The
History of Waterford, Virginia |
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Waterford's Pioneering QuakersAn excerpt from the book, When Waterford & I Were Young, by John E. Divine. This book shares the author’s experiences and love of Waterford as he grew up in the early 1900s. About this book More
on Waterford's beginnings »
Waterford's pioneering Quakers were Amos and Mary Yardley Janney from Bucks County, Pennsylvania, north of Philadelphia. In the early 1680s the Janney and Yardley families had been among the first to leave England for William Penn's new colony. Fifty years later the grandchildren of those Quaker immigrants were themselves ready to move on, enticed by reports of fertile land newly open to settlement in Virginia. In the early 1730s Amos bought 400 acres on the south fork of Catoctin Creek from John Mead, who had obtained the land in a round-about way from Lord Fairfax, colonial proprietor of most of northern Virginia. [Prince William County Deed Book "C," the book recording the date of transfer to Amos Janney from land agent Catesby Cocke, has been missing since the Civil War. Thus an exact date is not available. Waterford dates its founding to 1733, based on the land transfers of the 703 acres between and among land agents John Mead, Richard Averill and Catesby Cocke.] The new home must have suited the Janneys; they evident. I encouraged friends and relatives to join them from Pennsylvania Among the first to follow were Mary's sister Jane and brother-in-law Francis Hague. In 1743 Hague bought from the same John Mead 303 acres abutting Janney's land on the northeast. Francis settled his large family in a modest stone cottage on a hill above Catoctin Creek. In succeeding years Quakers arrived in growing numbers, drawn like Amos Janney by the promise of good land. Still, the trek from the north was not for the faint of heart. Even a full generation after Amos’s pioneering move, the passage was still difficult as this letter home makes clear.
Not everyone was as cautious as the travel-weary Myers in appraising the new neighborhood. In April 1776, Thomas Rankin, a young Methodist preacher, described his ride from Frederick, Maryland, through the Waterford area to Leesburg in terms that would make even a modern-day developer blush.
Even Rankin conceded, however, that there were a few problems in this eden. He reported that panthers were numerous in the Waterford area. A local land-owner, Captain William Douglass, presented him with the pelt of one. It "...measured 11 feet; and allowing 4 feet and 1/2 for the length of the tail, the body of the animal was upwards of 6 feet long." Wolves too were plentiful and a real threat to settlers' livestock. In 1757 local authorities paid Joseph Janney (cousin of Amos) 100 pounds of tobacco for a wolf's head-the standard bounty. [This Joseph Janney-and there were several-was probably the Joseph who married Hannah Jones in Pennsylvania in 1764. He was the son of Abel and Sarah Baker Janney and a great-grandson of Thomas, the original Janney immigrant from England. Joseph died about 1793.] Copyright © Waterford Foundation
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