| 5003 Hallett Circle Cape Charles, VA 23310 (757) 331-2760 |
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Eastern Shore of Virginia Refuge History
Written history of the area dates back to the earliest colonial times, when refuge uplands were farmed and wetlands and waters were hunted and fished. In the early 1600's, Captain John Smith described the area that is the refuge as: "...a faire Bay compassed but for the mouth with fruitful and delightsome land... Heaven and earth never agreed better to frame a place for man's habitation."
Military PresenceThe strategic location at the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay encouraged military uses of the area in the years before the refuge was established. At the beginning of World War II, much of the land which is now refuge was acquired by the federal government and named Fort John Custis, after a prominent eighteenth century resident of Northampton County. During the war, large bunkers housed 16-inch guns designed to protect naval bases and shipyards in Virginia Beach and Norfolk. In 1950, the U.S. Air Force acquired Fort John Custis, renaming it the Cape Charles Air Force Station. Radar towers and additional buildings were built by the Air Force, which occupied the area until 1981.
Fisherman Island RefugeAs a barrier island, Fisherman Island has a much different history than Eastern Shore of Virginia National Wildlife Refuge. The earliest documentation of an island in the vicinity of Fisherman Island is from an 1815 navigational chart of the Chesapeake Bay. Two small islands, named the Bird Islands are shown on the chart just south of Cape Charles. Maps prior to 1815 show only shoals in the area and it is probable that Fisherman Island did not become permanently exposed until around this time.
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