Whitewood Hall

Stately Home in Historic Lexington

A rare opportunity to own a stately home in historic downtown Lexington, one of America's top rated communities. Gorgeous Whitewood Hall is just steps to downtown restaurants and shops. Close to Washington & Lee University and the Virginia Military Institute. Enjoy life in this vibrant college community, surrounded by the rich heritage and natural beauty of the Shenandoah Valley and Blue Ridge Mountains. Move-in ready, this home has been tastefully renovated by the current owners, offering a modern kitchen with high-end appliances -- while retaining its historic integrity. Whitewood Hall is a spacious American 4-square, built circa 1911, with 5-6 bedrooms and 3 baths. Plenty of room to host visiting friends and family! Plenty of off-street parking. Enjoy the views from your sweeping front porch. Watch the carriage rides.  Or you may choose to relax on your intimate back patio, and admire the elegant gardens.

The home at 4 White Street has traditionally been called either the Ruth Anderson McCulloch House or the the Francis Lee McClung House.  Prior to its construction in 1912 by Frank Lee McClung, a local businessman, the property belonged to the Presbyterian Manse next door. The lot had been used to “park” horses while parishioners attended church services at the original Lexington Presbyterian Church built in 1799 (which stood nearby at the head of White Street in what is today the NW corner of the Stonewall Jackson Memorial Cemetery).  The court order severing the land from the Manse property was clearly designed to enhance the prominence and value of the Manse. It not only stipulated that any house erected on the site should stand further back from White Street than the Manse (hence the large lawn and deep setback), it also specified that any such house should be valued at no less than four thousand dollars, a large amount of money at that time.

For almost thirty years, until her death in 1971, 4 White Street was the home of Ruth Anderson McCulloch. She was the daughter of Gen. William A. Anderson, former Attorney General of Virginia. In the 1930s “Miss Ruth”, as she was known, was founder of the Rockbridge Historical Society and a pioneer historical preservationist. She was a driving force behind the creation of the Society for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities. A well known local book -- “Mrs. McCulloch’s Stories of Ole Lexington” -- is based on extensive interviews with Miss Ruth in the early 1970s, just prior to her death.

Have a Property to Sell? Advertise With Us.

HistoricProperties.com is your source to buy or sell historic real estate - from projects to completed renovations, residential to commercial, Federal to Eclectic.