Prince William County Historical Commission urges denial of ‘digital gateway’ plan
By Jill Palermo Times Staff Writer Oct 12, 2022 Updated 18 hrs ago 2
Blaine Pearsall, in tan jacket, second from right, urges his fellow Prince William Historical Commissioners to press county officials on why they want to open areas in the Manassas Battlefield Historic District to data centers.
Photo by Jill Palermo
Citing threats to historic resources of national significance, the Prince William County Historical Commission voted unanimously Tuesday to urge that the board of supervisors not approve the “Prince William Digital Gateway” as proposed and instead shield key areas from development.
Those areas include land within the Manassas Battlefield Historic District as well as the birthplace and gravesite of Jennie Dean, a local icon who was born into slavery and later founded the Manassas Industrial School for Colored Youth, Northern Virginia’s first high school for African American students.
During more than four hours of discussion that spanned two meetings – held Monday, Oct. 3, and Tuesday, Oct. 11 – the historical commission reviewed research about the Pageland Lane area, including its role in the First and Second Battles of Manassas, both pivotal in the Civil War, and the area’s use as an encampment for Confederate troops after the First Battle of Manassas.
Among other things, the commission discussed how troops training in the Pageland area from North Carolina, Mississippi, Georgia and Alabama were beset by measles in the late summer and early fall of 1861, leaving more than 200 men dead, according to several sources.
The commission noted that the southern portion of the Digital Gateway study area, which it defines as between Little Bull Run and U.S. 29, is particularly significant because the area lies within the battlefield’s “congressional boundaries,” meaning Civil War activity occurred there despite it not being formally part of the Manassas National Battlefield Park.
In 2006, the U.S. Department of the Interior and the National Park Service defined “the Manassas Battlefield Historic District” as spanning 6,400 acres, of which only 5,073 acres are contained by the park’s boundaries. Another 1,396 acres lie along the Pageland Lane corridor and within the 2,133-acre area that would be replanned for data centers if the supervisors approve the PW Digital Gateway comprehensive plan amendment. A final vote is scheduled for Nov. 1.
Areas within the Prince William Digital Gateway study area are included in the Manassas Battlefield Historic District. The Prince William Historical Commission recommends that no changes be made to county zoning below the yellow line.
Source: Prince William County Historical Commission
The area is also believed to contain a Civil War mass burial site recognized by both Prince William County and the state of Virginia, even though its precise location has not been determined. During their discussions, the commissioners noted that the measles outbreak could have necessitated the mass burial site, rather than troop losses during the two battles.
The commissioners also noted that 22,000 Confederate and Union troops were wounded or killed in the battles and that many of the wounded wandered off the battlefield to homes in the Pageland Lane corridor that served as field hospitals.
“That’s 22,000 casualties over the course of three days,” said Morgan “Blaine” Pearsall, who represents the Gainesville District, the home of Manassas National Battlefield Park, on the historical commission. “That is the size of Jiffy Lube Live. Jiffy Lube at full capacity is 25,000. Imagine that volume.”
Pearsall made the comment during an Oct. 3 special meeting devoted solely to updating the historical commission’s position on the Gateway comprehensive plan amendment, which if approved by the supervisors, would open land that is both in the county’s rural crescent and adjacent to the Manassas National Battlefield Park to industrial development for the first time.
Since first introduced by the landowners in March 2021, the proposal has sparked major opposition from conservation groups, nearby Gainesville residents not included in potential land sales, the Manassas National Battlefield Park itself, along with supporting nonprofits, such as the National Parks Conservation Association, and some elected officials.
The historical commission, a body of residents appointed by individual supervisors, is charged by Prince William County code to assess new developments for their impacts on historic resources.
Confusion delays commission’s input
Pearsall noted that the historical commission had recommended as early as last May that the PW Digital Gateway be split into northern and southern sections and that the southern section’s agricultural designation remain unchanged to protect historical assets.
Pearsall said he could not understand why the data center companies and the Pageland Lane landowners –who the commissioners assumed were the applicants for the Gateway proposal — never responded to the recommendation. That lack of response led to the historical commission reiterating its May recommendation during its Sept. 13 meeting.
A map of the Prince William Digital Gateway area separated into northern and southern areas as designated by the Prince William County Historical Commission. The historical commission recommends that the southern portion of the plan (in yellow) remain unchanged from its current land-use designations or that the plan be denied by the planning commission and the board of supervisors.
Prince William County Historical Commission
Nevertheless, the Prince William County Planning Commission recommended approval of the amendment during a marathon meeting that stretched into the early morning hours of Sept. 15. Pearsall said he didn’t understand until after the planning commission’s vote that the county itself – rather than the data center companies or the landowners – is assuming the role of “applicant” for the amendment.
That arrangement was seemingly unclear to much of the community – including the planning commission – and led to Board Chair Ann Wheeler, D-At Large, moving to delay the supervisors’ final vote on the PW Digital Gateway CPA from Oct. 11 to Nov. 1 to “clear up confusion about the process.”
During the Oct. 3 meeting, Pearsall and other historical commissioners expressed disappointment that the county planning staff continues to recommend that the southern Pageland stretch – which lies within the Manassas Battlefield Historic District – be replanned for “tech/flex,” a designation that would allow data centers.
“I mean, these are areas that are important to the United States of America, to our state and to our county, and it’s completely being ignored,” Pearsall said.
Other commissioners also objected. Commissioner Jim Burgess, who represents the Occoquan District, called the Gateway “an atrocious atrocity” and “a rape of Prince William County.”
“It’s a horrible plan, promoted by developers and people who are going to get filthy rich by it,” Burgess said. “If we allow developers to dictate the future of Prince William County, it’s not a smart move and it’s certainly not in the public interest.”
But other commissioners, including Occoquan Mayor Earnie Porta, an at-large member of the historical commission, and Vice Chair Yolanda Green, who represents the Potomac District, said they understood those objections but felt the historical commission should offer ideas for protecting the historic assets if the supervisors approve the amendment.
Occoquan Mayor Earnie Porta, a member of the Prince William County Historical Commission, discusses how the commission should express its concerns before the supervisors’ Nov. 1 vote on the Prince William Digital Gateway.
Photo by Jill Palermo.
That discussion led the historic commission to vote on Oct. 3 to urge that the supervisors exclude from data center development the area between Little Bull Run and U.S. 29 in the southern section of the Gateway study area and the area between Sudley Road and “an unnamed tributary of Lick Branch” in the northern section. The latter contains the area once known as “Cushing Farm” where the Dean family, including Jennie Dean, was enslaved and where they eventually owned property and were buried.
Land-use designations proposed for the Prince William Digital Gateway area by the Prince William County Planning Department.
Prince William County Planning Department
On Oct. 11, the historical commission continued its discussion for another 90 minutes. At the end, the group agreed to draft a letter to the supervisors explaining their opposition and detailing the historic resources that lie within the Gateway area and outside the battlefield boundaries, an option suggested by County Archeologist Justin Patton, who guides the commission’s work.
Some of the historic assets lie within the areas the county planners designated as “parks and open space” in the PW Digital Gateway plan. The county plan sets aside 800 of the 2,133-acre area as park space. An identified “weakness” of the plan, however, according to county planning staff, is that those properties are not part of the two rezoning applications already submitted for the area and therefore are not being proffered for such protections.
As a result, the county has no way of ensuring that the historically sensitive areas will be protected, Patton said, unless the county purchases the properties, perhaps with grant funding.
Attorneys for data center developers QTS and Compass have already requested in a Sept. 9 letter that the county remove automatic protections for the suspected Civil War mass burial site and instead require more archeological investigation when future rezonings are considered. The planning commission included the recommendation in its vote to recommend approval, but county staff has not decided its position on the matter, Patton said.
The commission is working on a final version of its letter, which it plans to submit to the supervisors as soon as possible.
Reach Jill Palermo at jpalermo@fauquier.com
Historic assets in the Prince William Digital Gateway study area:
The Manassas Battlefield Historic District
Manassas battlefield “core area”
Manassas battlefield “integrity area”
Unfinished railroad bed used as entrenchment by Confederate troops
Civil War mass burial site
1916 pit latrine used by soldiers training for World War I
Camp Pageland, where more than 200 Confederate soldiers perished from a measles outbreak from July through September 1861
Civil War field hospitals
Jennie Dean’s birthplace (Cushing Farm) and burial site in the Marble Hill area
Cemeteries: Cushing Farm, Haislip, Manuel, Marble Hill (slave), Pattie, Philips