland

4min
pages 34-35

The Gentle Lady From Upperville Knows It’s Time To Move On

5min
pages 32-33

A 1967 Fiery Disaster in The Plains

8min
pages 30-31

What Should We Feed Wildlife?

4min
page 28

In Ashburn, They Never Skate on Thin Ice

3min
page 27

Down Virginia Way

3min
page 26

Horse Sports and Conservation PROTECTING OUR FUTURE

4min
pages 24-25

A Helping House Hunting Hand Always Pays Off

3min
page 22

Good Fences Make Good Business Sense

3min
page 21

Nancy Bedford and a New Museum in Middleburg

4min
page 20

Ethel Rae Stewart Smith, The Teacher Who Asked For Coal

4min
page 18

Celebrate the First Annual Twelfth Night of Christmas with Piedmont Fox Hounds

1min
page 17

Saving Belmont's Burial Ground for the Enslaved

4min
page 16

For Porcha Dodson, It All Began at Hill

5min
page 15

From Close Quarters to a Grand New Town Hall

4min
page 14

Rural Landowners Manual: Conservation Depends on All

5min
page 12

RENE LLEWELLYN A Legendary Fondness For All

5min
pages 10-11

Tutti Caters to Fine Food and Music Lovers

3min
page 8

The Worst Test: Pretty Mischievous Wins Tragic Renewal of Grade 1 Test

8min
pages 6-7

SOME FABULOUS FEEDBACK

3min
page 4

IN AND OUT

1min
page 3
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