A Guide to the Gum Springs, Virginia Collection, 1915-1991
A Collection in The Fairfax County Public Library
Record Group Number MSS 03-10
City of Fairfax Regional Library
Virginia Room
10360 North Street
Fairfax, VA 22030-2514 USA
Virginia Room: 703-293-6227 x6
Fax: 703-293-2155
Email: va_room@fairfaxcounty.gov
URL: https://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/library/branches/virginia-room
© 2024 Fairfax County Public Library. All rights reserved.
Administrative Information
Access Restrictions
None
Use Restrictions
Consult repository for information
Preferred Citation
Virginia Room, Fairfax County Public Library. Gum Springs, Virginia Collection. Box 1, Folder #.
Acquisition Information
Virginia Room staff artificially created this collection over the years. The majority of the collection came from unknown donors. Frank Kulesza donated the photocopied Colored Citizens Protection League Minutes.
Processing Information
Carol Abrams, 2015
EAD generated by Ross Landis, 2024
Historical and Biographical Information
Gum Springs is Fairfax County’s largest African-American community. It is located at the intersection of Richmond Highway and Mount Vernon Road on the northern boundary of the original Mount Vernon property. In 1829, West Ford, an antebellum freedman, purchased the land tract that comprises most of what is now Gum Springs. Ford who was born a slave, gained his freedom under the terms of the will of Hannah Bushrod Washington, a relative of George Washington. Ford farmed his land while he continued to work and live at Mount Vernon. Similar to Ford, many of Gum Springs’ earliest black residents were associated with Mount Vernon. After the Civil War as the number of free blacks swelled, Gum Springs’ population grew. The history of the black community in Gum Springs spans over 150 years and is characterized by economic struggle and aspiration as well as African-American community building. In the 20th century, its residents struggled to maintain their rural livelihoods in the face of post-World War II suburbanization. It was the first community to receive anti-poverty funding under the federal “War on Poverty.”
In 1984, the Fairfax County Park Authority issued a Request for Proposals (RFP) for the Feasibility of Developing and Maintaining a Black History Museum in Fairfax County. The RFP solicitation specified that the museum had to be in the Gum Springs area of Fairfax County. The resulting feasibility study became known as the Gum Springs Black History Museum Study. Through the RFP process, the Center for History Now was designated as the study consultant. The scope of work included recommendations for an effective, cost-efficient concept and plan, and implementation plan, and an evaluation of its benefits. The Gum Springs Historical Society's Museum & Cultural Center opened on November 24, 1996.
Related Material
Historic Landmark File: Gum Springs - History
John Terry Chase Manuscript Papers on Gum Springs: The Triumph of a Black Community - 2015.097
Separated Material
None
Index Terms
- African-American Community life
- Fairfax County Park Authority
- Ford, West
- Freedman
- Post-Civil War South
- Saunders B. Moon Community Action Association
- The Center for History Now