HE Northern Neck of Virginia is that long, narrow
59) ha Dy strip of land, lying between the Rappahannock and
BEX KS) Potomac Rivers. Here were the homes of Wash¬
By UE: ington, Madison, Monroe, and Lee—and many
having lived.
This section is far from the centers of trade and commerce, and
there are still no railroads or towns; so there one can find. old¬
time traditions and conditions as perhaps in no other part of Vir¬
ginia. Here one finds many fine old homes and churches left intact.
Amid the rural beauties, winding rivers, honeysuckled roads,
great wheat and corn fields in Richmond County lies "Mount ÁAiry,
the ancestral home of the Tayloes. Ítis one of the greatest of Tide¬
water estates, and is like an old barony, with its vast lands and
great mansion.
As you drive up the high, winding way to the top of the
terrace, through grassy lawn and giant trees—alternate shade and
sunlight—and come to the house, you feel that you must be in
England, for it is very stately and beautiful, so softened and
mellowed by time, that you are sure you cannot be in twentieth
century America.
It was in the reign of Charles II that the first Tayloe came to
the new land to live and brought with him the culture and traditions
of an English gentleman, and transferred them to the virgin soil.
His grandson, Colonel John Tayloe, built Mount Airy in
1747, and the Layloes still own the place, and live there, which
makes it unusual among Virginia colonial homes.
The place consists of three houses, grouped about a central axis,
and connected by curved covered ways, the whole enclosing a raised