The 11 acres comprising the Mayfield Earthwork Fort is situated between the Buckhall and Russia Branch tributaries of the Occoquan River, its strategic high ground and water resources made its occupation advantageous. Native Americans occupied the site as far back as 3,700 - 2,500 BC. Prehistoric artifacts uncovered on the site reflect a hunter/gatherer culture with extensive migration and trading connections. European settlement began in 1740 when the land was patented to Peter Hamrick (or Hambrick) and became known as "Mayfield." In 1779 it was sold to Robert Hawson Hooe. The Hooes were an established Virginia family of considerable wealth and a long history of settlement in the lower Potomac region. The Hooe family shaped Mayfield into a bustling operation featuring a stone house, a sizeable number of support buildings. The construction was performed under the direction of Col. G. H. Terret, a Confederate engineer, using conscript slave labor and local troops. The forts were constructed of earth reinforced with log revetments, and were armed with naval guns that had been captured from the Norfolk Navy Yard. Confederate troops occupied the fort between June 1861 and March 1862. When the rebels withdrew to aide in the defense of Richmond, Union troops sporadically occupied the fort from March 1862 to November 1864. Communities and Related LinksMayfield Fort Web SiteWashington, DC, Official Tourism |
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