'Aldie' is an
unincorporated village located on the John Mosby Highway (
U.S. Route 50) between
Gilbert's Corner and
Middleburg in
Loudoun County,
Virginia. It is located in a gap between the
Catoctin Mountain and
Bull Run Mountain, through which the
Little River flows.
Notable facts
Aldie is home to several historic shops, homes, and the Aldie Mill, which survives today as Virginia's only known
gristmill powered by twin overshot water wheels. Aldie has an annual Harvest Festival in October.
Aldie was the birthplace of
Julia Beckwith Neale, mother of
Confederate Lieutenant General Stonewall Jackson.
During the
American Civil War, the village itself and lands immediately to the west and northwest were the site of the
Battle of Aldie during the
Gettysburg Campaign. In addition, the Confederate
partisan John Singleton Mosby was active in the village, and several small skirmishes between
Union cavalry and his band of rangers took place in and around Aldie.
Aldie sites listed on the
National Register of Historic Places include the Aldie Mill (1807) and the Aldie Mill Historic District on US 50, the Loudoun Agricultural and Mechanical Institute on Route 650, and the Mount Zion Old School Baptist Church (1851) on US 50.
History
Aldie's beginnings were laid in
1765 when James and George Mercer established a mill at the location of the present historic edifice. The location was a natural choice, as the gap contained the intersection of the Belhaven road between
Winchester and
Alexandria and the Mountain road which ran northwest to
Snickers Gap. By
1809 the
Little River Turnpike was completd from Alexandria to the Mercer Mill, replacing the older rutted section of Belhaven Road. With the opening of the road, James Mercer's son,
Charles Fenton Mercer, in a partnership with William Cooke set out to develop a village on 30 acres at the turnpike's western terminus. Mercer named the village for Castle Aldie, his
Scottish clan's ancestral home.
By
1811 a post office had been established in the burgeoning village. Two years later, the
Ashby's Gap Turnpike was completed from Aldie to Middleburg, and in
1818 the
Snickersville Turnpike opened, replacing the Mountain Road, setting up Aldie for its rise to prominence. By the
census of
1820, Aldie had a population of 248 residents, making it the fourth largest town in the county. The population peaked in
1830 at 260—notably more than half, 132, were slaves. With the incorporation of Middleburg the following year, Aldie began a slow decline.
External links
★
Aldie Mill Historic District
★
Mount Zion Church Preservation Association
★
Village of Aldie