10,500 BC
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Paleo-Indians were the first people known to inhabit the area.
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8000 BC-
1700
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Great Falls and its surrounding areas served as a major trading place for many indigenous tribes; especially the local Piscataway (present day Maryland) and Powhatan (present day Virginia), but also Iroquois (present day New York) would come to trade goods with local tribes.
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1649
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King Charles II of England claimed all the land between the Rappahanock and Potomac rivers, and deeded a land patent to seven Englishmen (his war comrades).
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1719
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Thomas (6th Baron) Lord Fairfax inherited the property.
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1737
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Thomas Lord Fairfax set aside 12,588 acres in the area of Great Falls for himself.
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1759
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Bryan (8th Baron) Lord Fairfax (close friend of George Washington) received some of the land near Great Falls from his cousin, Thomas Lord Fairfax.
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1785-1828
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The Patowmack Canal Company utilized mostly enslaved labor to construct and operate at Great Falls one of five skirting canals designed to make the Potomac River navigable to the Ohio River Valley. The town of Matildaville (chartered in 1790) served as headquarters for the Company and home for the workers. The company went bankrupt and turned over its assets to the newly formed Chesapeake and Ohio Canal company in 1828.
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1833
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Much of the property that is now Great Falls Park was acquired by Albert Fairfax and later sold at auction to pay debts. It was purchased by three men: Hall Neilson, Thomas C. Jones, and William A. Bradley.
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1839
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Neilson, Jones, and Bradley organized the Great Falls Manufacturing Company to develop a large textile milling operation utilizing water power from the river. They re-chartered Matildaville as South Lowell, modeling it after the textile mill town of Lowell, Massachusetts.
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1855-1867
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The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers constructed the Aqueduct Dam (the park's northern boundary) to supply water for the District of Columbia.
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1895-1900
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The Great Falls Manufacturing Company was reorganized as the Great Falls Power Company in order to develop hydroelectric power, but later sold out to the Potomac Electric and Power Company.
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1906
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Great Falls Amusement Park opened and a light rail line was built from Georgetown to Great Falls. The rail line eventually merged with the Washington and Old Dominion Railroad.
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1912
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The Daughters of the American Revolution placed a brass plaque on a boulder overlooking the falls, to honor George Washington.
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1930
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Congress enacted the Capper-Cramton Act, which established the George Washington Memorial Parkway. It included a provision that Great Falls Park would eventually be included to provide protection and preservation for the historic Patowmack Canal and the natural scenery.
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1947-1952
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Potomac Edison Power Company (PEPCO) became the sole owner of about 800 acres of the area. The Washington and Old Dominion Railroad continued to own and operate the amusement park until 1952.
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1952
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Fairfax County purchased 16 acres from the railroad. These 16 acres became the county's first park land. The owner of the original carousel dismantled and sold it because he "did not want to work for the county." Another carousel began operation in 1954 and continued operations until 1972, when it was destroyed by Hurricane Agnes.
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1956
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The Nature Conservancy made efforts to explore ways to preserve the area still owned by PEPCO.
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1958
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Fairfax County planned to condemn the PEPCO property with intentions of starting a county park.
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1960
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The National Park Service (NPS) leased the property from PEPCO and the land was administered jointly by the NPS and Fairfax County.
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1965
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The NPS was authorized to acquire 783 acres at Great Falls. The NPS signed an agreement with Fairfax County to acquire the County's 16 acres.
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1966
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NPS acquired the Great Falls land and started operations of Great Falls Park as a unit of the George Washington Memorial Parkway.
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1969
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The Patomack Canal Historic District was designated a National Civil Engineering Landmark by the American Society of Civil Engineers. A commemorative brass plaque was placed on a boulder next to Lock 1 of the Canal.
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1983
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The ruins of the Patowmack Canal and Matildaville were declared a National Historic Landmark by the Secretary of the Interior.
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