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William Gunnell House (Great Falls, Virginia)

Colonial Revival architecture in VirginiaColonial architecture in VirginiaFairfax County, Virginia geography stubsHouses completed in 1750Houses in Fairfax County, Virginia
Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in VirginiaNational Register of Historic Places in Fairfax County, VirginiaNorthern Virginia Registered Historic Place stubs
WILLIAM GUNNELL HOUSE0300
WILLIAM GUNNELL HOUSE0300

William Gunnell House, also known as Gunnell's Run, is a historic home located in Great Falls, Fairfax County, Virginia. It consists of a frame dwelling built in two stages and dated to about 1750, together with its compatible and unobtrusive 20th-century additions. The earliest section is a 1+1⁄2-story frame Colonial-era dwelling with irregular bays and three entrances. It was carefully restored and rehabilitated in the preservation manner of the Colonial Revival style after 1933. Also on the property are a contributing log house (c. 1770) outbuilding and two early wells.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2003.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article William Gunnell House (Great Falls, Virginia) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

William Gunnell House (Great Falls, Virginia)
Innsbruck Avenue,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 39.003888888889 ° E -77.285 °
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Address

Innsbruck Avenue

Innsbruck Avenue
22066
Virginia, United States
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WILLIAM GUNNELL HOUSE0300
WILLIAM GUNNELL HOUSE0300
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Nearby Places

Olmsted Island
Olmsted Island

Olmsted Island is a small island in the middle of the Potomac River in the U.S. state of Maryland, near Great Falls which is a part of C & O Canal National Historical Park, located across the river from Great Falls Park. It is a part of Potomac, Maryland. Named for Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr., the landscape architect and preservationist whose famous father designed New York's Central Park, the small island is a bedrock terrace forest that supports rare, threatened and endangered plant species.The island is very rocky and has steep cliffs that face the river, where it has been eroded over time. It also has trees and vegetation. One might also spy a heron, small lizard or wild goose here. The total area of the island (estimating from calibrated satellite footage) is no more than 0.2 square kilometers. A fenced-in wooden tourist walkway winds along the southern part of the island. For the purpose of protecting the island's natural wildlife, visitors are not allowed to leave the tourist walkway. The tourist walkway eventually ends in a scenic overlook platform (see images 1 and 2) that has a beautiful view of the Great Falls of the Potomac River. "Hurricane Agnes washed away all the woody shrubs and trees in 1972," says R. Harrison Wiegand, a regional ecologist for the Wildlife and Heritage Service of the Maryland Department of Natural Resources. "The next big flood will wash them away again. The floods constantly change things. You may see a rare species in one area, then the floods will come through and wash it out. Some other plants will grow there instead. This is one of the most biologically diverse habitats within the whole national park system."The trail leading to Olmsted Island is handicapped accessible and has wheelchair ramps, but dogs are not permitted.