Warren County Virginia Real Estate

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Warren County is located in the Shenandoah Valley of northwestern Virginia.
It is bounded by Frederick and Clarke Counties on the north, Fauquier and Rappahannock Counties on the
east, Page County to the south, and by Shenandoah County to the west.
Warren County has a total land area of 219 square miles.
The Warren County public schools are very good.
The rural part of the County contains 209.9 square miles and the Town of Front Royal covers 9.1 square miles.
Three factors in the County's regional setting have greatly influenced growth and development.
The first factor is its location in the Shenandoah Valley.

For more than a century, the Valley has been noted for its beautiful mountains and clear streams, and has attracted many tourists
and seasonal guests.
Because of the ease of travel along its length, the Valley has been an important north-south transportation route since Indian
times.
A second regional setting factor influencing growth is the County's location bordering two low passes over the Blue Ridge Mountains.
Much pioneer commerce from the Richmond and Hampton Roads areas passed through Chester and Manassas Gaps, across Warren County to distant
markets.
The early retail and industrial sectors of the economy developed from trans-shipping of manufactured goods and agricultural produce through
the County.
The third factor is the close proximity of Warren County to major cities.
The distance to Washington, D.C. is 70 miles; to Baltimore, 110 miles; and to Richmond, 135 miles.
These and other eastern cities have been major market places for County produce and products, as well as major suppliers of manufactured
goods.

Warren County Virginia History
The history of Warren County begins with the American Indians between 11,000 and 12,000 years ago.
The site of the oldest known permanent habitations in the eastern United States is located in the County along the South Fork of
the Shenandoah River.
White men first appeared in the Shenandoah Valley in the mid-1600's.
Warren County was first settled around 1730.
Many of the County's early settlers were Scots-Irish and English Quakers.
Warren County was situated at the intersection of land and water trade routes.
Supplies and manufactured goods came through the Blue Ridge Mountains through Chester and Manassas Gaps.
At the confluence of the North and South Forks of the Shenandoah River, much of the early agricultural produce of the Valley was
loaded onto barges for shipment to the coastal ports.
The Town of Front Royal was eventually established at that river port in 1788.
Leadership and military manpower were the major resources supplied by Warren County and other Shenandoah Valley communities
during the Revolutionary War.
Pig iron, grain, leather, flour meat, fruit vegetables, and lumber were other valuable resources furnished to the Colonial
cause.
Warren County began to boom in the early 1800's. The wars in Europe created a need for breadstuffs and brought a quick
change from a tobacco-oriented economy to the raising of wheat.
The County was officially founded in 1836.
It was formed from parts of Frederick and Shenandoah Counties.
Front Royal has been the county seat from the beginning.
In 1840, Warren County had a population of 5,627, one-fourth of which were slaves.
The first railroad made its way into the Shenandoah Valley in 1854 by way of the Manassas Gap and Front Royal.

Warren County was of strategic importance during the Civil War because of its agricultural productivity, its transportation links
with Winchester to the north, and its links with eastern Virginia by way of the roads through Chester and Manassas Gaps and the vital Manassas
Gap Railroad.
The Battle of Front Royal, on May 23, 1862, was one of the Battles in General Stonewall Jackson's famous Valley
Campaign.
In that battle, Confederate forces defeated 1,000 Union soldiers to capture a military supply depot, the Manassas Gap Railroad,
and the strategic bridges over the two forks of the Shenandoah River at Riverton.
The Civil War destroyed most of the buildings in Warren County, but the soil could still be farmed and the County soon began to
attract investors to develop local natural resources.
By the 1890's, the County had again erupted in a flurry of activity.
An enormous vineyard had been started near Front Royal, and iron, copper, and manganese were discovered within the
County.
Lime works had been founded in Riverton in 1869.
Manufacturing also soon expanded, with sumac, tanning, and leather industries regaining the importance they had previously
known.
Other industries included tinning and cigar production.

By 1900, Warren County's population had reached 8,837.
The two most important changes in Warren County during the 20th century have been the construction of two large manufacturing
plants and the growth of tourism.
In 1937, construction began on the American Viscose manufacturing facility.
This chemical-textile plant in Front Royal was at one time the world's largest producer of rayon.
The U.S. Government operated the plant during World War II, producing materials to aid the war effort.
FMC purchased the facility and operated it into the mid 1970's.
An FMC management team, led by John Gregg, executed one of the first leveraged buyouts in the United States.
The new company was named Avtex Fibers-Front Royal, Inc.
The rayon plant was the economic mainstay of this community for several decades.
It was the largest employer within the region for over 20 years.
Several major layoffs decreased the workforce from approximately 1300 in 1988 to 468 at the plant's closing in November 1989.
In 1980, a division of the duPont Corporation was established in Cedarville near Front Royal.
Paints for the secondary automotive market is manufactured at this facility.
In 1989, with the closing of Avtex Fibers, duPont became Warren County's largest employer.
Since 1994, the Front Royal-Warren County Economic Development Authority has successfully recruited manufacturing, distribution,
hospitality and technology companies for an investment of more than $180 million and the creation of 1,400 new jobs.
Warren County has long attracted tourists and seasonal residents, who have come to the area because of its climate, accessibility
to major cities, and scenic beauty.
Major tourist attractions include the Shenandoah National Park, the Skyline Drive, the Shenandoah River and the Skyline
Caverns.

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