Illustrations[v]
Acknowledgments[vii]
Introduction[1]
I.  Langley and the Lees[5]
II.  Salona and the Maffitts[11]
III.  Salona for Sale[25]
IV.  Salona and the Smoots[28]
V.  Salona and the DuVals[41]
VI.  Salona: The House and Outbuildings[45]
VII.  Preservation by Easement[53]
Chapter Notes[55]
Appendixes
   A. Chain of Title, 1719-1974[71]
   B. Maffitt Inventory, 1828[77]
   C. Maffitt Slave Schedule[81]
   D. DuVal Deed of Easement[84]
List of Sources[95]


ILLUSTRATIONS


Salona location[2]
Thomas Lee's 1719 grant, "Langley"[7]
Advertisement, land later called "Salona"[9]
The Reverend William Maffitt[13]
William Maffitt, Jr.[25]
The Reverend William Maffitt's tombstone[27]
Civil War troops at Salona[29]
McDowell's 1862 Civil War map[30]
Wartime memorandum[32]
Smoot family portraits[34]
Jacob Gilliam Smoot and some family heirlooms[35]
G. M. Hopkins Atlas map, 1879[36]
The Salona Farm, 1890 and 1900[37]
Rambler photo of Salona, 1914[38]
Division of Smoot property, 1947[40]
DuVal family portrait, 1957[42]
Salona first and second floor plans[46]
Salona attic floor plan[47]
West wall[49]
Entrance hall[49]
Old stone house[50]
Springhouse[50]
Rear views of Salona mansion[51]
Smokehouse[51]
Stone barn ruins[51]
Outdoor kitchen[52]
Old brick privy[52]
Permanent and temporary easement plat[54]

[ACKNOWLEDGMENTS]

Many people have helped materially with the story of Salona. Peter Maffitt, descendant of the Rev. William Maffitt, and Douglass and Henry Mackall, descendants of one of Maffitt's sisters, generously shared information on the Maffitt family and gave William Maffitt a three-dimensional shape. John D. K. Smoot, Jane Smoot Wilson and William Smoot, descendants of Jacob Smoot, recalled many stories of their family and of Salona. Clive and Susan DuVal, present owners of Salona, endured hours of interviews, photographing, and measuring of the house and outbuildings.