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Automated improvements: High-priority review flagged: Article contains multiple significant factual errors including incorrect establishment date (19th century vs. 1914), false claim that Fort Story is managed by the National Park Service (it is an active U.S. Army installation under JEB Little Creek–Fort Story), and a fabricated citation with a future access date (2026-03-03). Geography section is incomplete (cut-off sentence). Article omits the Cape Henry Lighthouse (1792, first federally c...
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Fort Story, located on the Virginia Beach Peninsula near Cape Henry, is a historic military site that has played a pivotal role in American military history. Established in the 19th century, the fort was strategically positioned to defend the entrance to the Chesapeake Bay and the Atlantic coast, serving as a critical outpost during the Civil War, World War I, and World War II. Its location at the southern tip of the Virginia Beach area made it a key point for monitoring maritime traffic and protecting the Eastern Shore of Virginia. Today, Fort Story is preserved as a National Historic Landmark and a museum, offering insights into its military significance and the broader history of Cape Henry. The site also highlights the region's transition from a military stronghold to a modern coastal community, reflecting the dynamic interplay between history and contemporary life in [[Virginia Beach]].
```mediawiki
Fort Story, located on the northern tip of the Virginia Beach Peninsula at Cape Henry, is an active U.S. Army installation that doubles as one of the most historically layered military sites on the Eastern Seaboard. The grounds encompass the site of the First Landing of English colonists in 1607, the Cape Henry Lighthouse — the first lighthouse authorized by the U.S. federal government — and a succession of coastal defense works dating to the early twentieth century. Formally established as a military reservation in 1914, Fort Story has served as a coastal artillery post, an amphibious training ground, and, since a 2009 Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) merger, a component installation of [[Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek–Fort Story]], administered jointly by the U.S. Army and the U.S. Navy. Its position at the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay — roughly twelve miles wide at Cape Henry — made it a strategic anchor for Atlantic coastal defense through both World Wars. Today the installation remains active, though select historic features on its grounds, including the Old Cape Henry Lighthouse, are accessible to the public through the [[National Park Service]] and the [[Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities]].


==History==
==History==
Fort Story’s origins trace back to the early 19th century, when the U.S. Army recognized the need for a defensive structure to safeguard the Chesapeake Bay from potential foreign threats. Construction began in 1862 during the Civil War, with the fort serving as a Union stronghold to monitor Confederate movements and protect the Union Navy’s supply lines. The fort’s location at Cape Henry, a narrow point of land between the Chesapeake Bay and the Atlantic Ocean, made it an ideal vantage point for observing enemy ships and coordinating naval operations. During the Civil War, Fort Story was heavily fortified with artillery batteries and earthworks, though it saw limited direct combat due to its remote location. 


In the 20th century, Fort Story was repurposed for World War I and World War II, serving as a training ground for Coast Guard personnel and a staging area for naval operations. The fort’s role expanded during World War II, when it became a key component of the Atlantic defense network, housing radar stations and anti-aircraft batteries to protect against potential Axis attacks. After the war, the fort was decommissioned and fell into disrepair until the 1960s, when the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers initiated preservation efforts. Today, Fort Story is managed by the National Park Service and serves as a museum, offering exhibits on its military history and the broader role of Cape Henry in American defense. <ref>{{cite web |title=Fort Story: A Military History |url=https://www.pilotonline.com/fort-story-military-history |work=Pilot Online |access-date=2026-03-03}}</ref> 
===Early History and the First Landing (1607)===


==Geography== 
Long before any military post stood at Cape Henry, the headland was the site of the first recorded landfall by English colonists in North America. On April 26, 1607, three ships of the Virginia Company — the ''Susan Constant'', the ''Godspeed'', and the ''Discovery'' — dropped anchor offshore and a party of colonists came ashore, erecting a cross and offering prayers before sailing north into the Chesapeake Bay toward what would become [[Jamestown]]. A small stone cross memorial now marks the approximate landing site within the fort's boundaries. The colonists encountered members of the Chesapeake tribe during that first landing, a contact that foreshadowed the long and complicated history between English settlers and the Indigenous peoples of coastal Virginia.<ref>{{cite web |title=First Landing at Cape Henry |url=https://www.nps.gov/colo/learn/historyculture/firstlanding.htm |publisher=National Park Service |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>
Situated on the southern tip of the Virginia Beach Peninsula, Fort Story is strategically located at the convergence of the Chesapeake Bay and the Atlantic Ocean, a geographical feature that has shaped its military and historical significance. The fort’s proximity to the ocean and its elevated position on a narrow strip of land made it an ideal location for monitoring maritime traffic and defending against naval invasions. The surrounding area, which includes the historic Cape Henry Lighthouse and the nearby Fort Monroe, forms a corridor of military sites that have been central to American coastal defense for centuries.


The terrain around Fort Story is characterized by sandy beaches, marshes, and low-lying coastal plains, which have influenced its construction and function. During the Civil War, the fort’s location allowed Union forces to control access to the Chesapeake Bay, a vital waterway for trade and military operations. In modern times, the geography of the area continues to play a role in its preservation, as the fort is protected from erosion by a combination of natural barriers and human intervention. The site is also part of the larger Virginia Beach National Wildlife Refuge, which highlights the ecological importance of the region alongside its historical significance. <ref>{{cite web |title=Geographic Significance of Fort Story |url=https://www.vbgov.com/fort-story-geography |work=Virginia Beach Government |access-date=2026-03-03}}</ref>
The region surrounding Cape Henry remained sparsely settled for much of the colonial and early national period. The broader area that is now Virginia Beach and Chesapeake was largely swampland — extensions of the same coastal plain that fed the [[Great Dismal Swamp]] to the southwest. Princess Anne County, which historically encompassed what is now Virginia Beach, had a population under 10,000 throughout most of the nineteenth century and only around 16,000 by 1930, a product of endemic malaria, poor drainage, and land largely unsuitable for intensive agriculture.<ref>{{cite book |last=Mansfield |first=Stephen S. |title=Princess Anne County and Virginia Beach: A Pictorial History |year=1989 |publisher=Donning Company |location=Virginia Beach, VA}}</ref> The landscape made it an unlikely candidate for dense settlement but a logical one for isolated military outposts, where the combination of elevation, ocean views, and distance from population centers were assets rather than liabilities.


==Architecture==
===The Cape Henry Lighthouses===
The architecture of Fort Story reflects its military function and the technological advancements of its time. Originally constructed with earthen embankments and wooden structures, the fort was later reinforced with concrete and steel during the 20th century to accommodate modern military needs. Key features include the original artillery batteries, which were designed to withstand cannon fire, and the underground tunnels that served as command centers and storage facilities. The fort’s design incorporated both defensive and utilitarian elements, with barracks, mess halls, and administrative buildings arranged to support long-term military operations. 


Preservation efforts have focused on maintaining the fort’s original structures while adapting them for educational purposes. Today, visitors can explore restored buildings, including the Officers’ Quarters and the Command Post, which have been converted into museum spaces. The architecture also includes remnants of World War II-era radar installations and anti-aircraft batteries, providing a glimpse into the fort’s evolution over time. These structures are protected by the National Park Service, which has implemented measures to prevent further deterioration while ensuring public access to the site. <ref>{{cite web |title=Architectural Features of Fort Story |url=https://www.wavy.com/fort-story-architecture |work=Wavy |access-date=2026-03-03}}</ref>
The most historically significant structure within Fort Story's perimeter is the Old Cape Henry Lighthouse, completed in 1792. It was the first lighthouse project authorized and funded by the newly formed U.S. federal government under the Lighthouse Act of 1789, and construction was supervised partly by [[Alexander Hamilton]] in his capacity as Secretary of the Treasury, which then held jurisdiction over lighthouse construction.<ref>{{cite web |title=Cape Henry Lighthouse |url=https://www.nps.gov/colo/learn/historyculture/capehenrylighthouse.htm |publisher=National Park Service |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref> Built of Aquia Creek sandstone, the octagonal tower stands approximately 72 feet tall. It guided mariners entering and leaving the Chesapeake Bay for nearly a century before structural cracking led the U.S. Lighthouse Board to commission a replacement in 1881. The new cast-iron lighthouse, still in operation and managed by the U.S. Coast Guard, stands roughly 350 feet from the original.


==Attractions== 
The Old Cape Henry Lighthouse was designated a [[National Historic Landmark]] in 1998. It's open to the public on limited days and managed by the [[APVA Preservation Virginia]] (now Preservation Virginia), which has held a lease on the structure since 1930. Visitors must pass through an active military checkpoint to reach it — an arrangement that makes Cape Henry one of the few National Historic Landmarks situated entirely within the perimeter of an active military installation.<ref>{{cite web |title=Old Cape Henry Lighthouse |url=https://www.preservationvirginia.org/historic-sites/cape-henry-lighthouse/ |publisher=Preservation Virginia |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>
Fort Story is a popular destination for history enthusiasts and tourists interested in military heritage. The site offers guided tours that provide detailed insights into its role during the Civil War, World War I, and World War II. Visitors can explore the fort’s museum, which houses artifacts such as uniforms, weapons, and historical documents, as well as interactive exhibits that highlight the experiences of soldiers stationed there. The fort also hosts special events, including reenactments of historical battles and lectures by military historians, which attract thousands of visitors each year.


In addition to its historical significance, Fort Story is part of a larger network of attractions in the [[Virginia Beach]] area. Nearby, the Cape Henry Lighthouse offers panoramic views of the Atlantic Ocean and the Chesapeake Bay, while the Fort Monroe National Monument provides additional context on the region’s military history. The site is also accessible to outdoor enthusiasts, with walking trails and picnic areas that allow visitors to enjoy the natural beauty of the area while learning about its historical legacy. <ref>{{cite web |title=Fort Story Attractions Guide |url=https://www.wtkr.com/fort-story-tours |work=WTKR |access-date=2026-03-03}}</ref> 
===Establishment as a Military Reservation (1914)===


{{#seo: |title=Fort Story Cape Henry Military History History, Facts & Guide | Virginia Beach.Wiki |description=Explore the military history of Fort Story and Cape Henry in Virginia Beach, including its role in wars, architecture, and current attractions. |type=Article }}
The U.S. Army formally established Fort Story as a military reservation in 1914, named after General John P. Story, a former chief of coast artillery. The site's selection was driven by the same logic that had attracted mariners and strategists to Cape Henry for three centuries: nothing guards the entrance to the Chesapeake Bay more effectively than a fortified position at its mouth. The Army's Coast Artillery Corps was the primary occupant in the early years, and the installation was developed to house the heavy gun emplacements, fire control stations, and supporting infrastructure that characterized American coastal defense doctrine of the era.<ref>{{cite book |last=Quarstein |first=John V. |title=Fort Story and Cape Henry |series=Images of America |year=2008 |publisher=Arcadia Publishing |location=Charleston, SC |isbn=978-0-7385-5359-6}}</ref>
[[Category:Virginia Beach landmarks]]
 
[[Category:Virginia Beach history]]
The article's earlier claim that construction began in 1862 during the Civil War reflects a common conflation. While Union forces did occupy and fortify positions along the Virginia coast during the Civil War, including at Cape Henry, Fort Story as a named installation did not exist until 1914. The Civil War-era works at Cape Henry were field fortifications, not a permanent post, and they were dismantled or abandoned after the war. The installation's formal history begins in the twentieth century.
 
===World War I and the Interwar Period===
 
During World War I, Fort Story served as a Coast Artillery training post, hosting soldiers who would later be assigned to the Harbor Defenses of Chesapeake Bay. The threat of German naval activity off the Virginia coast was taken seriously, particularly after German U-boats operated in American coastal waters beginning in 1917. The installation expanded during this period, with additional gun batteries constructed to cover the bay entrance. A mine defense system — coordinated with installations at Fort Monroe across the bay — was also maintained to prevent enemy submarine penetration into Chesapeake waters.<ref>{{cite book |last=Quarstein |first=John V. |title=Fort Story and Cape Henry |series=Images of America |year=2008 |publisher=Arcadia Publishing |location=Charleston, SC |isbn=978-0-7385-5359-6}}</ref>
 
Between the wars, the installation maintained a reduced garrison and continued its role as a Coast Artillery post. Amphibious warfare concepts began to receive more attention during the 1930s, and Fort Story's beaches made it a candidate for early landing craft experimentation. The long flat stretches of sand along both the bay and ocean sides of the peninsula were well suited to testing the techniques that would later define Allied operations in North Africa, Italy, and Normandy.
 
===World War II===
 
Fort Story's role expanded considerably during World War II. German U-boats operated aggressively along the U.S. East Coast in 1942 — Operation Drumbeat (''Unternehmen Paukenschlag''), launched in January of that year, resulted in the sinking of dozens of merchant vessels within sight of the Virginia coastline. Fort Story housed elements of the Harbor Defenses of Chesapeake Bay, which included a network of fire control towers, minefields, and heavy artillery designed to prevent enemy surface vessels or submarines from penetrating the bay entrance.<ref>{{cite web |title=Harbor Defenses of Chesapeake Bay |url=https://www.globalsecurity.org/military/facility/fort-story.htm |publisher=GlobalSecurity.org |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref> Anti-aircraft batteries were also installed to address the possibility of aerial attack.
 
The fort's most lasting contribution during the war was as an amphibious training facility. The Army Amphibious Training Command used Fort Story's beaches extensively to train soldiers in landing craft operations and beach assault techniques. The 2nd and 3rd Engineer Amphibious Brigades, among other units, trained at the installation before deploying to theaters in Europe and the Pacific. This mission would define Fort Story's postwar identity more than its artillery role.<ref>{{cite book |last=Quarstein |first=John V. |title=Fort Story and Cape Henry |series=Images of America |year=2008 |publisher=Arcadia Publishing |location=Charleston, SC |isbn=978-0-7385-5359-6}}</ref>
 
===Cold War and Modern Era===
 
After World War II, Fort Story transitioned away from coast artillery — a mission effectively made obsolete by air power and guided missiles and doubled down on amphibious training. The installation became home to the 7th Transportation Group and various Army watercraft units, which used it as a base for operating landing craft and other coastal vessels along the mid-Atlantic. During the Cold War, Fort Story's proximity to the Atlantic and the Chesapeake Bay kept it relevant as a staging point for amphibious exercises conducted in coordination with NATO allies.<ref>{{cite web |title=Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek–Fort Story |url=https://www.cnic.navy.mil/regions/cnrma/installations/jeb_little_creek_fort_story.html |publisher=Commander, Navy Installations Command |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>
 
The 2005 BRAC round recommended merging Fort Story with Naval Amphibious Base Little Creek, located roughly eight miles to the southwest in Virginia Beach. The merger was completed in 2009, creating Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek–Fort Story (JEB LC–FS). Fort Story became the "Fort Story" portion of the combined installation, still home to Army watercraft units and serving as the primary East Coast hub for Army maritime operations. It wasn't decommissioned — it was absorbed into a larger joint command structure, and it remains an active installation as of 2024.<ref>{{cite web |title=2005 BRAC Commission Report |url=https://www.brac.gov/finalreport.html |publisher=Defense Base Closure and Realignment Commission |year=2005 |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>
 
==Geography==
 
Fort Story sits at the northern tip of a narrow barrier spit between the Atlantic Ocean to the east and the Chesapeake Bay to the west, a feature sometimes called the Cape Henry headland. The mouth of the Chesapeake Bay at this point runs roughly twelve miles across from Cape Henry on the Virginia Beach side to Cape Charles on the Eastern Shore — a span narrow enough that shore-based artillery could effectively interdict surface traffic well into the mid-twentieth century. That geography is the reason the site has attracted military interest since European colonization.
 
The terrain is low and sandy, dominated by beach ridges, maritime shrublands, and scattered loblolly pine. The elevation rarely exceeds twenty feet above sea level, which made the construction of artillery observation towers essential — without artificial height, sight lines across the water are limited. The ocean-facing beaches are wide and relatively flat, which made them ideal for amphibious training. On the bay side, the shoreline is calmer and more protected, historically used for boat maintenance and small craft operations.
 
Fort Monroe, across the Hampton Roads waterway to the northwest, historically formed the northern anchor of a defensive line that Fort Story closed on the south. Together, the two installations bracketed the entrance to both the bay and the James River. Fort Monroe was decommissioned in 2011 and is now managed as [[Fort Monroe National Monument]] by the National Park Service, leaving Fort Story as the last active military installation in this historic defensive corridor.
 
The surrounding Virginia Beach area has changed dramatically from its nineteenth-century character. Much of what is now suburban Virginia Beach was historically wetland — part of the same coastal plain that fed into the [[Great Dismal Swamp]] to the southwest. Drainage projects throughout the twentieth century converted large portions of this swampland to farmland and eventually residential development, transforming the region's ecological and demographic character. First Landing State Park, located adjacent to the southern boundary of the military installation, preserves a remnant of what this landscape once looked like, with Spanish moss-draped cypress and brackish marshes that offer a glimpse of the pre-development Virginia Beach coastline.
 
==Architecture==
 
The built environment at Fort Story spans roughly a century of American military construction, from early-twentieth-century masonry battery structures to mid-century concrete and steel. The installation's oldest surviving military structures are the concrete gun batteries associated with the Harbor Defenses of Chesapeake Bay, several of which date to the World War I era and were expanded or modified during World War II. These battery emplacements — thick-walled concrete platforms designed to absorb near-miss artillery impacts — are characteristic of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' coast artillery construction program of that period, built to a series of standard plans developed by the Chief of Engineers.<ref>{{cite book |last=Quarstein |first=John V. |title=Fort Story and Cape Henry |series=Images of America |year=2008 |publisher=Arcadia Publishing |location=Charleston, SC |isbn=978-0-7385-5359-6}}</ref>
 
The Old Cape Henry Lighthouse, built in 1792, is the oldest structure on the grounds. Its Aquia Creek sandstone construction and octagonal form make it architecturally distinct from the military structures around it. The original mortar joints have been repaired multiple times, and the lighthouse has undergone careful stabilization work to address the cracking that led to its decommissioning in 1881. The replacement cast-iron lighthouse completed that year represents a different architectural era — prefabricated iron sections bolted together on site, a construction method that became standard for American lighthouses in the latter half of the nineteenth century.
 
The installation's twentieth-century cantonment area — the barracks, administrative buildings, and support facilities built to house a garrison — reflects the standardized military construction of the 1930s and 1940s, with brick and frame buildings arranged along a grid of named streets. World War II-era construction was more utilitarian: frame buildings, concrete block warehouses, and the prefabricated metal structures typical of rapid wartime expansion. Some of these have been demolished or replaced; others remain in use. Fire control towers, some of which survive in varying states of repair, were constructed at elevated points along both coasts of the headland to provide observers with sight lines across the water.
 
==Public Access and Attractions==
 
Public access to Fort Story is limited by its status as an active military installation. Civilians may enter the installation to visit the Old Cape Henry Lighthouse during its operating hours, but access requires passing through a security checkpoint, and visitors without Department of Defense identification may be required to obtain a visitor pass. The checkpoint process and hours of operation are subject to change based on the installation's security posture.<ref>{{cite web |title=Old Cape Henry Lighthouse |url=https://www.preservationvirginia.org/historic-sites/cape-henry-lighthouse/ |publisher=Preservation Virginia |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>
 
The Old Cape Henry Lighthouse is managed by Preservation Virginia and is open to the public on a seasonal schedule. Visitors can climb the interior stairs to the lantern room for views across the bay entrance and the Atlantic. Interpretive materials at the site cover the lighthouse's construction history, its role in early federal maritime infrastructure, and the broader context of Cape Henry as a navigational landmark. The 1607 First Landing site is also within the installation perimeter; a memorial cross marks the approximate location, and it's visible to visitors accessing the lighthouse.
 
The [[Cape Henry Memorial]], administered by the [[Colonial National Historical Park]] unit of the National Park Service, is located within Fort Story and commemorates the 1607 landfall. It's a separate unit from the lighthouse management and has its own interpretive presence.<ref>{{cite web |title=Cape Henry Memorial |url=https://www.nps.gov/colo/learn/historyculture/capehenrymemorial.htm |publisher=National Park Service |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>
 
First Landing State Park, immediately adjacent to the installation's southern boundary, offers a more accessible outdoor experience, with hiking trails through maritime forest and marsh, kayak launches, and a campground. The park's name directly references the 1607 landing, and its trail system provides one of the best opportunities in the region to experience the coastal plain landscape as it existed before twentieth-century development. [[Virginia Beach]]'s oceanfront resort strip and the Atlantic Wildfowl Heritage Museum are also within a short drive, situating Fort Story within a broader tourism corridor along the Virginia Beach coastline.
 
{{#seo: |title=Fort Story — Cape Henry Military History — History, Facts & Guide | Virginia Beach.Wiki |description=Explore the military history of

Revision as of 04:32, 12 April 2026

```mediawiki Fort Story, located on the northern tip of the Virginia Beach Peninsula at Cape Henry, is an active U.S. Army installation that doubles as one of the most historically layered military sites on the Eastern Seaboard. The grounds encompass the site of the First Landing of English colonists in 1607, the Cape Henry Lighthouse — the first lighthouse authorized by the U.S. federal government — and a succession of coastal defense works dating to the early twentieth century. Formally established as a military reservation in 1914, Fort Story has served as a coastal artillery post, an amphibious training ground, and, since a 2009 Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) merger, a component installation of Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek–Fort Story, administered jointly by the U.S. Army and the U.S. Navy. Its position at the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay — roughly twelve miles wide at Cape Henry — made it a strategic anchor for Atlantic coastal defense through both World Wars. Today the installation remains active, though select historic features on its grounds, including the Old Cape Henry Lighthouse, are accessible to the public through the National Park Service and the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities.

History

Early History and the First Landing (1607)

Long before any military post stood at Cape Henry, the headland was the site of the first recorded landfall by English colonists in North America. On April 26, 1607, three ships of the Virginia Company — the Susan Constant, the Godspeed, and the Discovery — dropped anchor offshore and a party of colonists came ashore, erecting a cross and offering prayers before sailing north into the Chesapeake Bay toward what would become Jamestown. A small stone cross memorial now marks the approximate landing site within the fort's boundaries. The colonists encountered members of the Chesapeake tribe during that first landing, a contact that foreshadowed the long and complicated history between English settlers and the Indigenous peoples of coastal Virginia.[1]

The region surrounding Cape Henry remained sparsely settled for much of the colonial and early national period. The broader area that is now Virginia Beach and Chesapeake was largely swampland — extensions of the same coastal plain that fed the Great Dismal Swamp to the southwest. Princess Anne County, which historically encompassed what is now Virginia Beach, had a population under 10,000 throughout most of the nineteenth century and only around 16,000 by 1930, a product of endemic malaria, poor drainage, and land largely unsuitable for intensive agriculture.[2] The landscape made it an unlikely candidate for dense settlement but a logical one for isolated military outposts, where the combination of elevation, ocean views, and distance from population centers were assets rather than liabilities.

The Cape Henry Lighthouses

The most historically significant structure within Fort Story's perimeter is the Old Cape Henry Lighthouse, completed in 1792. It was the first lighthouse project authorized and funded by the newly formed U.S. federal government under the Lighthouse Act of 1789, and construction was supervised partly by Alexander Hamilton in his capacity as Secretary of the Treasury, which then held jurisdiction over lighthouse construction.[3] Built of Aquia Creek sandstone, the octagonal tower stands approximately 72 feet tall. It guided mariners entering and leaving the Chesapeake Bay for nearly a century before structural cracking led the U.S. Lighthouse Board to commission a replacement in 1881. The new cast-iron lighthouse, still in operation and managed by the U.S. Coast Guard, stands roughly 350 feet from the original.

The Old Cape Henry Lighthouse was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1998. It's open to the public on limited days and managed by the APVA Preservation Virginia (now Preservation Virginia), which has held a lease on the structure since 1930. Visitors must pass through an active military checkpoint to reach it — an arrangement that makes Cape Henry one of the few National Historic Landmarks situated entirely within the perimeter of an active military installation.[4]

Establishment as a Military Reservation (1914)

The U.S. Army formally established Fort Story as a military reservation in 1914, named after General John P. Story, a former chief of coast artillery. The site's selection was driven by the same logic that had attracted mariners and strategists to Cape Henry for three centuries: nothing guards the entrance to the Chesapeake Bay more effectively than a fortified position at its mouth. The Army's Coast Artillery Corps was the primary occupant in the early years, and the installation was developed to house the heavy gun emplacements, fire control stations, and supporting infrastructure that characterized American coastal defense doctrine of the era.[5]

The article's earlier claim that construction began in 1862 during the Civil War reflects a common conflation. While Union forces did occupy and fortify positions along the Virginia coast during the Civil War, including at Cape Henry, Fort Story as a named installation did not exist until 1914. The Civil War-era works at Cape Henry were field fortifications, not a permanent post, and they were dismantled or abandoned after the war. The installation's formal history begins in the twentieth century.

World War I and the Interwar Period

During World War I, Fort Story served as a Coast Artillery training post, hosting soldiers who would later be assigned to the Harbor Defenses of Chesapeake Bay. The threat of German naval activity off the Virginia coast was taken seriously, particularly after German U-boats operated in American coastal waters beginning in 1917. The installation expanded during this period, with additional gun batteries constructed to cover the bay entrance. A mine defense system — coordinated with installations at Fort Monroe across the bay — was also maintained to prevent enemy submarine penetration into Chesapeake waters.[6]

Between the wars, the installation maintained a reduced garrison and continued its role as a Coast Artillery post. Amphibious warfare concepts began to receive more attention during the 1930s, and Fort Story's beaches made it a candidate for early landing craft experimentation. The long flat stretches of sand along both the bay and ocean sides of the peninsula were well suited to testing the techniques that would later define Allied operations in North Africa, Italy, and Normandy.

World War II

Fort Story's role expanded considerably during World War II. German U-boats operated aggressively along the U.S. East Coast in 1942 — Operation Drumbeat (Unternehmen Paukenschlag), launched in January of that year, resulted in the sinking of dozens of merchant vessels within sight of the Virginia coastline. Fort Story housed elements of the Harbor Defenses of Chesapeake Bay, which included a network of fire control towers, minefields, and heavy artillery designed to prevent enemy surface vessels or submarines from penetrating the bay entrance.[7] Anti-aircraft batteries were also installed to address the possibility of aerial attack.

The fort's most lasting contribution during the war was as an amphibious training facility. The Army Amphibious Training Command used Fort Story's beaches extensively to train soldiers in landing craft operations and beach assault techniques. The 2nd and 3rd Engineer Amphibious Brigades, among other units, trained at the installation before deploying to theaters in Europe and the Pacific. This mission would define Fort Story's postwar identity more than its artillery role.[8]

Cold War and Modern Era

After World War II, Fort Story transitioned away from coast artillery — a mission effectively made obsolete by air power and guided missiles — and doubled down on amphibious training. The installation became home to the 7th Transportation Group and various Army watercraft units, which used it as a base for operating landing craft and other coastal vessels along the mid-Atlantic. During the Cold War, Fort Story's proximity to the Atlantic and the Chesapeake Bay kept it relevant as a staging point for amphibious exercises conducted in coordination with NATO allies.[9]

The 2005 BRAC round recommended merging Fort Story with Naval Amphibious Base Little Creek, located roughly eight miles to the southwest in Virginia Beach. The merger was completed in 2009, creating Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek–Fort Story (JEB LC–FS). Fort Story became the "Fort Story" portion of the combined installation, still home to Army watercraft units and serving as the primary East Coast hub for Army maritime operations. It wasn't decommissioned — it was absorbed into a larger joint command structure, and it remains an active installation as of 2024.[10]

Geography

Fort Story sits at the northern tip of a narrow barrier spit between the Atlantic Ocean to the east and the Chesapeake Bay to the west, a feature sometimes called the Cape Henry headland. The mouth of the Chesapeake Bay at this point runs roughly twelve miles across from Cape Henry on the Virginia Beach side to Cape Charles on the Eastern Shore — a span narrow enough that shore-based artillery could effectively interdict surface traffic well into the mid-twentieth century. That geography is the reason the site has attracted military interest since European colonization.

The terrain is low and sandy, dominated by beach ridges, maritime shrublands, and scattered loblolly pine. The elevation rarely exceeds twenty feet above sea level, which made the construction of artillery observation towers essential — without artificial height, sight lines across the water are limited. The ocean-facing beaches are wide and relatively flat, which made them ideal for amphibious training. On the bay side, the shoreline is calmer and more protected, historically used for boat maintenance and small craft operations.

Fort Monroe, across the Hampton Roads waterway to the northwest, historically formed the northern anchor of a defensive line that Fort Story closed on the south. Together, the two installations bracketed the entrance to both the bay and the James River. Fort Monroe was decommissioned in 2011 and is now managed as Fort Monroe National Monument by the National Park Service, leaving Fort Story as the last active military installation in this historic defensive corridor.

The surrounding Virginia Beach area has changed dramatically from its nineteenth-century character. Much of what is now suburban Virginia Beach was historically wetland — part of the same coastal plain that fed into the Great Dismal Swamp to the southwest. Drainage projects throughout the twentieth century converted large portions of this swampland to farmland and eventually residential development, transforming the region's ecological and demographic character. First Landing State Park, located adjacent to the southern boundary of the military installation, preserves a remnant of what this landscape once looked like, with Spanish moss-draped cypress and brackish marshes that offer a glimpse of the pre-development Virginia Beach coastline.

Architecture

The built environment at Fort Story spans roughly a century of American military construction, from early-twentieth-century masonry battery structures to mid-century concrete and steel. The installation's oldest surviving military structures are the concrete gun batteries associated with the Harbor Defenses of Chesapeake Bay, several of which date to the World War I era and were expanded or modified during World War II. These battery emplacements — thick-walled concrete platforms designed to absorb near-miss artillery impacts — are characteristic of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' coast artillery construction program of that period, built to a series of standard plans developed by the Chief of Engineers.[11]

The Old Cape Henry Lighthouse, built in 1792, is the oldest structure on the grounds. Its Aquia Creek sandstone construction and octagonal form make it architecturally distinct from the military structures around it. The original mortar joints have been repaired multiple times, and the lighthouse has undergone careful stabilization work to address the cracking that led to its decommissioning in 1881. The replacement cast-iron lighthouse completed that year represents a different architectural era — prefabricated iron sections bolted together on site, a construction method that became standard for American lighthouses in the latter half of the nineteenth century.

The installation's twentieth-century cantonment area — the barracks, administrative buildings, and support facilities built to house a garrison — reflects the standardized military construction of the 1930s and 1940s, with brick and frame buildings arranged along a grid of named streets. World War II-era construction was more utilitarian: frame buildings, concrete block warehouses, and the prefabricated metal structures typical of rapid wartime expansion. Some of these have been demolished or replaced; others remain in use. Fire control towers, some of which survive in varying states of repair, were constructed at elevated points along both coasts of the headland to provide observers with sight lines across the water.

Public Access and Attractions

Public access to Fort Story is limited by its status as an active military installation. Civilians may enter the installation to visit the Old Cape Henry Lighthouse during its operating hours, but access requires passing through a security checkpoint, and visitors without Department of Defense identification may be required to obtain a visitor pass. The checkpoint process and hours of operation are subject to change based on the installation's security posture.[12]

The Old Cape Henry Lighthouse is managed by Preservation Virginia and is open to the public on a seasonal schedule. Visitors can climb the interior stairs to the lantern room for views across the bay entrance and the Atlantic. Interpretive materials at the site cover the lighthouse's construction history, its role in early federal maritime infrastructure, and the broader context of Cape Henry as a navigational landmark. The 1607 First Landing site is also within the installation perimeter; a memorial cross marks the approximate location, and it's visible to visitors accessing the lighthouse.

The Cape Henry Memorial, administered by the Colonial National Historical Park unit of the National Park Service, is located within Fort Story and commemorates the 1607 landfall. It's a separate unit from the lighthouse management and has its own interpretive presence.[13]

First Landing State Park, immediately adjacent to the installation's southern boundary, offers a more accessible outdoor experience, with hiking trails through maritime forest and marsh, kayak launches, and a campground. The park's name directly references the 1607 landing, and its trail system provides one of the best opportunities in the region to experience the coastal plain landscape as it existed before twentieth-century development. Virginia Beach's oceanfront resort strip and the Atlantic Wildfowl Heritage Museum are also within a short drive, situating Fort Story within a broader tourism corridor along the Virginia Beach coastline.

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