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  2. Present-day Arlington County was part of Fairfax County in the Colony of Virginia during the colonial era. Land grants from the British Crown were awarded to prominent Englishmen in exchange for political favors and efforts as part of the county's early development.

  3. Feb 17, 2021 · More counties followed: Fairfax and Louisa counties in 1742; Albemarle County in 1744; Lunenburg County in 1745; and Chesterfield, Culpeper, Cumberland, and Southampton counties in 1749. By 1750 Virginia consisted of forty-four counties.

  4. Fairfax was first part of a district called Chicacoan. It later became part of several counties as the divisions continued: Northumberland (1645), Westmoreland (1653), Stafford (1664), Prince William (1730), and finally, in 1742, Fairfax County, much larger than we know it now.

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  5. The Northern Neck Proprietary – also called the Northern Neck land grant, Fairfax Proprietary, or Fairfax Grant – was a land grant first contrived by the exiled English King Charles II in 1649 and encompassing all the lands bounded by the Potomac and Rappahannock Rivers in colonial Virginia.

  6. Jan 23, 2024 · The colonial era brought significant change to Arlington as European settlers began to establish themselves in the area. In 1669, the land that would become Arlington was granted to a prominent colonial figure, Lord Thomas Fairfax.

  7. the ceded land was returned in 1847, it became Arlington County and a part of the City of Alexandria. After 1800, with both Washington and Mason dead, with the port of Alexandria no longer the county seat, with the soil

  8. Jul 29, 2024 · In 1789, the area that now encompasses Alexandria City and Arlington County was donated to the Federal Government during the creation of the District of Columbia in 1791 and designated Alexandria County of the District of Columbia until 1846, when it was returned to Virginia as the independent county of Alexandria.

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