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Ridgedale (also known as Washington Bottom Farm, Ridge Dale, and as the George W. Washington House and Farm) is a 19th-century Greek Revival plantation house and farm on a plateau overlooking the South Branch Potomac River north of Romney, West Virginia, United States.
Ridgedale is located off the South Branch Valley Railroad and is accessible from West Virginia Route 28 by way of Washington Road (West Virginia Secondary Route 28/3). Ridgedale once had a post office and a school in operation there. Today, Ridgedale consists of the old Washington farm and a number of summer camps, cabins, and vacation homes on ...
Ridgedale has multiple meanings, including: Ridgedale, Saskatchewan; Ridgedale Center, a regional shopping mall in Minnetonka, Minnesota; Ridgedale, Hampshire County, West Virginia; Ridgedale, Missouri; Ridgedale (also known as Washington Bottom Farm), the plantation of George W. Washington, a distant relative of George Washington
English: The primary residence, barn, and carriage house as seen upon arriving at Ridgedale. This is an image of a place or building that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places in the United States of America .
This is intended to be a complete list of properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Morris County, New Jersey.Latitude and longitude coordinates of the sites listed on this page may be displayed in an online map.
Confederate Capt. Turner Ashby established the headquarters of the 7th Virginia Cavalry at "Camp Washington" on the George W. Washington farm, "Ridgedale," immediately north of Hanging Rocks and across the South Branch Potomac River from Wire Bridge.
Bailey Washington Jr. was the third son born to Bailey Washington Sr. and his wife, the former Catherine Storke. His father also served in the Virginia House of Delegates, as well as operated plantations using enslaved labor.
From 1735 to 1738, he resided with his father, mother and siblings at Mount Vernon, [2] then his father moved the family to Stafford County, where he was raised on Ferry Farm. Samuel Washington suffered from tuberculosis for much of his life, and would ultimately die from the disease at age 46; three of his four sons who reached adulthood also ...