Nestled in a Grove, a Manor Still Stands
This Old House Has Survived Development Tide
"I was always into old houses," said Don Kraper, who bought Locust Grove in 2004 for $640,000.
(By Tracy A. Woodward -- The Washington Post)
Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.
|
Sunday, May 14, 2006
Like so many subdivisions cropping up across rural Loudoun County, the 212 homes of Locust Grove are too new to disguise that they rose on the rolling farmland on the outskirts of Purcellville just six years ago.
Locust Grove's trees are still young, its shrubs still small. Its streets are smooth and its sidewalks uncracked. Only the name of the neighborhood bears evidence of age: Like developers before them, Locust Grove's creators took the title from the dairy farm and manor home that had occupied the land.
Except, in this case, the house still stands.
At the center of a sea of new roofs rises a mature stand of towering trees, including a 175-year-old Siberian elm. Through the trees winds a long driveway lined with stones. At its end stands an elegant, white-stucco Federal-style home with black shutters, a tin roof, a spring house and a barn.
This is the real Locust Grove, a rarity among Loudoun County's explosion of homes: an older structure that was allowed to stay.
"I had seen this house about a year before I bought it," recalled owner Don Kraper, 42, "and what had turned me off about it was the neighborhood. It was like, what a shame -- this great old house in the middle of this neighborhood.
"But actually," he added, "I've got the best of both worlds. When it snows they plow the street. I've got trash service. And Courtney" -- his 8-year-old daughter -- "has friends in the neighborhood."
Kraper, then living in Ashburn, bought Locust Grove almost on impulse.
"I watched all those farmhouses in Ashburn getting burned to the ground to make way for all those houses," Kraper recalled, and he thought that saving even one might somehow make up for those losses.
The story of Locust Grove's preservation actually goes back three owners before Kraper, and it begins with a bit of happenstance. About 20 years ago, an heir to the 135-acre farm began renting the land to an adjacent farmer. Since the farmer didn't need a house, too, the heir -- Edward E. Nichols of Nichols Hardware Store in downtown Purcellville -- rented the house to a separate tenant.
But eventually Nichols, now 86, grew tired of renting the house to successive tenants, "some of whom were satisfactory and some of whom were not," he recalled.
Although the house had been in his family since 1873, Nichols sold the house and a three-acre parcel about 15 years ago. In 1998, he sold the surrounding 112 acres to developer James M. Jost. As he was planning Locust Grove, Jost approached the owner of the home, too, but he struck no deal with her.


![[The Presidential Field]](http://media.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/graphic/2007/09/17/GR2007091700670.gif)




