FALLS CHURCH, Va. — Before the modern shopping centers and office buildings of Merrifield stood a thriving African-American community known as Williamstown. Established after the Civil War by formerly enslaved people, free Black Virginians, and their descendants along Gallows Road near present-day Merrifield and Dunn Loring, this close-knit, self-sufficient community thrived despite the barriers of segregation and discrimination.
As Black landownership expanded in Fairfax County, families built farms, homes, churches, and charitable organizations, creating a vibrant and resilient community. Williamstown, together with the neighboring communities of Merrifield (then known as Mills Crossing) and The Pines, became an important center of African-American life in Northern Virginia.
By the 1980s, however, decades of eminent domain, suburban development, and commercial expansion—including what is now the Mosaic District and the Merrifield commercial corridor—had erased nearly all physical traces of Williamstown.
Today, the community lives on through oral histories, archival records, and the work of descendants and historians who continue to preserve its story.
📸: absolonkent.net/photogallery/index.php?/category/709
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