Willoughby Spit (Norfolk, Virginia)
USA /
Virginia /
Norfolk /
Norfolk, Virginia
World
/ USA
/ Virginia
/ Norfolk
World / United States / North Carolina
The area known as Willoughby Spit takes its name from Thomas Willoughby, who came to Virginia in 1610 and received a land grant around 1625. Willoughby's son, Thomas II, was living there in the 1660s, and legend has it that his wife awoke one morning following a terrific storm (possibly the "Harry Cane" of 1667) to see a point of land in front her home, where there had been only water the night before. The Willoughby family, it is said, were quick to apply for an addendum to the original land grant, giving them ownership of the "new" property.
Severe storms and hurricanes would continue to transform the contour of the coast, and the Willoughby holdings, for more than a century. Although official records of Hampton Roads weather go back only to 1871 when the National Weather Service was established in downtown Norfolk, records of earlier storms have been located in ships' logs, newspaper accounts, history books and writings of early settlers.
Residents of colonial coastal Virginia were very much aware of the weather. To people who lived near the water and derived much of their livelihood from the sea, a tropical storm was a noteworthy event. During a hurricane in 1749, the Chesapeake Bay rose 15 feet above normal, sand spit was washed up at Sewell's Point and, with the help of The Great Coastal Hurricane of 1806, Willoughby Spit was formed.
Severe storms and hurricanes would continue to transform the contour of the coast, and the Willoughby holdings, for more than a century. Although official records of Hampton Roads weather go back only to 1871 when the National Weather Service was established in downtown Norfolk, records of earlier storms have been located in ships' logs, newspaper accounts, history books and writings of early settlers.
Residents of colonial coastal Virginia were very much aware of the weather. To people who lived near the water and derived much of their livelihood from the sea, a tropical storm was a noteworthy event. During a hurricane in 1749, the Chesapeake Bay rose 15 feet above normal, sand spit was washed up at Sewell's Point and, with the help of The Great Coastal Hurricane of 1806, Willoughby Spit was formed.
Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willoughby_Spit
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 36°57'55"N 76°16'51"W
- Wards Corner 5.3 km
- Interstate 64 Exit 277 6.5 km
- Riverview 8.7 km
- Rental Car Counters, Norfolk International Airport, ORF, Norfolk, Virginia 10 km
- Third Island 20 km
- Fourth Island 21 km
- Cape Henry Inn 21 km
- The North End 26 km
- North Channel Bridges 29 km
- Fisherman Island 31 km
- Solar Farm 1.2 km
- Lincoln Military Housing - Willoughby Bay 1.6 km
- Interstate 64 Exit 273 1.7 km
- Willoughby Bay 1.7 km
- Thomas Willoughby Elementary School 1.9 km
- 2017 Ocean View Elementary School Building 2 km
- Ocean View Fishing Pier 2 km
- Ocean View Elementary School Grounds 2.1 km
- Naval Station Norfolk (NGU/KNGU) 3.2 km
- Chesapeake Bay Impact Crater 43 km