Historical Marker Series

Virginia: Norfolk Heritage Cannonball Trail

Showing results 1 to 10 of 14
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HM1MY_st-pauls-church-1739_Norfolk-VA.html
In 1641 a "chapel of ease" was built here where St. Paul's Church is now. The 1680 survey of the new town designated this site for a church and burying ground. Many of the founders of Norfolk are buried here. When Norfolk became a borough by royal charter i…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HM1MZ_epworth-united-methodist-church-1894_Norfolk-VA.html
This 1894 Richardsonian Romanesque granite and sandstone church was designed by Norfolk architects James E. R. Carpenter and John V. Peebles. It was built to accommodate the growing congregation of the 1850 Granby Street Methodist Church at the northeast co…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HM1N0_flood-protection-for-downtown-norfolk_Norfolk-VA.html
Tidal flooding from hurricanes and northeasters has always been a part of Norfolk's relationship with the sea. In 1693, the Royal Society of London reported that "there happened a most violent storm in Virginia, which stopped the course of ancient channels …
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HM1N3_battleship-wisconsin-a-floating-fortress_Norfolk-VA.html
Battleship Wisconsin and the sister-ships of the Iowa Class arguably hold a symbolic status as monuments in naval surface warship design. Unlike torpedo boats, tin-can destroyers, flat-top aircraft carriers, and pig-boat submarines, the teak decks and tower…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HM1NW_battleship-wisconsin-berthed-in-norfolk_Norfolk-VA.html
Redefining the skyline of downtown Norfolk, battleship Wisconsin stands stoically with dominating presence. After months of dredging and construction, Wisconsin majestically slipped into the seemingly tailored berth without a hitch on 7 December 2000—…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HM1NX_the-cedar_Norfolk-VA.html
A cedar tree near this location, then known as Foure Farthing Pointe, was described in the original patent defining the western boundary of the 50 acres that comprised Norfolk Town. In August 1680 John Ferebee, surveyor for Lower Norfolk County, was instruc…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HM1PL_armed-forces-memorial_Norfolk-VA.html
The Armed Forces Memorial is located here on a river that has for more than 200 years carried servicemen off to war and returned them home to loved ones. Within the Memorial are 20 inscriptions from letters written home by U.S. service members who lost thei…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HM1PM_the-first-battle-of-ironclad-ships-1862_Norfolk-VA.html
On March 8, 1862 CSS Virginia steamed past this point (1) to a battle which would forever change naval warfare. This ship had previously been a Union steam frigate, USS Merrimack, which had been destroyed near the Gosport Navy Yard (2). Confederate forces f…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HM1PO_atlantic-intracoastal-waterway_Norfolk-VA.html
Off this point in the Elizabeth River is the zero mile buoy marking the beginning of the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway. In colonial times water transportation was the principal mode for moving cargo. The idea of a canal connecting the Elizabeth River in Vi…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HM1PQ_downtown-waterfront-revitalization_Norfolk-VA.html
In the 1950s the downtown waterfront contained an assortment of aging facilities-wharves, warehouses, rail lines, ship chandlers, tugboat operations, and ferry docks. The city of Norfolk made a significant decision. An area of downtown along the Elizabeth R…
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