Williamsburg Regional Library

Chesapeake, Virginia, Raymond L. Harper

Label
Chesapeake, Virginia, Raymond L. Harper
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 157-158) and index
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Chesapeake, Virginia
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
50621968
Responsibility statement
Raymond L. Harper
Series statement
The making of America series
Summary
Although fairly new on the American scene of cities, Chesapeake possesses a long history dating back to the early 1600s, when the first intrepid settlers began establishing farms on the fertile soils of Tidewater Virginia. Over the centuries, the region divided itself into larger cities, such as Norfolk and Portsmouth, a number of small towns, and rural county governments. Combating the expansion of the City of Norfolk, the leaders and citizens of South Norfolk and Norfolk County agreed to merge their governing entities in 1963 to create the new city of Chesapeake. Chesapeake, Virginia chronicles the history of the young city, nestled between the Elizabeth and Indian Rivers, and explores the various towns and villages that provide the area with its unique charm and character. From Berkley and South Norfolk to Deep Creek and Great Bridge, readers will journey into the past and hunt with the early American Indians that inhabited this lush landscape, toil with the colonial fathers as they began taming the land for future settlement, battle with the Continental troops as they defeated the British at Great Bridge, strain with the workers as they dig the historic Dismal Swamp Canal, and so on
Target audience
adult
Content
Mapped to

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