Pfalzgraf Family Farmhouse
GPS Coordinates: 38.8411662, -77.2738757
Closest Address: 9517 Main Street, Fairfax, VA 22032

The Pfalzgrafs
Students, staff, and visitors to Frost and Woodson schools often ask about the old white farmhouse that still stands on the corner of Main Street and Pickett Road next to Woodson HS. This remarkable, and still beautiful, house was built by an even more remarkable family, The Pfalzgrafs. It's care has been entrusted to FCPS and school employees maintain the house to this day.
Adele de Dietrich Pfalzgraf, born December 4, 1880, was the fourth of five daughters of parents Baron Charles de Dietrich and Baroness Anne von Turcke of the wealthy de Dietrich industrial family of France. The de Dietrich's had made their fortune in the 1600's with iron mining. Later the company manufactured household appliances and eventually would even make Bugatti luxury cars.
Jacques Pfalzgraf was born on August 19, 1877 in Niederbronn-les-Bains, Germany, the son of a country gardener. Adele de Dietrich was Jacques' second wife. He had been married previously to Magdalena Rubin, but, as coachman in the employment of the De Dietrich family, he met their daughter Adele , and they fell in love. Making a scandalous decision that ostracized her from her uncle (her guardian since her parents had died) and the rest of her family, Adele, the heiress, and Jacques, an already-married man, decided to leave their European families and move to America in 1907. The couple married in Washington, D.C on December 28, 1908.
In 1908, using funds from the sale of her De Dietrich company shares, Adele and Jacques purchased the Seaton lots 1, 2 & 3 from widow Ida Steele and built the white farmhouse that still sits on Main Street. Today, the house is used for the FCPS GED offices. Jacques by all reports became a successful dairy and corn farmer. The Pfalzgrafs were well-known and had high standing in the community. Their pigs and cows even won top prizes at the county fairs!
In an interesting turn of events, Adele Pfalzgraf's sister Amelie de Dietrich, would also join her sister in Fairfax County in 1909 and purchase the farm right next door (Seaton lots 4 & 5). Since both of her parents had passed away and being a woman and a painter, Amelie saw little future in her family's company. After a brief stay in Austria, she decided to try farming and moved to be with her sister in Fairfax. Thomas M. Trew, the brother of a friend she had met in Austria, joined her, and they married in 1910.
When Amelie and Thomas Trew decided to emigrate their family to Canada, the Trew's sold their farm to the Pfalzgraf's, combining all five lots and creating the exact 100 acre parcel of land that Frost and Woodson sit on today.
Amelie and Adele's youngest sister was the well-known French theologian Suzanne de Dietrich. A frequent speaker on the lecture circuit and avid traveler, Suzanne visited Amelie in Canada often and became close with her children. She visited Fairfax to see the Pfalzgrafs on a number of occasions as well.
Sadly, Adele Pfalzgraf, reportedly given to bouts of depression and worried over gambling debts, took her own life on April 2, 1933. Six years later, Jacques passed away on April 15, 1939 of stomach cancer. They are buried in the Fairfax City Cemetery.
The Pfalzgrafs had five children: Jacqueline Adele Pfalzgraf Wagener was a clerk for Chevy Chase Dairies. Rene Dietrich Pfalzgraf was a farm manager and then a farming equipment salesman for Marietta Silos, eventually moving to Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Adele Suzanne Pfalzgraf Copeland taught English for FCPS. In 1936, she was a founding faculty member at Fairfax High School during its very first year. She eventually moved to Ohio. Marcel Chasseur Pfalzgraf, who attended Virginia Tech (called Virginia Polytechnic Institute or V.P.I. in those days), also taught Agriculture at Fairfax High and coached varsity boxing. He eventually moved to Fredericksburg. Didier Charles Pfalzgraf served in the U.S. Army and was a D.C. firefighter for over 25 years.
The Feltmans
Four years after his father's death in 1939, the Pfalzgraf's son, Marcel Pfalzgraf, and his wife Jane, sold his parents' farm to Ralph Lee and Ruth S. Feltman.
Ralph Feltman started out as an auto mechanic and garage foreman from Aldie and ultimately became a successful entrepreneur. After purchasing the Pfalzgraf farm, the Feltmans made a number of improvements to the farm, building a large, new barn, a garage, storage buildings, adding electricity and phone service and bringing the main house and the entire facility into the modern era. He also continued his auto service business out of the garage on the farm.
The Feltmans had purchased their dairy farm at just the right time. By 1958, ten years after their purchase, the war years, the building of the Pentagon and the expansion of the federal government led to a huge population boom in Fairfax County. Families in need of homes were pouring into the county. Land developers could not build homes fast enough. An entire neighborhood could fit on the land from one farm so, in the face of lucrative offers for their large tracts of land from developers, many Fairfax farmers made the hard choice to sell. Neighborhoods of single family homes would completely transform the landscape of the county.
In addition to homes, schools also could not be built fast enough. With the family population increasing rapidly, the "baby boom" was on and children needed schools quickly. Fairfax County Public Schools was in the hunt for land to build schools, but the school board was finding it hard to compete with soaring land values. However, developers, eager to use quality schools as a selling point, encouraged the design of neighborhoods around elementary schools. High schools, however, needed much bigger plots of land. Then Superintendent W.T. Woodson, recognizing that the area east of Fairfax City would soon need an additional high school, took notice of the Feltman farm and encouraged the school board to pursue the purchase of it. The school board debated the purchase of such a huge piece of land and the cost effectiveness of such a purchase, but the location on Little River Turnpike, the farm's placement between Fairfax City and Annandale and the lack of other viable choices available at the time all convinced the school board that the purchase should be made. The plan for the land was to be for the new "Central High School".
In the summer of 1959, Ralph Lee Feltman sold the the 104 acre dairy farm to the Fairfax County School Board for $270,000, over a quarter of a million dollars and quite a bit of money in 1959. He would then move his family to the Belle Haven neighborhood in Alexandria and continued to have many business interests including a taxi cab company and a Volkswagon dealership.
The school board now owned the "Feltman Tract", one of the biggest parcels of land that FCPS would ever buy, and quickly began plans for a new "Central" High School that would offer more programs to students than any school before. When Superintendent Woodson announced his retirement in 1961 after 32 years, the planned high school was given his name. W.T. Woodson High School opened in 1962. Frost Middle School opened two years later in 1964.