History
The
village of Aldie enjoys a rich, 200 year heritage, and occupies a
unique place in the history of northern Virginia and Loudoun County.
Few places in the region pack so much history into such a small space.
The
village grew up in the early 1800s around the Aldie Mill. It occupies
what was then a strategic location at one of the gaps in the Bull Run
Mountains, through which travelers and commerce could move west along
Little River Turnpike toward Middleburg, Upperville and the Blue Ridge.
The mill is powered by water from Little River, diverted upstream into the mill race. Its construction was
financed by Charles Fenton Mercer, a distinguished member of the
Virginia General Assembly and the United States Congress, and William
Cooke. It was Mercer who named the village Aldie after Aldie Castle,
the ancestral home of the Mercer family in Scotland. Mercer himself
never operated the mill, although the income from its operations
allowed him to pursue his career in public service. Mercer left
day-to-day operations to Cooke, his business partner. He bought out
Cooke’s interest in 1816 (for $11,250), then sold the mill in 1835 to a
family that operated it for six generations until it closed in 1971.
Fifty
years after Mercer and Cooke built their mill, Aldie was the site of a
bloody cavalry skirmish at the start of the Gettysburg campaign. In
June 1863, Confederate General Robert E. Lee was moving his army up the
Shenandoah Valley to the west of the Blue Ridge Mountains. He planned
to cross the Potomac River into Maryland, then push further north into
Pennsylvania.
To escape detection while he
moved his troops north, Lee positioned his cavalry under General J.E.B.
Stuart east of the Blue Ridge, with orders to shield the infantry’s
movements. Anxious to learn Lee’s intentions, Union commanders
dispatched several cavalry brigades from Washington, D.C., to find the
Confederate Army.
Stuart had stationed a
cavalry brigade at Aldie to prevent Union troops from gaining control
of the two roads over the Blue Ridge Mountains into the Shenandoah
Valley: the Little River Turnpike (now Route 50) through Middleburg and
Upperville, and the Snickersville Turnpike, which runs northwest out of
Aldie. The Union cavalry clashed with Stuart’s cavalry first at Aldie
on June 17, 1863 then again at Middleburg and Upperville in the days
following.
J.E.B. Stuart’s cavalrymen did
their job, holding the Union troops long enough for Lee to move his
Army across the Potomac into Maryland undetected, only to collide with
the Union Army two weeks later at Gettysburg.
The
history books describe the outcome of the cavalry battle at Aldie as
“inconclusive”. It must not have seemed so to the men of the First
Massachusetts Cavalry, however.
This
regiment rode through the village of Aldie on June 17, and turned
northwest at the western edge of town to follow the Snickersville
Turnpike. There had been fighting in the area most of the day. Dead horses
and men lay in the fields on either side of the road. Several miles
outside of Aldie, the First Massachusetts rode four abreast into a
horrific ambush. Sharpshooters from the 2nd and 3rd Virginia cavalry
were concealed behind stone walls on either side of the road, and
decimated the Union cavalry column. In his official report on the
encounter, Confederate Colonel Thomas Munford wrote: “I do not hesitate
to say that I have never seen as many Yankees killed in the same space
of ground in any fight I have ever seen, or on any battlefield in
Virginia that I have been over.” The site is marked today by a monument
to the First Massachusetts Cavalry, said to be the only monument to
Union forces in Loudoun County.
Today, the
village of Aldie has an historical district with buildings dating from
as early as 1775. Most were built from early 1800s to mid-1800s. There
are many points of interest in addition to the Aldie Mill, which is operating again. Mt. Zion Church has tours, reenactments, and other events. Aldie Harvest Festival, held
the third Saturday of October each year, is a reminder of when Aldie
was a farming community. Explore the links to the left for a fuller appreciation of Aldie's history and people.
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