Cape Lookout National Seashore Historic Resource Study By



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Cape Lookout National Seashore

Historic Resource Study

By

David E. Whisnant

and

Anne Mitchell Whisnant

Primary Source History Services

SECOND DRAFT SUBMISSION

January 14, 2010

Prepared for the Organization of American Historians

under Cooperative Agreement with the
National Park Service

Table of Contents

Illustrations / Figures List

Introduction and Executive Summary
Chapter 1: An Overview of Previous Cultural Resource Studies at Cape Lookout National Seashore and Some New Analytical Possibilities
Chapter 2: To and From the Most Remarkable Places: The Communities Of Ocracoke Inlet as North Carolina’s Gateway to an Atlantic World
Chapter 3: Restless (and Storm-Battered) Ribbons Of Sand: Hurricanes and Inlets

Chapter 4: An Eye For the Possible: Maritime (and Other) Economic Activities on the Southern Banks


Chapter 5: At the Sea’s Edge: Slavery, Race and Class in a Maritime World
Chapter 6: The Government Presence: Revenue Cutters, Lighthouses, Life-Savers, Coast Guardsmen, New Dealers and Others
Chapter 7: Regulators to Aviators: Wars and the Southern Banks

Chapter 8: Down East, Far West, and Hoi Toide: Thinking About Culture and the Outer Banks


Chapter 9: Tourism and the Coming of Cape Lookout National Seashore
Chapter 10: Management, Research, and Interpretive Recommendations
Bibliography
Annotated List of Repositories and Collections Consulted
Appendices
Appendix A: Historical Base Maps

Appendix B: Coastal County and State Election Results, Elections of 1896-1908

Appendix C: Calendar of Hurricanes

Appendix D: Opening and Closing of Inlets

Appendix E: List of Classified Structures, Annotated and Cross-Referenced with Historic Contexts

Appendix F: National Register Nominations

Appendix G: Maps

Appendix H: Cultural Landscapes Inventory



Introduction and Executive Summary




Historic Resources in a “Natural” Environment

Nature has always had the upper hand on the “ribbon of sand” that is now Cape Lookout National Seashore. Part of the ever-changing Outer Banks, the seashore’s island environment has commanded attention and demanded respect for centuries. Reports of disastrous encounters with hurricanes and shoals go back at least into the late sixteenth century.1

Appropriately then, the 1966 Federal law that authorized creation of a National Seashore at Core Banks and Shackleford Banks focused on the area’s “outstanding natural values” and required that they be managed for “conservation of natural features.” At the same time, however, the establishing legislation specified that the area’s “recreational values” be conserved and managed so as to contribute to “public enjoyment [and] public outdoor recreation” (P.L. 89-366).

As every National Park Service employee who has ever worked at Cape Lookout National Seashore has learned, these two sets of values and obligations can be difficult to harmonize and maintain at the same time. Conservationists don’t always see things in the same way that ATV riders do; sport and commercial fishermen can find themselves at odds; tourists sometimes want more infrastructure than the environment can support. Historic preservation of sometimes fragile structures can clash with their adaptive reuse, and each must be measured against available public tax dollars. Indeed, opposition between these values and aims long predated the coming of the National Seashore.

In 2007, a much acclaimed new film made for the park welcomed visitors with the soothing voice of Meryl Streep channeling Rachel Carson. “The shore,” Streep nearly whispers, “is an ancient world,” a place of the “meeting of land and water,” where “in every curving beach and every grain of sand, there is the story of the earth.” For the nearly thirty minutes that follow, human history (in the form of a few picturesque but unoccupied and uncontextualized historic structures and the Cape Lookout Lighthouse) plays only a bit part in a sweeping drama featuring sparkling blue water, blowing sands, orange sunsets, galloping horses, swooping and wading birds, God-like satellite views, heart-stopping helicopter flyovers, new-age music, and finally the comforting benedictory assurance that “All at last return to the sea, to Oceanus.”

Would that it were so. When an NPS team gathered at the park in 1967 and 1970 to begin drafting a master plan, however, not everything had slipped so peacefully into the sea. In converting the parklands for recreational use, early park managers found on their “to-do” list a recommendation to “[d]ispose of the hundreds of abandoned and junked cars and many squatter shacks” remaining on Core Banks.2

The 2500 junked cars and squatter shacks were just the latest residue of a long history of human activity on the islands that became the National Seashore.3 Like nearly all national park areas in the eastern United States, Cape Lookout National Seashore was carved out of privately owned lands, rather than out of the trackless public domain on which most early western parks had been mapped. While most of the permanent residents of the islands had already left by the time the National Seashore was created, protracted land acquisition conflicts with large property owners like the Core Banks Gun Club and individuals who owned fishing or vacation cabins remind us that creating the national parks, especially in the east, superimposed Park Service-created landscapes on vernacular ones.4 Deciding how much – and what elements – of the former landscape to retain and interpret in a new park context is a central management challenge.5

Thus, during the decade between the park’s authorization in 1966 and formal establishment in 1976, park managers and others began to realize that the new park contained substantial material remnants of the long human history on the islands. This growing understanding of the historic resources in the park doubtless came about at least partly due to NPS efforts to comply with the newly codified principles of historic preservation, encompassed in the landmark 1966 National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA), which created the National Register of Historic Places, housed within the Park Service.



The Historical Moment of This Study


National Park Service Cultural Resource Management Guideline NPS-28 specifies that a Historic Resource Study (HRS) should provide “a historical overview of a park or region and identif[y] and evaluat[e] a park's cultural resources within historic contexts.” In the customary sequence, the HRS is designed to precede most other detailed studies: Cultural Landscapes Inventories, Lists of Classified Structures, National Register nominations, and Historic Structure Reports.

As it happens, this HRS follows, rather than precedes, those more detailed studies. Our project methodology has, in turn, been structured and the study written with that fact in mind.

At the time the Scope of Work was signed, existing studies included:


  • an early historical study by Holland (1968)

  • two Historic Resource Studies of Portsmouth (1970 and 1982)

  • two National Register district nominations (Portsmouth [1979] and Cape Lookout Village [2000])

  • several other National Register nominations for specific structures (1972, 1989, 2005)

  • fourteen historic structure reports (2003-2006)

  • two Cultural Landscape Reports (Cape Lookout Village [2005] and Portsmouth [2007])

  • an Ethnohistorical Overview and Assessment for CALO and Harkers Island (2007)

The reversed sequence of work done thus far was acknowledged in the Scope of Work, which stated that “A large part of this HRS will be a work of synthesis of both NPS documentation and other sources identified by the contractor.” It also specified, however, that this study should provide “additional baseline historical research and interpretation of the park's cultural resources . . . [that will] enhance and broaden existing National Register documentation as well as provide historical background for any future National Register work.” No National Register nominations were required or undertaken as part of the present study.

We have taken as our major task, then, creating a synthetic work that uses (but does not simply summarize or recount) the best of the existing primary research underlying those previous studies, bolsters it where needed with additional (more limited) primary research of our own, and reframes the histories presented there within the context of the best available historiography and categories of analysis. We have, that is, tried to take advantage of our later and broader perspective, together with (as Chapter 1 explains at some length) more recent historiography, in order to think carefully about the historic contexts in which Cape Lookout National Seashore’s historic resources are understood.

It is important to note here at the outset that several crucial characteristics of the historic resources of Cape Lookout National Seashore have affected our analysis and writing. First, those historic resources have been fragmented by historical processes: by the geographical and historical separation of buildings and settlements from Bogue Bank to Bodie Island; by the wide separation in time (early eighteenth to mid-twentieth centuries) of the creation of those resources; and by the fact that so many of the resources that must be considered no longer exist (Shell Castle and its lighthouse, Diamond City and other Shackleford Banks settlements, numerous Coast Guard-related structures, World War II installations). Moreover, the contexts that must be considered are only infrequently congruent with the boundaries of the park (e.g., the story of Portsmouth is inseparable from that of Ocracoke, as is the story of race from the history of the coastal counties and inland North Carolina). And finally, one cannot in any case base an adequate historic resource study on the existing resources alone, especially to the degree that by “resources” one means only buildings.

A central thesis of this study is that seeking to comprehend the history of the Outer Banks in terms of the geophysical fact (and metaphor) of “barrier islands” is fraught with difficulty, and provides an insufficient and confusing orientation for analysis. We have attempted, rather, to set the Outer Banks (hence the history of CALO and of its many historic resources) into a much broader context, paying special attention to the Banks’ myriad and persistent connections with broader systems – physical, economic, social, political, and cultural. That has resulted in recasting the “barrier islands” model as instead a border region, a place where worlds come into contact.

In addition to examining key details and processes of CALO’s history and historic resources, each chapter takes up part of that larger task. Doing both of these tasks at once (taking account of existing CALO studies and material remains sitting on the park’s lands, and setting the relevant history within a much broader framework provided by more recent historiography) is not unlike the challenge of the honoring both the “preserve and protect” and the “use and enjoyment” requirements imposed upon all national parks. We have engaged that challenge as best we could. Our effort to do so is set out most explicitly in Chapter 1; it is implicit in the analysis presented in subsequent chapters.

Chapter Summaries



Chapter 1: An Overview of Previous Cultural Resource Studies at Cape Lookout National Seashore and Some New Analytical Possibilities
This chapter examines already completed CALO studies and planning documents, as a base for conceiving and structuring the HRS, especially in view of the fact that the HRS is being done after, rather than before, National Register nominations and other detailed studies.

Our aim in this chapter is to assess the quality of previous research, characterize the sources (both primary and secondary) on which it was based, analyze the historic contexts under which the extant structures and resources were determined (in National Register terms) to be significant, correlate the identified “periods of significance” with the actual structures remaining, and identify gaps to be filled either by this study or by future research.

An early conclusion is that many (though by no means all) existing studies rest upon a rather narrow and repetitive research base that is in some cases years or even decades out of date.

This chapter then considers the potential usefulness of some long available but unused historical studies, and of more recent ones coming out of the “new social history” of formerly overlooked or disempowered groups. We also consider the potential usefulness of recent analytical perspectives such as postmodernism, transnationalism, regional and cultural studies, African-American and Native American studies, and other sectors.

Especially germane, we suggest, are studies dealing with the broader (non-coastal or Outer Banks) history of North Carolina, maritime and coastal history, the Atlantic world, slavery and race, commercial development, tourism, gender and class, and Outer Banks language and culture.
Chapter 2: To And From The Most Remarkable Places: The Communities of Ocracoke Inlet As North Carolina’s Gateway To An Atlantic World
With an emphasis on Portsmouth, this chapter considers the specific history of the communities surrounding Ocracoke Inlet in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, when Ocracoke Inlet was the major point of connection between mainland North Carolina and the “Atlantic world” beyond. The chapter argues that characterizing Portsmouth as an “isolated” community – as it frequently is – fails to take account of how intertwined the community’s history was in that period with economic, political, and social worlds of both North Carolina, the rest of coastal North America, the West Indies, and Europe. The chapter reframes the history of Portsmouth, as well, within a broader conceptualization of the area around Ocracoke Inlet as a set of several closely related communities: Portsmouth, Ocraoke, and Shell Castle.

Instead of trying to provide a comprehensive history of Portsmouth, this chapter teases out key parts of the village’s history that were most shaped by its role as a major transshipment point for cargo entering and leaving North Carolina by sea. Areas of focus, then, include trade networks and patterns; the labors of the population (both white and African American) in the piloting and lightering work that dominated the economy there; the relationship between Portsmouth resident John Wallace and Washington, North Carolina entrepreneur John Gray Blount in the creation of Shell Castle; and the implications of “Atlantic world” connections for the large enslaved population at Portsmouth.


Chapter 3: Restless (and Storm-Battered) Ribbons of Sand: Hurricanes and Inlets
This chapter examines the impact of storms and hurricanes upon the location and configuration of the inlets; the nature of the sounds as the opening and closing of inlets changed their character and impacted the economic and social development associated with them; and the consequential or related histories of populations, communities, occupations and particular built structures. More specifically, it inquires into the effects of particular storms and hurricanes that have struck the southern Banks within the Cape Lookout area since the middle of the eighteenth century when Portsmouth was founded.
Chapter 4: An Eye for the Possible: Maritime (and Other) Economic Activities on the Southern Banks
This chapter argues that economic activity on the southern Banks has tended to be mostly episodic and opportunistic – dependent upon the availability at some historical moment of an exploitable resource (whales, for example, or a certain species of fish, or later, tourists) together with an attractive external market (for whale oil, waterfowl, bird feathers, fish, or leisure and scenery). On occasions when those two crucial conditions have come into alignment, an industry has arisen and flourished. But when one or the other of the conditions wanes or fails, it has declined or disappeared.

Thus to understand the history of maritime and other economic activity on the southern Banks and their adjacent waters is a very different task from understanding the textile, furniture or tobacco industries of the North Carolina piedmont – all of which were both larger and more stable over a longer time, however vulnerable they ultimately proved to be.

For the Outer Banks, therefore, one must instead map a historical sequence of activities that have appeared, grown, waned, and disappeared, each of them marshalling an essentially time- or environmentally-limited resource, adaptively reorganizing and redeploying the skills and energies of a limited labor pool, and linked to a too often fickle or fragile market.

This chapter considers an overlapping historical sequence of economic activities that have had this episodic and opportunistic character: stock raising and agriculture, whaling, fishing (with attention to the particularities of individual species), shipbuilding, work boat building, commercial hunting or “market gunning,” and extra-legal maritime activities (piracy, “wrecking,” and smuggling). Tourism is reserved for a later chapter.


Chapter 5: At the Sea’s Edge: Slavery, Race and Class in a Maritime World
Our examination of slavery, race, and class makes five related arguments: that however special or “isolated” the Outer Banks have been argued to be in some respects, the area cannot be understood apart from the race and class dynamics, discourses, laws, and customs of the rest of the state; that the structure and character of maritime endeavors have nevertheless at times produced some special configurations of slavery, race, and racial categories and discourse; that sometimes race and class relations have been better than more general ones in the state (e.g.,, among mullet fishermen, as Garrity-Blake has argued, or among slave watermen, as Cecelski has explained), and sometimes they have been worse (e.g.,, among slaves forced to dig canals); that since there were no stable economic or industrial structures or power blocs (as in the plantation system or the textile industry) to hold the racial system – whatever its character – steady, it has flexed and adjusted with the shifting economic base (e.g.,, from shipping to fishing to tourism); and that widespread and persistent romanticization of Outer Banks culture has blurred essential features and details of its racial and class system.
Chapter 6: The Government Presence: Revenue Cutters, Lighthouses, Life-Savers, Coast Guardsmen, New Dealers and Others

Since the eighteenth century, the Outer Banks have been a prime site of government presence and activity. State and Federal actions, laws, and regulations have partitioned the land, specified its uses, erected buildings, built fences and docks, dredged channels, built harbors, established (and done away with) institutions, employed (and discharged) personnel, and purchased goods and services.

In the process, government decisions, actions and agencies have functioned as major shapers of and change factors within the economic, political, social and cultural dynamics of the Outer Banks. The persistent and highly visible presence of government agencies has imparted to their buildings, activities and landscapes a particular spatially, socially, economically, and culturally organizing character.

At their various moments, these dynamics have arisen from – and been shaped by – some array of five characteristic criteria: relatively low population density; limited local employment opportunities; long-term presence of an agency offering stable, relatively high-status jobs; large iconic buildings; and defined institutional landscapes. The durable importance of any particular agency or installation, has depended upon how fully or durably it satisfied these criteria.

The effects of these entities, events and processes have been varied, broad and (sometimes) deep. Within the built environment, they have inscribed themselves upon the land – some permanently, some vestigially, and some now buried beneath the sands or washed out to sea. Technologies have been introduced and replaced or withdrawn. Jobs have come and gone. Social and professional networks have formed, flourished and dissolved. Communities have arisen and collapsed.

In this chapter we examine a long series of governmental entities, events and processes: the Custom House and the Marine Hospital at Portsmouth, lighthouses and their keepers, the Life-Saving Service (1871), the Coast Guard (1915), and the Great Depression and the New Deal.6 The coming of Cape Lookout National Seashore itself is addressed in a later chapter on tourism.


Chapter 7: From Regulators to Aviators: Wars and the Southern Banks
Many prominent features of landscape and life on the southern Outer Banks have come and gone. Inlets have opened and closed; islands have appeared, reconfigured themselves, and disappeared; hurricanes have wiped out homes and even whole villages; sounds have gone from fresh water to brackish and back again; whole industries have appeared, developed, and disappeared.

But government activities have been there continuously at least since the early eighteenth century. Five times they have been associated with a war, and in wartime the shoals, islands, inlets, sounds, and rivers take on urgent strategic importance. Troop concentrations, forts, docks, jetties, communications facilities, gun emplacements, barracks, and other buildings and appurtenances dominate the landscape and alter the character and rhythm of daily life and the structure of communities.

This chapter provides a synoptic overview of the five wars that have impacted the area since the late eighteenth century: the American Revolution, the War of 1812, the Civil War, and World Wars I and II.
Chapter 8: Down East, Far West, and Hoi Toide: Thinking About Culture and the Outer Banks

In recent years, popular discourse about the Outer Banks has been unrelievedly positive and romantic. But it has not always been so – especially with regard to culture. Our aim in this chapter is to map the long-wave changes in views of Outer Banks culture, to test them (when available evidence permits) against historical fact, and to examine in some detail one of the most central current elements: hoi toide speech. In the process, we will test the regional linguistic analogy (to Appalachia) featured in the work of hoi toide’s most skillful analyst.


Chapter 9: Outer Banks Tourism and the Coming of Cape Lookout National Seashore
This chapter chronicles the now more than 250-year long history of tourism on the Outer Banks, moving through the many forms it has taken. Setting our analysis initially against the comparative example of tourism development in western North Carolina, we first examine the eighteenth and early nineteenth century nodes at Nags Head and Ocracoke, both of which attracted wealthy families who stayed (with servants) in the earliest hotels or built summer homes. We then move to the hunting clubs of the last third of the nineteenth century, frequented (mostly) by wealthy northerners brought South in comfortable Pullman cars, their immediate needs for food and guides supplied by local people, and their masculine identities bolstered by familiar hunting rituals. We conclude by turning to the beach pavilions, elegant hotels, and residential developments of the early twentieth century; the elaborate tourism development schemes launched by Cape Lookout Development Company and their successors; the stimulus of new roads and bridges; the post-World War II boom in tourism; and the coming of two National Seashores, development of which was constrained in some respects by the structures, customs, and material and legal remains of the two centuries of tourism that preceded them.

Overall, we endeavor to show that in order to understand the history of tourism development on the Outer Banks, one must have recourse to frames of analysis considerably more complex that those offered by familiar notions of tradition-bound “ca’e bankers” living an isolated life on miraculously preserved “barrier islands,” following the occupations of their maritime ancestors, and speaking the picturesque hoi toide brogue.7


Chapter 10: Management and Research Recommendations
The Scope of Work asks for this study to identify “any need for special history studies, cultural landscape reports, or other detailed studies.” It may also, it said “make recommendations for resource management and interpretation as appropriate.” In this brief final chapter, we endeavor to respond to both of these requirements, confining our recommendations to areas for which our own research qualifies us to render opinions and judgments. [Summarizing list to follow from Chapter 10.]

Throughout all of the chapters, we have referred readers to the best available scholarship. Appendices present numerical data, base maps, a calendar of hurricanes, a List of Classified Structures, and other relevant documents.




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