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AVI Career Training’s esthetician school in Chantilly, VA, goes beyond basic esthetics training. We provide career guidance and resources to help students assess and achieve their goals. Our focus on career development sets us apart in esthetics education, master esthetics, electrolysis, massage therapy, permanent cosmetic tattooing, etc. We’re a beauty school that prepares you.
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Intrigued about skin care therapy training and beauty? At AVI Career Training’s esthetics school, we provide hands-on training and professional guidance for VA residents to shape their standing. Our curriculum assures you’re prepared for a rewarding career in esthetics, whether in a spa, salon, or your own business. With experienced instructors and a supportive learning environment, you’ll gain motivation to turn your passion into a profession. Contact us today to learn more and take the first step towards your basic esthetician license or skincare and makeup course.
Chantilly was home to a number of colonial plantations in the 1700s, including the Sully Plantation (now the Sully Historic Site) built by Richard Bland Lee I. Other plantations included George Richard Lee Turberville’s “Leeton Grove” (originally a 5,000+ acre plantation, the main house of which still stands at 4619 Walney Rd.), the John Hutchison Farm, and the Chantilly Plantation, after which Chantilly is named. Cornelia Lee Turberville Stuart, who was born at Leeton and was the daughter of George Richard Lee Turberville and Henrietta Lee, inherited a portion of Leeton in 1817 from her father. Stuart and her husband Charles Calvert Stuart, whom she had married in 1816, constructed the Chantilly Plantation and named it after the Westmoreland County plantation owned by her grandfather, Richard Henry Lee, a signer of the Declaration of Independence. During the Civil War, federal troops destroyed by fire the Chantilly Plantation manor house. One building remains, a stone house across Route 50 from the Greenbriar Shopping Center. While it is not clear what this stone house was used for, most historical evidence suggests it was probably a plantation overseer’s quarters during the antebellum period, and a tavern or boarding house following the war. After the war, Cornelia Stuart, who had become deeply in debt, sold her 1,064-acre (431 ha) Chantilly estate. The advertisement for the sale referenced several “tenements”, one of which was the Stone House.
The village grew during the 19th century, particularly following the construction of the Little River Turnpike to Winchester.
The evolution of the Chantilly area into an outer suburb of Washington, D.C., gained momentum after 1980, as developers built residential subdivisions and commercial areas, filling in the farmland south of Dulles Airport.
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