Willard, Virginia


The former unincorporated community of Willard was located in what is now a part of Washington Dulles International Airport in the U.S. state of Virginia.
The village was named after Joseph Edward Willard, a delegate to the Virginia General Assembly from 1893 to 1901, then Lieutenant Governor of Virginia. Although Willard lived in Loudoun County, he represented Fairfax County, because the village was only from the county border. Willard owned a estate in Fairfax. His father was Joseph Clapp Willard, the owner of the famed Willard Hotel in Washington, D.C.
Willard was at the intersection of Willard Road and Sterling Road, surrounded by extensive farmland, housing, schools, places of worship, the Willard store, and Blue Ridge Airfield. Willard stood west of Floris, north of Pleasant Valley, and south of Farmwell. Willard was regarded as a crossroads and a distinctive community until construction of Washington Dulles International Airport began in 1958.
Approximately of Virginia land from Willard, Chantilly, Pleasant Valley, Sterling, and Ashburn was bought for construction. By the airport's completion, all remains of civilization before 1958 on this land had virtually disappeared, except a stretch of Willard Rd, and three storage outbuildings between Runways 1C/19C and 1R/19L.