Online Encyclopedia

NORFOLK

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 747 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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NORFOLK  , a

city and
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port of entry of Norfolk county, Virginia, U.S.A., on the
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northern side of the Elizabeth
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river (an arm of the Chesapeake
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Bay) and at the mouth of its eastern branch, and on the Albemarle and Chesapeake and the
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Dismal Swamp canals, about go m . S.E. of Richmond . Pop . (1890) 34,871; (1900) 46,624, of whom 1705 were
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foreign-born and 20,230 were negroes; (1910 census) 67,452 . It is served by the
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Atlantic Coast
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Line, the Seaboard Air line, the
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Southern, the New York,
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Philadelphia & Norfolk, the Chesapeake &
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Ohio, the Norfolk & Western, the Norfolk & Southern and the Virginian
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railways, by many steamship lines, by ferry to Portsmouth (immediately opposite),
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Newport
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News, Old Point Comfort and Hampton, and by electric lines to several neighbouring towns . The Norfolk and Portsmouth Belt Line encircles the two cities, and connects the various trunk lines . Among the prominent buildinr,s and institutions are the Custom House, the Federal
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Building, Marine Hospital, St Christopher's Hospital, St Vincent's Hospital, Norfolk
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Protestant Hospital, Sara Leigh Hospital, Norfolk Public Library, Norfolk Academy, Cotton
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Exchange, City Market,
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Bank of Commerce Building, Citizens' Bank Building, Board of Trade Building, Law Building, Virginia Bank &
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Trust
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Company Building, Norfolk
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National Bank, Atlantic Hotel, Monticello Hotel, Lynnhaven Hotel, Norfolk
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Mission College (Presbyterian) for negroes and the historic St Paul's church, which was built in 1737 and was struck by a cannon-ball and partly burned in 1776; in the yard is one of the
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oldest cemeteries in the country . Norfolk is the see of a Protestant Episcopal bishopric . The city has a public park of 1 ro acres and various smaller ones, and in the vicinity are several summer resorts, notably Virginia
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Beach, Ocean View, Old Point Comfort, Pine Beach and
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Willoughby Beach . The " Norfolk "
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navy yard is in the southern
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part of the city of Portsmouth . The harbour is deep, easily accessible through a channel 30 ft. in
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depth, and well protected by forts Monroe and Wool . The city has immense
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coal piers .

It is the largest peanut market in the

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world, is in a
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great
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truck-gardening region, and makes large shipments of cotton (822,930 bales in 1905), oysters, coal, fertilizers,
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lumber, grain, fruits, wine, vegetables, fish and live stock . Norfolk is combined with Portsmouth in one customs
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district, the foreign trade of which in 1908 amounted to $11,326,817 in exports and $1,150,044 in imports . One of the most important manufacturing
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industries is grading, roasting, cleaning and shelling peanuts (in 1905 valued at $791,760) . In 'goo the value of the factory products was $4,691,779; in1905 it was $5,900,129, the city ranking third among the cities of the state in value of factory products . Norfolk was founded in 1682 in pursuance of an act of the Virginia Assembly passed in 168o to establish towns for the encouragement of trade; it was incorporated as a borough in 1736 by a royal charter, was chartered as a city in 1845, its charter being revised in 1882 and 1884, and received a new charter in 1906 (amended in 1908), under which there are a mayor (elected fer four years), a
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common council, a board of aldermen and a board of control of three members, which has charge of public
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works, streets, sewers, drains and
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water supply, the police and fire departments, the
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work of the board of
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health, &c . Norfolk is administratively
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independent of Norfolk county . In 1906 the
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town of Berkley (incorporated in 189o; pop. in 1900, 4988) was annexed . During the War of Independence Norfolk was bombarded on the 1st of
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January 1776 by the
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British under John Murray, 4th
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earl of
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Dunmore (1732-1809); much of the town was burned by the
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American troops to prevent Dunmore from establishing himself here . In 1855 it suffered severely from yellow fever . At the outbreak of the
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Civil War the city was abandoned, and the navy yard was burned by the Federals in
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April 1861; Norfolk was then occupied until the 9th of May 1862 by Virginia troops, first under General William Booth Taliaferro (1822-1898) and later under General Benjamin Huger (1806-1877) . Five miles from Norfolk and with Norfolk as its headquarters was held from the 26th of April to the 3oth of November 1907 the
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Jamestown Ter-Centennial Exposition, celebrating the first permanent
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English settlement in
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America at Jamestown, Virginia .

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