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What
is it about an island that is so intriguing, so special, so alluring?
Why is it that an island is so altogether different from the mainland?
That the mere mention of the word makes our faces soften and our breath
slow down? Why does a piece of land surrounded by water call out to
us, creating an intense longing to visit its banks and shores?
Hatteras
is like any other island in this respect. Its Atlantic Ocean beaches,
Pamlico Sound marshes and undeveloped sandscapes call to the weary soul
in all of us, promising breath-taking sunrises as a respite for strained
eyes, healing salt air to purify stale lungs, and warm sand to soften
hardened soles.
The
island calls out to the adventurer in all of us, enticing us with tales
of surfing a storm-induced |
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swell, riding the
wind with a kite and a board, and battling a blue marlin the size of
a small bus. Hatteras calls to the naturalist in all of us, luring us
in to see brown pelicans belly-skimming the ocean surface, sea turtle
tracks etched into the beach, and dolphins arcing their pointed fins
in the sea.
Hatteras Island is the perfect combination of natural world and vacation
world. More than 60 percent of the island is in its almost-natural barrier
island state, thanks to the protection of the Cape Hatteras National
Seashore and Pea Island National Wildlife Refuge. More than half of
the island is open land or cultural sites waiting to be explored. The
rest of the island caters to visitors with hotels and motels, rental
homes from the luxurious to the simple, restaurants from family style
to upscale contemporary, locally owned shops offering just about everything
you could need and recreation opportunities for everyone.
Thanks to bridges and a well-run ferry system, Hatteras Island is not
as remote as it once was. But still, the island is out-of-the-way enough
to make going there feel like a veritable getaway. Even northern Outer
Bankers, who live less than an hour away, like to escape to Hatteras
Island. This is because, for the most part, Hatteras Island has been
able to retain its own unique culture and attitude. For its residents
and visitors, Hatteras offers a simple lifestyle in tune with nature
and connected to the roots of its history. So far, superstores and chain
restaurants and cookie-cutter consumerism haven’t crossed the
waters that surround Hatteras Island. This is not to say that the modern
world isn’t slowly seeping in. This is best exemplified in a bumper
sticker seen around the island: “Slow down, this ain’t the
mainland.” This may be a reference to driving habits, but it applies
to much more.
If Hatteras Island is intriguing for what it offers today, it is even
more so because of its past. Hatteras’s history speaks of the
sea, of lighthouses, shipwrecks on the island’s infamous shoals,
the lifesaving efforts of courageous locals and the island’s vulnerability
in times of war. It speaks of islanders living in what sounds like an
idyllic setting with gardens and livestock and the bounty of the sea,
but what was really a struggle in the face of hurricanes and the hardships
of isolation. The stories of Hatteras’s past are so rich and colorful
that it’s a shame no single book will ever be able to contain
them.
If you’re hearing the call of Hatteras Island, this site is for
you. Whether you’re planning a visit or are already here and looking
for something to do, you’ll find what you need here. The site
follows the book Hatteras Island Driving Tour and Guidebook that
guides you along the Historic Hatteras Tour, a specially mapped out
tour of some of the historic sites from Oregon Inlet to Hatteras Inlet.
The second part of the book gives you the inside scoop on the attractions,
activities, shops, restaurants and places to stay on the island. It
won’t take much to get the salt in your blood, in other words,
to fall in love with Hatteras Island.
It would be impossible to visit Hatteras Island and not feel the pull
of the past. The island’s history is palpable and immediately
visible in such structures as the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse, the Chicamacomico
Life-Saving Station, the skeleton of an old bridge that leads to nowhere,
and historical markers by the roadside. But there’s much more
to the history of the island than you see at first glance. Look a little
closer: family cemeteries tucked into crevices all over the island,
wooden boats forgotten in creeks and harbors, old homes fixed up or
falling down, the old-timers’ unusual and charming brogue and
the hard-to-pronounce Native-American names for the island locations.
Here are clues that there is more than meets the modern eye on Hatteras
Island.
Hatteras’s history is somewhat overshadowed by the island’s
new role as a vacation hotspot. Times are changing, and the island will
never be the same. But all is not lost. Those who seek out the past
and are willing to delve a little deeper into it are rewarded with rich
stories and fascinating tales.
Before you go on the tour, take a few minutes to read the history of
the island on the History
page. Of course we couldn’t possibly fit all of the island’s
history and lore there, but it gives you an idea of the chronology of
the island’s history.
The Historic Hatteras Tour route takes you along the entire 50 miles
of the island, starting at Oregon Inlet and ending at Hatteras Inlet.
If you drive the tour all at once, visiting the sites in chronological
order from north to south, expect it to take a good half day, because
you’ll want to stop along the way to visit the historic sites,
scenic overlooks and shops and eat a seafood lunch. You can also do
the tour in smaller portions, according to the amount of time you have
to spend. Pick an area and explore the historic sites within. We’ve
made the tour easy: The sites on the tour are numbered and mapped to
correspond with those on the color maps in the front of this guide.
While you’re on the tour, try for a little while to forget the
modern world. Try to imagine this island before it was “discovered”
by vacationers and recreational fishermen. Stretch your imagination
to the time when the oceanfront was barren for the entire 50 miles,
save a fishing shack or two. Try to fathom the time when the Cape Hatteras
Lighthouse was the only light seen on the entire island. Wrap your mind
around the isolation of this island, separated from the rest of the
world by miles of open water. Imagine driving in sandy ruts on the beach
instead of the secure pavement of NC 12. The photographs in the guide
will help you get an image of the way the island was.
But don’t get completely lost in the past. Ask questions if you
have them. Notice the care with which old buildings and landmarks have
been preserved. Visit the businesses and talk to the people. Explore
the present as well as the past.
Keep
in mind that a few of the sites on the tour are private residences or
on private land. Please, respect people’s privacy. We sincerely
request that you restrict your tour activities to pausing in front of
the building, reading its history and moving on without entering the
building or bothering its residents, unless it is a public business
or attraction. |