Franconia Road once served as a
rolling road to bring
tobacco hogsheads to the port at Alexandria. The surrounding community derives its name from the "Frankhonia Farm", which sat on a portion of a tract of 191 acres purchased from Joseph Broders of Oak Grove Farm in 1859 by William Fowle, a merchant from
Alexandria. Fowle's son, Robert Rollins Fowle, sold 18 acres of the property to the
Alexandria & Fredericksburg Railway Company in 1871 for the erection of a
railway station, which took its name of the farm. The station was the site of the Garfield Post Office from 1881 until 1890, and again from 1898 until 1907. In 1903, it was relocated after a fire from its original site, near Fleet Drive, to the north side of
Franconia Road. The railway station remained in regular service until around 1953. Today, it is memorialized with a historic marker erected by the
Fairfax County History Commission in 2000, located in front of the Franconia Governmental Center. For many years the center of the community was Wards Corner, at the intersection of Franconia Road and Old Rolling Road. Over twenty-five years the complex grew to include a gas station, grocery store, bar, movie theater, and dance hall; a 1959 fire destroyed everything at the site. The Franconia area was the site of a skirmish in January 1862, during the
American Civil War. Colonel
Wade Hampton III, having led a group of cavalrymen across the
Occoquan River past
Pohick Church, encountered a group of Union cavalry in the area and gave chase. Being warned by a Texas scout that he was soon to enter an ambush, Hampton stopped short and formed a squadron on top of Potter's Hill. The trap having failed, both sides began firing at each other; several soldiers were wounded, including one of Hampton's men who was shot in the face. The Confederates then retreated across the Occoquan. In later years Potter's Hill was the site of three schoolhouses, the last of them burning in 1932; more recently it was the site of a chicken farm and, later, a gravel
quarry which provided material for the construction of the first
Woodrow Wilson Bridge. Today the location is the site of the Hilltop Village Center. Members of the Potter family are buried at the Millan family cemetery, located nearby on the former grounds of the Millan family home, Dairy Lodge. The Franconia Volunteer Fire Department was organized in 1934; its first firehouse, completed in 1937, stood where the government center is located today. Today the department continues to serve the community from two locations in the vicinity. Franconia is also the site of the
Laurel Grove Colored School and Church, organized as a congregation of former slaves in the 1880s. The church cemetery still exists, as does the school building, which was honored in 2008 with the erection of a historical marker by the Fairfax County History Commission. A number of other churches have existed in the neighborhood over the years, including Sharon Chapel, founded in 1848 and counting
Phillips Brooks among its early seminarians, and Olivet Episcopal Church. one of several in the area; another marks the former site of Oak Grove plantation, which was demolished in 1996 to make way for an assisted living facility. Other cemeteries can be found along Beulah Street. The Franconia area is represented in the
Virginia House of Delegates by
Democrat Mark D. Sickles. Other residents have included former South Carolina Congressman
William Waters Boyce, who purchased the house Ashland and 195 acres of farmland after the Civil War. ==Demographics==