A historic estate and working winery in Loudoun County, Virginia. Event venues, estate wines, and overnight accommodations — all on one property, at the end of one quiet road.
Tranquility Farm is a fully operational estate — event venue, working winery, and private accommodation on the same grounds. The 1807 Federal manor, the antique barn, the Glass Manor at the Silo, the vineyard, and the winery are in active daily use. You can host a wedding in the barn, taste wine from the vineyard outside the window, and stay the night in the manor. That combination — on one private property, reached by one road — is what sets this estate apart.
Five packages from intimate to full 48-hour estate. Exclusive use. Full-service catering. Estate wines throughout. Up to 300 guests.
Full-service corporate retreats. One-day, overnight, and multi-day formats. Catering by Founding Farmers Co. Leave the logistics to the estate team.
Draksha — traditional method sparkling. Otium — artisanal still wines. Grown and poured on the same property.
The Manor House, Vineyard Cottage, Grüner Bungalow, and glamping. Year-round. On VRBO or by direct inquiry.
The manor, the barn, the smokehouse, the springhouse, the silo — each structure has stood on this land for generations, preserved and restored for active use. The Glass Manor is the one addition, built in 2024 alongside the landmark silo. The spaces below are listed as they are — what they hold, what they include, and what they are suited for.
Hand-hewn beams, wide plank floors, and two centuries of honest use. The barn is climate-controlled and seats up to 120 for a ceremony or reception. Chandeliers on dimmers, 12 eight-foot farm tables with antique chairs, four church pews, WiFi, a caterer's kitchen, and a dressing room. The manicured lawn beside the barn is the most popular ceremony location on the estate. The most photographed space on the property — not because it was designed for photographs, but because two centuries of farm use produced a quality of light and texture that cannot be replicated.
The estate's largest venue — a permanent glass structure built at the base of the landmark 130-foot silo, the tallest in Loudoun County. Floor-to-ceiling windows on every face. Diamondback chairs and round tables included. Climate-controlled. No tenting required for 300 guests. The view across the estate changes with every hour of light. This is where Draksha sparkling wines are poured at tastings, and where the estate's scale becomes most apparent — the silo above, the vineyard beyond, and the Blue Ridge Mountains on the horizon.
The 1807 Federal-style fieldstone manor — plaster crown molding, heart pine floors on both staircases, and working fireplaces throughout. Five bedrooms, three and a half bathrooms, a private courtyard named the Lovett Courtyard in honour of the farm's founding builder. Available as an event space for intimate gatherings and as overnight accommodation for up to 10 guests. Included in the Estate Weekend wedding package.
Multiple outdoor ceremony and event sites across the estate grounds. The wisteria pergola and terrace. The Lovett Courtyard — the mossy stone smokehouse courtyard, among the most photographed spots on the property. The vineyard rows and the creek meadow along Goose Creek. The stone smokehouse and springhouse date to the founding era. Fire bowls and bistro lights are included with all packages.
Dedicated dressing and getting-ready suites on the estate for bridal parties. Separate from the main event spaces, allowing preparation in privacy on the grounds before the ceremony.
The estate winery sits within the grounds — the full winemaking and tasting experience on the same property as the 1807 manor. Four distinct spaces: the Wine Store and the Loft above it with sweeping estate views; the brick-laid Tasting Room with fireplace and leather couches; the Belvedere — glass-enclosed, 21+, heated; and the Terrace with Adirondack chairs and fire pits. Draksha sparkling wines and Otium still wines are poured here. Reservations through Tock.
Nestled along Goose Creek and flanked by vineyards, Tranquility Farm sits at the end of a quiet gravel road through open Loudoun County countryside. The Blue Ridge Mountains are on the western horizon from every elevated point on the property. A 23-acre conservation easement ensures this landscape remains as it is.
The estate is part of the Goose Creek Rural Historic District — Virginia's first designated rural historic district — and surrounded by other conserved land. The farm at the end of Tranquility Road will always be a farm.
Venues, weddings, events, and the estate through the seasons.
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A wedding, a retreat, a stay, a tasting — or a tour of the property. One road, one estate, everything on the same grounds.
Originally 600 acres. Built by Quaker hands. Worked by generations who understood this land before it had a name for what it was.
David Lovett, a prominent Quaker land developer, established the farm on 600 acres in 1807. The Federal-style fieldstone manor was built by skilled Quaker stone masons — the same tradition responsible for the most durable construction in the county. Heart pine floors, plaster crown molding, and working fireplaces survive intact. The Quakers denounced slavery, and Virginia's Quakers sympathised with the Union during the Civil War. A Quaker meeting house in the nearby village of Lincoln is still active today.
The manor's exterior carries a formation of white quartz stones that resembles an eye. Every summer solstice at precisely 7am, the rising sun illuminates the quartz formation while the shadow of the nearby smokehouse roof falls below it as a pyramid — an alignment that has repeated since the house was built, similar to the all-seeing eye of providence on the dollar bill. Whether deliberate or coincidental, no one now living knows.
The Piedmont Fox Hounds — founded in 1840, the oldest organised fox hunt in the United States — covered territory that included these fields for over a century. The farm housed thoroughbred racehorses alongside dairy cattle through most of its working life. The landmark 130-foot silo was built during the dairy era, when Purcellville farms shipped product by rail from Purcellville to Washington D.C.
In the 1980s, Barbara Graham — a racehorse trainer who grew up at Tranquility Farm — hunted here with her friend Jackie Kennedy Onassis, who followed the Piedmont Fox Hounds during this period. "They hunted side by side in the mornings and then drove around the country lanes," wrote Vicky Moon in The Private Passion of Jackie Kennedy Onassis: Portrait of a Rider (2005). "We connected because she was so down to earth," said Graham.
The historic structures — the manor, the barn, the smokehouse, the springhouse, the silo — have been preserved and restored as found. Two existing cottages were renovated and named the Grüner Bungalow and the Vineyard Cottage. The grounds were shaped with careful hardscaping, the Glass Manor was built beside the landmark silo in 2024, and an estate winery was established producing two wine labels: Draksha sparkling wines and Otium still wines. The Lovett Courtyard was named in honour of the farm's founding builder. The 23-acre conservation easement remains fully intact.