Goodloe House

The Goodloe House located in the City of Staunton is a 1927 Colonial Revival house with Craftsman-style accents and a professionally designed garden. Architect Sam Collins designed the dwelling. The […]

Staunton Steam Laundry

Located in the Shenandoah Valley, the well-preserved Staunton Steam Laundry, is an example of a 20th-century commercial steam laundry in the City of Staunton that, at its height, employed over […]

Montgomery Hall Park

Founded in 1946 as a recreational facility for African Americans during the Jim Crow era of racial segregation in Virginia, Montgomery Hall Park was operated largely independent of the city […]

Civil War-Era National Cemeteries (MPD)

This Multiple Property Documentation Form (MPD) facilitates the individual nomination of Civil War-era cemeteries. Many contain the fine architectural examples of a prototype design of lodges that were executed in […]

Booker T. Washington High School

Staunton’s Booker T. Washington High School opened in 1936 as the only high school for African Americans in the city until it closed in 1966, when Staunton integrated its public […]

Cobble Hill Farm

Cobble Hill Farm sits on 196 acres that are now within the limits of the city of Staunton, and consists of a well-preserved complex of late-19th-century agricultural buildings and an […]

Robert E. Lee High School

One of the most impressive Colonial Revival-style schools in the Shenandoah Valley, Robert E. Lee High School is located on five acres atop a hill overlooking an important crossroads in […]

Virginia School for the Deaf and the Blind

The high quality of the early architecture of many of Virginia’s state-supported institutions is exemplified in the splendid main building of the Virginia School for the Deaf and the Blind. […]

Virginia School for the Deaf and the Blind

The high quality of the early architecture of many of Virginia’s state-supported institutions is exemplified in the splendid main building of the Virginia School for the Deaf and the Blind. […]

Waverley Hill

Waverley Hill is an elegant expression of the Georgian Revival that was designed by William Lawrence Bottomley, a New York architect who maintained an extensive Virginia clientele in the 1920s […]