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19751020 r-75-22RESOLUTION NO. R-75-22 WHEREAS Route 123 passes through the heart of the City of Fairfax, Virginia; and WHEREAS Route 123 has had a long history as Ox Road and Chain Bridge Road; and WHEREAS it was at the junction of Ox Road and Little River Turnpike that in 1799 Richard Ratcliff conveyed to the Fairfax Court a two-acre parcel for the construction of a courthouse; and WHEREAS the original Courthouse completed in 1800 remains today as the north wing of the present Fairfax County Courthouse; and WHEREAS a number of homes, some built as early as 1801, were built on or near Ox Road and played an important role in the history of the Town of Fairfax and the County; and WHEREAS the Antonia Ford House, the Oliver House, and the Nelson Conrad Moore House are still standing today; and WHEREAS Capt. John Quincy Marr, the first Confederate officer to lose his. life in the Civil War, was killed at Fairfax County Courthouse on June 1, 1861; and WHEREAS the famous raid led by Confederate Col. John S. Mosby in 1863, occurred in a residence close to Ox Road; and WHEREAS Route 123 under its various names played an unbroken and celebrated role in theihistory of the City; and WHEREAS this road provided the principal connections to the Town of Vienna and Chain Bridge to the north and to the numerous Fairfax County farms and the Occoquan River to the south; and WHEREAS the City of Fairfax is encouraging its citizens and its visitors to learn more about the history of the community as part of its Bicentennial celebration; NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED that the City Council of the City of Fairfax, Virginia, does hereby designate Route 123 as an historic byway. Adopted: October 20, 1975. Attest: