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Samuel Steer House 
Samuel Steer House

This house was built during the Civil War and used briefly as a hospital. Samuel Steer (1811-1883) purchased the dwelling in 1867. For his family's safety, he had moved into the village during the war from his farm south of town. Steer, like several of his Quaker neighbors, spent time in a Confederate prison because of his Union sympathies. During the war his daughter, Sarah Ann, co-edited the pro-Union Waterford News with her young neighbors Lida and Lizzie Dutton. After the war Sarah Ann Steer was the first teacher at the new school for African Americans just down the street.

 


Sunnyside Sunnyside
Sunnyside was built in the early 1850s by John B. Dutton (1816-1892), a Quaker who rented John Williams' old store space on the present post office site for his own dry goods business. The Confederates forced Dutton out of Waterford during the war, so he lived in Point of Rocks, Maryland, visiting home when he could evade the pickets. He served as Postmaster in Point of Rocks, thereby keeping Waterford in touch with the outside world. (Mail had been suspended to seceded states.) Dutton's daughters, Lida and Lizzie, co-edited The Waterford News with Sarah Steer. After the war they married former Union soldiers from New York and Indiana who had passed through the village.
The front porch, which had been removed at some point, was rebuilt in the late 1990s.

 


Trouble Enough Indeed Trouble Enough Indeed
Believe it or not, this dwelling did not appear in Waterford until the early 1970s. Its owners moved two 19th century log houses from Lewisdale, Maryland, to this site and reassembled them into the home seen here.

 


Old Insurance Building Old Insurance Building
This was the third home of the Loudoun Mutual Fire Insurance Company, which purchased this site from the Hough family in 1901. The company demolished the old Hough house and hired Mr. Poole of Dunn Loring, Virginia, to build the new office, garage, and retaining walls. The entire cost was $5,524.49. The company remained in this building until 1949, when it moved to its present office on High Street. Today it is used as a home.

 


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