Buckingham Historic District
USA /
Virginia /
Arlington /
World
/ USA
/ Virginia
/ Arlington
NRHP - National Register of Historic Places, draw only border, residential neighborhood, historic district, do not draw title

Historic district listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP).
"As a community, the Buckingham Historic District is closely associated with the development of Arlington from a rural area to an independent suburban Northern Virginia county. Built between 1937 and 1938 in the Colonial Revival style, the first phase of Buckingham is historically significant as a well preserved example of the planned garden-style residential communities that became popular during the suburbanization of many metropolitan areas during the first decades of the twentieth century. With its low-density buildings, landscaped courtyards and streetscapes and accessibility to the nation’s capital, the community became a model for other planned residential communities for white collar, middle class families. The success of the first 52 buildings, which comprised the first phase of the community development, led to the construction of nearly 2,000 units by the end of Buckingham’s construction in 1950. The units were based on architect Henry Wright’s final 1930s site plan. In the mid 1930’s, the Committee for Economic and Social Progress, a private group consisting of 16 national business leaders including Allie Freed, sponsored the Buckingham project. The Committee for Economic and Social Progress formulated the concept of linking private financial sources with home building companies to foster the creation of better housing, i.e. higher quality, lower cost housing, for the majority of American families. During the same period Allie Freed was also the president of Paramount Communities Inc., which became the home building company that constructed the Buckingham project."
--Virginia Department of Historic Resources
"As a community, the Buckingham Historic District is closely associated with the development of Arlington from a rural area to an independent suburban Northern Virginia county. Built between 1937 and 1938 in the Colonial Revival style, the first phase of Buckingham is historically significant as a well preserved example of the planned garden-style residential communities that became popular during the suburbanization of many metropolitan areas during the first decades of the twentieth century. With its low-density buildings, landscaped courtyards and streetscapes and accessibility to the nation’s capital, the community became a model for other planned residential communities for white collar, middle class families. The success of the first 52 buildings, which comprised the first phase of the community development, led to the construction of nearly 2,000 units by the end of Buckingham’s construction in 1950. The units were based on architect Henry Wright’s final 1930s site plan. In the mid 1930’s, the Committee for Economic and Social Progress, a private group consisting of 16 national business leaders including Allie Freed, sponsored the Buckingham project. The Committee for Economic and Social Progress formulated the concept of linking private financial sources with home building companies to foster the creation of better housing, i.e. higher quality, lower cost housing, for the majority of American families. During the same period Allie Freed was also the president of Paramount Communities Inc., which became the home building company that constructed the Buckingham project."
--Virginia Department of Historic Resources
Wikipedia article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buckingham_Historic_District
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 38°52'23"N 77°6'22"W
- Douglas Park 1.2 km
- Bluemont 3.2 km
- Fairlington 3.3 km
- East Falls Church 6.4 km
- Cleveland Park 8.7 km
- Randolph Hills 21 km
- Hampshire Greens Colf Course Community 30 km
- Broad Run Farms 37 km
- Forest Lakes 99 km
- The Highlands 157 km
- Buckingham 0.2 km
- Columbia Gardens Cemetery 0.6 km
- Arlington County, Virginia 0.9 km
- Lubber Run Park 1 km
- Arlington Forest 1.2 km
- Glencarlyn Park 1.6 km
- Barcroft Garden Apartments 1.9 km
- Columbia Heights West 2.1 km
- Bailey's Crossroads, Virginia 3.5 km
- Fairfax County, Virginia 16 km