Online Encyclopedia

OLD POINT COMFORT

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V20, Page 74 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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OLD POINT COMFORT  , a summer and

winter resort, in Elizabeth City county, Virginia, U.S.A., at the
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southern end of a narrow, sandy peninsula projecting into Hampton Roads (at the mouth of the James
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river), about 12 M . N. by W. of Norfolk . It is served directly by the Chesapeake &
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Ohio railway, and indirectly by the New York,
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Philadelphia & Norfolk (Pennsylvania
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System), passengers and freight being carried by steamer from the
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terminus at Cape Charles; by steamboat lines connecting with the
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principal cities along the
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Atlantic coast, and with cities along the James river; by ferry, connecting with Norfolk and Portsmouth; and by electric railway (3 m.) to Hampton and (12 m.) to
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Newport
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News . There is a U.S. garrison at Fort Monroe, one of the most important fortifications on the Atlantic coast of the
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United States . Old Point Comfort is included in the reservation of Fort Monroe . The fort lies within the tract of 252 acres ceded, for coast defence purposes, to the Federal government by the state of Virginia in 1821, the survey for the
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original fortifications having been made in 1818, and the
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building begun in 1819 . It was named in honour of President Monroe and was first regularly garrisoned in 1823; in 1824 the Artillery School of Practice (now called the United States Coast Artillery School) was established to provide commissioned
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officers of the Coast Artillery with instruction in professional
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work and to give technical instruction to the non-commissioned staff . During the
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Civil War the fort was the
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rendezvous for several military expeditions, notably those of General Benjamin F . Butler to Hatteras Inlet, in 1861; of General A . E . Burnside, to North Carolina, in 1862; and of General A . H .

Terry, against Fort Fisher, in 1865; within sight of its parapets was fought the famous duel between the " Monitor " and the "
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Merrimac " (March 9, 1862) . Jefferson Davis was a prisoner here for two years, from the 22nd of May 1865, and Clement Claiborne Clay (1819—1882), a prominent Confederate, from the same date until
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April 1866 . Between Fort Monroe and Sewell's Point is Fort Wool, almost covering a small island called Rip Raps . The expedition which settled
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Jamestown rounded this peninsula (April 26, 1607), opened its sealed instructions here, and named the peninsula Poynt Comfort, in recognition of the sheltered harbour . (The " Old " was added subsequently to distinguish it from a Point Comfort settlement at the mouth of the York river on Chesapeake
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Bay) . On the site of the
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present fortification a fort was erected by the whites as early as 163o .

End of Article: OLD POINT COMFORT
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