First Landing State Park: Difference between revisions
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'''First Landing State Park''' is a 2,888-acre [[Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation|state park]] situated on [[Cape Henry]] in the northern section of [[Virginia Beach, Virginia]]. As Virginia's most-visited state park, it | '''First Landing State Park''' is a 2,888-acre [[Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation|state park]] situated on [[Cape Henry]] in the northern section of [[Virginia Beach, Virginia]]. As Virginia's most-visited state park, it draws more than a million visitors annually, serving as a natural refuge within one of the most densely populated corridors on the East Coast. The park stands near the site where Captain Christopher Newport and approximately 104 men and boys of the [[Virginia Company]] first came ashore on April 26, 1607, before establishing the permanent English settlement at [[Jamestown]]. Built in part by African-American [[Civilian Conservation Corps]] workers between 1933 and 1940, the park is a [[National Natural Landmark]] and is listed in the [[National Register of Historic Places]]. It draws visitors year-round for its rare ecological diversity, extensive trail network, Chesapeake Bay beachfront, and deep ties to American colonial history. | ||
== History == | == History == | ||
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=== The 1607 Landing === | === The 1607 Landing === | ||
On the early morning of Sunday, April 26, 1607, three small ships carrying the first permanent settlers | On the early morning of Sunday, April 26, 1607, three small ships carrying the first permanent English settlers to Virginia approached the shore near Cape Henry at the mouth of the [[Chesapeake Bay]]. Those three ships — the ''Discovery'', the ''Susan Constant'', and the ''Godspeed'' — had departed England in December 1606 under the authority of the Virginia Company of London. Roughly 104 men and boys were aboard; no women made the crossing on this initial voyage. Christopher Newport served as the expedition's naval commander, responsible for navigating the vessels across the Atlantic and along the coast. | ||
That evening the colonists opened the | That evening the colonists opened the sealed orders from the Virginia Company and discovered that, while the members of the governing council had been named, no president had been designated. They held what is considered the first recorded free election under English common law in the New World. According to George Percy — younger son of the eighth Earl of Northumberland and one of the expedition's chroniclers — the colonists "set up a cross and called the place Cape Henry," naming the headland for Henry, Prince of Wales, eldest son of King James I.{{sfn|Percy|1608}} After several days exploring the surrounding land and waterways, the party moved inland and established Jamestown on May 14, 1607. | ||
A cross was erected | A cross was erected within the state park by the Daughters of the American Colonists on April 26, 1935, to mark the general location of the first landing, with a placard at the base bearing the dates of the landing and the subsequent settlement at Jamestown. This park cross is distinct from the nearby Cape Henry Memorial — a granite cross maintained by [[Preservation Virginia]] (formerly the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities) that stands just outside the park's boundary on the grounds of [[Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek-Fort Story|Fort Story]]. In 2007, the park hosted a re-enactment of the first landing as part of the Jamestown 400th anniversary celebrations. | ||
=== Civilian Conservation Corps and Park Founding === | === Civilian Conservation Corps and Park Founding === | ||
Development of Seashore State Park | Development of the park — then called Seashore State Park — began in 1933 when the [[Civilian Conservation Corps]] began work on 1,060 acres of donated land. The labor was performed primarily by African-American CCC enrollees, including members of Company 1354P, one of the segregated "colored" companies established under the CCC's racially divided organizational structure. Working under the supervision of the Virginia State Commission on Conservation and Development and with architectural drawings and construction plans provided by the [[National Park Service]], the CCC crews built the park's cabins, trail system, recreational facilities, and infrastructure over the better part of a decade.{{sfn|Salmon|1986}} The new park opened on June 15, 1936, and was the first planned state park in the Virginia State Park system. CCC work at the site continued through 1940, by which time the park encompassed a considerably more developed trail and facility network than at its initial opening. | ||
The Seashore State Park Historic District, comprising the entire 2, | The Seashore State Park Historic District, comprising the entire 2,888-acre park, is listed in the National Register of Historic Places with significance dating to 1933 for its architecture and engineering. The historic district includes eight contributing buildings, six contributing sites, and ten contributing structures — the majority of which were built or substantially shaped by CCC labor.{{sfn|NPS NRHP|}} | ||
=== Segregation and Civil Rights === | === Segregation and Civil Rights === | ||
Like all Virginia State Parks following Reconstruction | Like all Virginia State Parks in the decades following Reconstruction, First Landing State Park enforced [[Jim Crow laws]] through the first half of the twentieth century, maintaining segregated and demonstrably unequal facilities for white and Black visitors. The park's very construction by African-American CCC workers stood in sharp contrast to the exclusionary policies that governed its use once built. | ||
In 1955, following the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in ''[[Brown v. Board of Education]]'', Virginia state park administrators chose to close Seashore State Park entirely rather than comply with desegregation orders — a response that reflected the broader policy of [[massive resistance]] adopted by Virginia's political leadership. The park remained closed to the public until 1965, when it reopened as a fully integrated facility following the enactment of the [[Civil Rights Act of 1964]].{{sfn|Friends of First Landing|}} | |||
=== Renaming the Park === | === Renaming the Park === | ||
The | The park operated under the name Seashore State Park from its 1936 opening for more than six decades. In 1997, during the early planning stages for the Virginia Company and Jamestown 400th anniversary commemorations, community groups and state officials rallied to rename the park in recognition of its historical significance to early English settlement. The park was officially redesignated First Landing State Park that year, though longtime Tidewater residents frequently still refer to it by its former name.{{sfn|DCR Blog|}} The renaming was part of a broader effort to reframe the site's public identity ahead of the 2007 anniversary events, which brought national attention and a formal re-enactment of the 1607 landing to the park's shores. | ||
=== Native American Heritage === | === Native American Heritage === | ||
Virginia Indian tribes relied on the coastal area as a source of | Long before English colonists arrived, Virginia Indian tribes relied on the coastal area as a seasonal source of food and resources, establishing temporary hunting and fishing camps during the summer months. The 1607 expedition's journals record encounters with Algonquian-speaking peoples in the vicinity of Cape Henry within days of the landing. | ||
First Landing State Park holds the repatriated remains of 64 Virginia Indians in a ceremonial gravesite within the park. The remains, which had been held by the [[Smithsonian Institution]], were returned to Virginia in 1997 under the [[Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act]] (NAGPRA), which requires federal agencies and institutions receiving federal funding to return Native American cultural items and human remains to lineal descendants and culturally affiliated tribes.{{sfn|DCR|}} | |||
== Geography and Natural Features == | == Geography and Natural Features == | ||
First Landing State Park | First Landing State Park occupies the southern tip of Cape Henry in northern Virginia Beach, where the Chesapeake Bay meets the Atlantic Ocean. The park encompasses a striking range of habitats compressed into a relatively small area: open bay beach, back dunes, upland maritime forest, tidal salt marsh, freshwater wetlands, and bald cypress swamp. It is also the northernmost location on the East Coast where subtropical and temperate plant species grow together in the same community — a convergence driven by the moderating influence of the Chesapeake Bay and the region's position at the boundary of two distinct climate zones.{{sfn|NPS|}} | ||
The | The park's most dramatic topographic feature is its ancient dune system, which reaches heights of up to 75 feet — the highest natural points in southeastern Virginia. These dunes were built over thousands of years by wind and wave action along the bay shoreline and have since been stabilized by deep-rooted vegetation. Spanish moss drapes the live oaks and loblolly pines of the maritime forest that now covers much of the dune system, creating an environment more commonly associated with the Carolinas or Georgia than with coastal Virginia. | ||
The 3,598-acre Seashore Natural Area, a portion of which | The 3,598-acre Seashore Natural Area, a portion of which falls within the park's boundaries, was listed as a [[National Natural Landmark]] in 1965 by the [[National Park Service]]. The designation recognized the ecological significance of the park's forested dunes, its rare maritime forest community — considered one of the most endangered habitat types in the world — and its unusual assemblage of Atlantic white cedar, bald cypress, and Coastal Plain plant species that together form communities found in few other places along the Eastern Seaboard.{{sfn|NPS NNL|}} | ||
The park's waterways have served human activity for centuries. Native American canoes, Colonial settlers | The park's interior waterways include a series of cypress swamps and tidal creeks that have served human activity for centuries. Native American canoes, Colonial-era settlers, and later merchant mariners, privateers, and military vessels navigated or sheltered in these waters. The cypress swamps provided fresh water to ships anchored offshore during the [[War of 1812]], and local tradition holds that the pirate [[Blackbeard]] used the Narrows area of the park as a hiding place. Union and Confederate patrol vessels used the park's interior waterways during the [[Civil War]]. | ||
== | === The Rainbow Sheen in the Swamps === | ||
Visitors to the park's cypress swamp trails frequently notice a rainbow-colored sheen floating on the surface of standing water and sometimes mistake it for an oil spill or pollution. The phenomenon is entirely natural. The sheen is produced by iron-oxidizing bacteria and biofilms — thin microbial mats that form on the surface of anaerobic, or oxygen-depleted, water as organic matter decays on the swamp floor. As iron compounds in the decomposing leaf litter oxidize and rise to the surface, they form a thin, iridescent film that refracts light in the same way as petroleum products. | |||
The easiest way to distinguish natural biofilm from an actual oil slick is to disturb the surface: biofilm fractures and breaks apart into rigid plates when touched, while petroleum-based oil spreads and flows back together. The sheen in First Landing's swamps is a sign of a healthy, active decomposition cycle — not contamination. | |||
== Trails and Recreation == | |||
The park features 1.5 miles of shoreline along the Chesapeake Bay and more than 20 miles of trails traversing its varied habitats. The trail system reaches into virtually every corner of the park, passing through cypress swamp, salt marsh, maritime forest, freshwater wetlands, dune systems, and bay shoreline. With the exception of the beach itself, nearly every significant habitat type in the park can be accessed on foot. | |||
The Bald Cypress Trail is a 1.5-mile loop through the park's cypress swamp, traveling on wooden boardwalks and observation platforms that place visitors directly above the water and root systems of the ancient trees. The Long Creek Trail runs five miles through open salt marsh along the edge of the Chesapeake Bay, passing White Hill Lake and offering some of the finest wading bird and waterfowl observation in the region. The Cape Henry Trail, at 5.9 miles, is the only trail in the park open to bicycles and cuts through the heart of the park's upland forest.{{sfn|DCR|}} | |||
Beyond hiking and biking, the park offers swimming along its Chesapeake Bay beachfront, boating, fishing, crabbing, picnicking, and a range of naturalist programs. A boat launch is located at the end of the 64th Street park road, which terminates at the Narrows — a channel of water between Broad Bay and Linkhorn Bay. Fishing and crabbing are popular throughout the park's waterways and beach; a valid Virginia saltwater fishing license is required.{{sfn|DCR|}} Open fires are prohibited throughout the park from midnight to 4:00 p.m. daily, and visitors should check current seasonal fire regulations before arrival. | |||
== Overnight Accommodations == | == Overnight Accommodations == | ||
The park operates more than 200 campsites with a range of accommodation types. Options include water and electric hook-up sites, tent campsites, six two-bedroom frame cabins, and fourteen two-bedroom cinderblock cabins. The park also offers recreational yurts — circular, semi-permanent shelters derived from the portable dwellings of Central Asian nomadic peoples — located along the dune system near the Chesapeake Bay. The yurts function as a middle ground between tent camping and cabin rentals, with more structural protection than a traditional tent and a closer connection to the outdoors than a fully enclosed cabin.{{sfn|DCR|}} | |||
First Landing State Park is open every day from 7 a.m. to dusk, with overnight areas accessible | First Landing State Park is open every day from 7 a.m. to dusk, with overnight areas accessible around the clock when open for the season. A $7 per vehicle entrance fee applies for most of the year; visits during peak-season weekends and select holidays cost $10 per vehicle.{{sfn|DCR|}} | ||
== Education and Visitor Center == | == Education and Visitor Center == | ||
The park's Chesapeake Bay Center serves as both a visitor center and an environmental education facility. It features aquariums and a wet laboratory operated in partnership with the [[Virginia Aquarium and Marine Science Center]], along with historical exhibits focused on the 1607 landing, a camp store, an outdoor amphitheater, and a Gateways Program regional welcome center.{{sfn|DCR|}} | |||
The park offers | The park offers self-guided and ranger-led programs covering topics from crabbing and junior ranger activities to beach ecology walks and formal environmental education curricula. Large groups — school field trips, community organizations, and clubs — can request programming tailored to historical, cultural, or environmental themes. The park participates in Virginia's ''State Parks: Your Backyard Classrooms'' initiative, a 40-activity curriculum guide used by K–12 classroom teachers and home-school educators across the state.{{sfn|DCR|}} | ||
The Friends of First Landing State Park is | The Friends of First Landing State Park is a nonprofit organization that supports the park through fundraising and volunteer programs, including trail maintenance, interpretive events, and shoreline cleanups.{{sfn|Friends of First Landing|}} | ||
=== Proposed Road Development === | |||
A proposed extension of Nimmo Parkway through southern Virginia Beach has raised concerns among conservationists and park supporters about the potential impact on First Landing's natural preserve. The proposed alignment would pass through or adjacent to protected land associated with the park, and environmental advocates have called for an independent assessment of the route's ecological consequences before any construction proceeds. The Virginia Department of Transportation has not announced a final decision on the project's alignment as of 2025. | |||
== References == | == References == | ||
{{reflist}} | |||
=== Sources === | |||
* {{cite web |ref={{sfnref|DCR}} |title=First Landing State Park |url=https://www.dcr.virginia.gov/state-parks/first-landing |work=Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation |access-date=2026-02-25}} | |||
* {{cite web |ref={{sfnref|NPS}} |title=First Landing State Park |url=https://www.nps.gov/places/first-landing-state-park.htm |work=U.S. National Park Service |access-date=2026-02-25}} | |||
* {{cite web |ref={{sfnref|Friends of First Landing}} |title=History of First Landing |url=https://friendsoffirstlandingstatepark.com/history-of-first-landing |work=Friends of First Landing State Park |access-date=2026-02-25}} | |||
* {{cite web |ref={{sfnref|DCR Blog}} |title=The Park Formerly Known as "Seashore" |url=https://www.dcr.virginia.gov/state-parks/blog/the-park-formerly-known-as-seashore-5384 |work=Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation |access-date=2026-02-25}} | |||
* {{cite web |ref={{sfnref|NPS NNL}} |title=National Natural Landmarks — First Landing State Park |url=https://www.nps.gov/subjects/nnlandmarks/site.htm?Site=FILA-VA |work=U.S. National Park Service, National Natural Landmarks Program |access-date=2026-02-25}} | |||
* {{cite web |ref={{sfnref|NPS NRHP}} |title=National Register of Historic Places — Seashore State Park Historic District |url=https://www.nps.gov/nr/ |work=U.S. National Park Service |access-date=2026-02-25}} | |||
* {{cite web |ref={{sfnref|Virginia DWR}} |title=First Landing State Park |url=https://dwr.virginia.gov/vbwt/sites/first-landing-state-park/ |work=Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources |access-date=2026-02-25}} | |||
* {{cite book |ref={{sfnref|Salmon|1986}} |last=Salmon |first=John C. |title=A Preliminary History of the CCC in Virginia State Parks |publisher=Virginia Division of Parks |year=1986}} | |||
* {{cite book |ref={{sfnref|Percy|1608}} |last=Percy |first=George |title=Observations Gathered out of a Discourse of the Plantation of the Southern Colony in Virginia by the English, 1606 |year=1608 |publisher=William Welby |location | |||
Latest revision as of 04:39, 19 April 2026
First Landing State Park is a 2,888-acre state park situated on Cape Henry in the northern section of Virginia Beach, Virginia. As Virginia's most-visited state park, it draws more than a million visitors annually, serving as a natural refuge within one of the most densely populated corridors on the East Coast. The park stands near the site where Captain Christopher Newport and approximately 104 men and boys of the Virginia Company first came ashore on April 26, 1607, before establishing the permanent English settlement at Jamestown. Built in part by African-American Civilian Conservation Corps workers between 1933 and 1940, the park is a National Natural Landmark and is listed in the National Register of Historic Places. It draws visitors year-round for its rare ecological diversity, extensive trail network, Chesapeake Bay beachfront, and deep ties to American colonial history.
History
The 1607 Landing
On the early morning of Sunday, April 26, 1607, three small ships carrying the first permanent English settlers to Virginia approached the shore near Cape Henry at the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay. Those three ships — the Discovery, the Susan Constant, and the Godspeed — had departed England in December 1606 under the authority of the Virginia Company of London. Roughly 104 men and boys were aboard; no women made the crossing on this initial voyage. Christopher Newport served as the expedition's naval commander, responsible for navigating the vessels across the Atlantic and along the coast.
That evening the colonists opened the sealed orders from the Virginia Company and discovered that, while the members of the governing council had been named, no president had been designated. They held what is considered the first recorded free election under English common law in the New World. According to George Percy — younger son of the eighth Earl of Northumberland and one of the expedition's chroniclers — the colonists "set up a cross and called the place Cape Henry," naming the headland for Henry, Prince of Wales, eldest son of King James I.Template:Sfn After several days exploring the surrounding land and waterways, the party moved inland and established Jamestown on May 14, 1607.
A cross was erected within the state park by the Daughters of the American Colonists on April 26, 1935, to mark the general location of the first landing, with a placard at the base bearing the dates of the landing and the subsequent settlement at Jamestown. This park cross is distinct from the nearby Cape Henry Memorial — a granite cross maintained by Preservation Virginia (formerly the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities) that stands just outside the park's boundary on the grounds of Fort Story. In 2007, the park hosted a re-enactment of the first landing as part of the Jamestown 400th anniversary celebrations.
Civilian Conservation Corps and Park Founding
Development of the park — then called Seashore State Park — began in 1933 when the Civilian Conservation Corps began work on 1,060 acres of donated land. The labor was performed primarily by African-American CCC enrollees, including members of Company 1354P, one of the segregated "colored" companies established under the CCC's racially divided organizational structure. Working under the supervision of the Virginia State Commission on Conservation and Development and with architectural drawings and construction plans provided by the National Park Service, the CCC crews built the park's cabins, trail system, recreational facilities, and infrastructure over the better part of a decade.Template:Sfn The new park opened on June 15, 1936, and was the first planned state park in the Virginia State Park system. CCC work at the site continued through 1940, by which time the park encompassed a considerably more developed trail and facility network than at its initial opening.
The Seashore State Park Historic District, comprising the entire 2,888-acre park, is listed in the National Register of Historic Places with significance dating to 1933 for its architecture and engineering. The historic district includes eight contributing buildings, six contributing sites, and ten contributing structures — the majority of which were built or substantially shaped by CCC labor.Template:Sfn
Segregation and Civil Rights
Like all Virginia State Parks in the decades following Reconstruction, First Landing State Park enforced Jim Crow laws through the first half of the twentieth century, maintaining segregated and demonstrably unequal facilities for white and Black visitors. The park's very construction by African-American CCC workers stood in sharp contrast to the exclusionary policies that governed its use once built.
In 1955, following the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Brown v. Board of Education, Virginia state park administrators chose to close Seashore State Park entirely rather than comply with desegregation orders — a response that reflected the broader policy of massive resistance adopted by Virginia's political leadership. The park remained closed to the public until 1965, when it reopened as a fully integrated facility following the enactment of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.Template:Sfn
Renaming the Park
The park operated under the name Seashore State Park from its 1936 opening for more than six decades. In 1997, during the early planning stages for the Virginia Company and Jamestown 400th anniversary commemorations, community groups and state officials rallied to rename the park in recognition of its historical significance to early English settlement. The park was officially redesignated First Landing State Park that year, though longtime Tidewater residents frequently still refer to it by its former name.Template:Sfn The renaming was part of a broader effort to reframe the site's public identity ahead of the 2007 anniversary events, which brought national attention and a formal re-enactment of the 1607 landing to the park's shores.
Native American Heritage
Long before English colonists arrived, Virginia Indian tribes relied on the coastal area as a seasonal source of food and resources, establishing temporary hunting and fishing camps during the summer months. The 1607 expedition's journals record encounters with Algonquian-speaking peoples in the vicinity of Cape Henry within days of the landing.
First Landing State Park holds the repatriated remains of 64 Virginia Indians in a ceremonial gravesite within the park. The remains, which had been held by the Smithsonian Institution, were returned to Virginia in 1997 under the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), which requires federal agencies and institutions receiving federal funding to return Native American cultural items and human remains to lineal descendants and culturally affiliated tribes.Template:Sfn
Geography and Natural Features
First Landing State Park occupies the southern tip of Cape Henry in northern Virginia Beach, where the Chesapeake Bay meets the Atlantic Ocean. The park encompasses a striking range of habitats compressed into a relatively small area: open bay beach, back dunes, upland maritime forest, tidal salt marsh, freshwater wetlands, and bald cypress swamp. It is also the northernmost location on the East Coast where subtropical and temperate plant species grow together in the same community — a convergence driven by the moderating influence of the Chesapeake Bay and the region's position at the boundary of two distinct climate zones.Template:Sfn
The park's most dramatic topographic feature is its ancient dune system, which reaches heights of up to 75 feet — the highest natural points in southeastern Virginia. These dunes were built over thousands of years by wind and wave action along the bay shoreline and have since been stabilized by deep-rooted vegetation. Spanish moss drapes the live oaks and loblolly pines of the maritime forest that now covers much of the dune system, creating an environment more commonly associated with the Carolinas or Georgia than with coastal Virginia.
The 3,598-acre Seashore Natural Area, a portion of which falls within the park's boundaries, was listed as a National Natural Landmark in 1965 by the National Park Service. The designation recognized the ecological significance of the park's forested dunes, its rare maritime forest community — considered one of the most endangered habitat types in the world — and its unusual assemblage of Atlantic white cedar, bald cypress, and Coastal Plain plant species that together form communities found in few other places along the Eastern Seaboard.Template:Sfn
The park's interior waterways include a series of cypress swamps and tidal creeks that have served human activity for centuries. Native American canoes, Colonial-era settlers, and later merchant mariners, privateers, and military vessels navigated or sheltered in these waters. The cypress swamps provided fresh water to ships anchored offshore during the War of 1812, and local tradition holds that the pirate Blackbeard used the Narrows area of the park as a hiding place. Union and Confederate patrol vessels used the park's interior waterways during the Civil War.
The Rainbow Sheen in the Swamps
Visitors to the park's cypress swamp trails frequently notice a rainbow-colored sheen floating on the surface of standing water and sometimes mistake it for an oil spill or pollution. The phenomenon is entirely natural. The sheen is produced by iron-oxidizing bacteria and biofilms — thin microbial mats that form on the surface of anaerobic, or oxygen-depleted, water as organic matter decays on the swamp floor. As iron compounds in the decomposing leaf litter oxidize and rise to the surface, they form a thin, iridescent film that refracts light in the same way as petroleum products.
The easiest way to distinguish natural biofilm from an actual oil slick is to disturb the surface: biofilm fractures and breaks apart into rigid plates when touched, while petroleum-based oil spreads and flows back together. The sheen in First Landing's swamps is a sign of a healthy, active decomposition cycle — not contamination.
Trails and Recreation
The park features 1.5 miles of shoreline along the Chesapeake Bay and more than 20 miles of trails traversing its varied habitats. The trail system reaches into virtually every corner of the park, passing through cypress swamp, salt marsh, maritime forest, freshwater wetlands, dune systems, and bay shoreline. With the exception of the beach itself, nearly every significant habitat type in the park can be accessed on foot.
The Bald Cypress Trail is a 1.5-mile loop through the park's cypress swamp, traveling on wooden boardwalks and observation platforms that place visitors directly above the water and root systems of the ancient trees. The Long Creek Trail runs five miles through open salt marsh along the edge of the Chesapeake Bay, passing White Hill Lake and offering some of the finest wading bird and waterfowl observation in the region. The Cape Henry Trail, at 5.9 miles, is the only trail in the park open to bicycles and cuts through the heart of the park's upland forest.Template:Sfn
Beyond hiking and biking, the park offers swimming along its Chesapeake Bay beachfront, boating, fishing, crabbing, picnicking, and a range of naturalist programs. A boat launch is located at the end of the 64th Street park road, which terminates at the Narrows — a channel of water between Broad Bay and Linkhorn Bay. Fishing and crabbing are popular throughout the park's waterways and beach; a valid Virginia saltwater fishing license is required.Template:Sfn Open fires are prohibited throughout the park from midnight to 4:00 p.m. daily, and visitors should check current seasonal fire regulations before arrival.
Overnight Accommodations
The park operates more than 200 campsites with a range of accommodation types. Options include water and electric hook-up sites, tent campsites, six two-bedroom frame cabins, and fourteen two-bedroom cinderblock cabins. The park also offers recreational yurts — circular, semi-permanent shelters derived from the portable dwellings of Central Asian nomadic peoples — located along the dune system near the Chesapeake Bay. The yurts function as a middle ground between tent camping and cabin rentals, with more structural protection than a traditional tent and a closer connection to the outdoors than a fully enclosed cabin.Template:Sfn
First Landing State Park is open every day from 7 a.m. to dusk, with overnight areas accessible around the clock when open for the season. A $7 per vehicle entrance fee applies for most of the year; visits during peak-season weekends and select holidays cost $10 per vehicle.Template:Sfn
Education and Visitor Center
The park's Chesapeake Bay Center serves as both a visitor center and an environmental education facility. It features aquariums and a wet laboratory operated in partnership with the Virginia Aquarium and Marine Science Center, along with historical exhibits focused on the 1607 landing, a camp store, an outdoor amphitheater, and a Gateways Program regional welcome center.Template:Sfn
The park offers self-guided and ranger-led programs covering topics from crabbing and junior ranger activities to beach ecology walks and formal environmental education curricula. Large groups — school field trips, community organizations, and clubs — can request programming tailored to historical, cultural, or environmental themes. The park participates in Virginia's State Parks: Your Backyard Classrooms initiative, a 40-activity curriculum guide used by K–12 classroom teachers and home-school educators across the state.Template:Sfn
The Friends of First Landing State Park is a nonprofit organization that supports the park through fundraising and volunteer programs, including trail maintenance, interpretive events, and shoreline cleanups.Template:Sfn
Proposed Road Development
A proposed extension of Nimmo Parkway through southern Virginia Beach has raised concerns among conservationists and park supporters about the potential impact on First Landing's natural preserve. The proposed alignment would pass through or adjacent to protected land associated with the park, and environmental advocates have called for an independent assessment of the route's ecological consequences before any construction proceeds. The Virginia Department of Transportation has not announced a final decision on the project's alignment as of 2025.
References
Sources
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- Template:Cite book
- {{cite book |ref=Template:Sfnref |last=Percy |first=George |title=Observations Gathered out of a Discourse of the Plantation of the Southern Colony in Virginia by the English, 1606 |year=1608 |publisher=William Welby |location