Mosby Heritage Area Association


The Mosby Heritage Area Association was founded in 1995 in Middleburg, Virginia, as a nonprofit preservation and historic organization. MHAA's mission is to educate about, and advocate for, the preservation of the historic, cultural and scenic resources in the Northern Virginia Piedmont.

Name and location

MHAA is named after Confederate Cavalry officer John S. Mosby, whose rangers fought throughout the region during the American Civil War. During the Civil War the area was known as Mosby's Confederacy..
The Mosby Heritage Area, located about one hour's drive west of Washington, D.C., is bounded by the Bull Run Mountains to the east, the Blue Ridge Mountains to the west, the Potomac River to the north and the Rappahannock River to the south. It encompasses the Virginia counties of Loudoun, Fauquier, Clarke, Warren and part of Prince William, some.
Portions of Evergreen Mill Road in Leesburg, in the heart of the Heritage Area, were once part of the historic Old Carolina Road, one of the most heavily trafficked Colonial roadways in Virginia. That road originally functioned as a north-south migration route for Native Americans, who also followed the buffalo along the route of what is now U.S. Route 50. Route 50 and Braddock Road in Colonial times were the main east-west corridors linking the port city of Alexandria to Winchester.

Historical activity

In 2015, Richard Gillespie, executive director of the Mosby Heritage Area Association, confirmed to Nicholas Fandos, a reporter for the New York Times that the assertions made on The River of Blood at the Trump National Golf Club in Lowes Island, Virginia owned by US President Donald Trump is false. In response to the monument's assertion that:
Many great American soldiers, both of the North and South, died at this spot, "The Rapids", on the Potomac River. The casualties were so great that the water would turn red and thus became known as "The River of Blood".

Gillespie replied, “No. Uh-uh. No way. Nothing like that ever happened there.”

Historic preservation

The association campaigns for the preservation of historic buildings and landscapes. MHAA was instrumental in adding the historically black rural hamlet of Willisville, Virginia to the National Historic Register.

Landscape preservation

MMHA is an active voice in discussions about development policy in the region. C. Dulany Morison was elected Chairman of MMHA in 2019, pledging that his top priority would be to solidify MHAA's leadership role in efforts to preserve the Northern Piedmont area, threatened by a wave of requests by developers for special exemptions. The Heritage Association helps fund conservation easements.

MHAA programs

The association offers a wide range of lectures and tours on diverse historical topics. MHAA also provides in-classroom history presentations for students across the heritage area on topics including the Revolutionary War, Civil War, and the Civil Rights Movement.