Aetna Hill (Midlothian, Virginia house)

[1][2] This original building consisted of "a 1 1/2 story Huguenot-style structure with a three-bay facade and twin front doors".

[3] In 1831, Thompson Blunt retired to Powhatan County and left Aetna Hill and its lands to his daughter Moriah and her husband, Elijah Brummall.

[5] The Midlothian and Chesterfield County historian, Bettie Woodson Weaver, also lived here with her mother, who was Robert H. Winfree's daughter, in her early years.

[6] After going to college and marrying Albert Weaver, Bettie returned to Aetna Hill after World War II and started renovated the building over the next three years, adding heating, electricity, and indoor plumbing to the 150-year-old house.

[9] In the present day, Aetna Hill is largely untouched and the main house appears as it did in the 1840s, with slight alterations.