place

Clapham's Ferry

1849 establishments in VirginiaFederal architecture in VirginiaHouses completed in 1849Houses in Loudoun County, VirginiaHouses on the National Register of Historic Places in Virginia
Leesburg, VirginiaLoudoun County, Virginia Registered Historic Place stubsNational Register of Historic Places in Loudoun County, Virginia
CLAPHAM'S FERRY, LOUDOUN COUNTY, VA
CLAPHAM'S FERRY, LOUDOUN COUNTY, VA

Clapham's Ferry, also known as Spinks Ferry, Lost Corner Farm, and Riverside, is a historic home located near Leesburg, Loudoun County, Virginia. It consists of a 2+1⁄2-story, three bay, Federal style main block of red sandstone, with a two-story sandstone kitchen addition built about 1849. It has a standing seam metal gable roof. Also on the property are the contributing log kitchen building, meat house, bank barn, corn crib, and tenant house. The property is also historically significant as the site of an early ferry crossing connecting Loudoun County, Virginia, with Maryland.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1997.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Clapham's Ferry (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Clapham's Ferry
Spinks Ferry Road,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Clapham's FerryContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 39.221944444444 ° E -77.464444444444 °
placeShow on map

Address

Spinks Ferry Road

Spinks Ferry Road
20176
Virginia, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

CLAPHAM'S FERRY, LOUDOUN COUNTY, VA
CLAPHAM'S FERRY, LOUDOUN COUNTY, VA
Share experience

Nearby Places

Dickerson Whitewater Course
Dickerson Whitewater Course

The Dickerson Whitewater Course, on the Potomac River near Dickerson, Maryland, was built for use by canoe and kayak paddlers training for the 1992 Olympic Games in Spain. It was the first pump-powered artificial whitewater course built in North America, and is still the only one anywhere with heated water. It remains an active training center for whitewater slalom racing, swiftwater rescue training, and other whitewater activities. The facility is owned by the NRG Energy company. Except during special events, access requires membership in the Potomac Whitewater Racing Center, a USA Canoe/Kayak National Training Center.The course was constructed in 1991, inside a pre-existing straight, 900-foot (270 m)-long concrete channel, 40 feet (12 m) wide. Since 1959, the channel has returned cooling water from the Dickerson Generating Station to the Potomac River, 41 miles (66 km) upstream from Washington, D.C. Water is pumped from the river, warmed as much as 35 °F (20 °C) as it cools the power plant's three coal-fired generators, and then emptied into the channel for gravity flow back to the river. (The plant has three other generators which use a different cooling system.) Streamflow through the course is 200 cu ft/s (5.7 m3/s) to 600 cu ft/s (17 m3/s), depending on the operation of the plant's three coal-fired generators and their six cooling water pumps. In the summer months, when water temperature in the channel exceeds 100 °F (38 °C), the course is closed for health reasons. It is also closed when the Potomac River rises above 5 feet (1.5 m) on the Little Falls gauge 20,000 cu ft/s (570 m3/s), flooding the lower section of the course.