First Landing State Park — Where America Began: Difference between revisions
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First Landing State Park | {{Infobox park | ||
| name = First Landing State Park | |||
| photo = First Landing State Park Virginia.jpg | |||
| photo_caption = Maritime forest and bald cypress swamp at First Landing State Park | |||
| location = Virginia Beach, Virginia, United States | |||
| nearest_city = Virginia Beach, Virginia | |||
| area = 2,888 acres (1,169 ha) | |||
| established = 1936 | |||
| visitation = 1,000,000+ annually | |||
| governing_body = Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation | |||
}} | |||
First Landing State Park | First Landing State Park sits at Cape Henry on the southwestern shore of the Chesapeake Bay in Virginia Beach, Virginia, at the site where English colonists first came ashore in April 1607 before sailing west to establish Jamestown. The park spans approximately 2,888 acres and contains one of the most ecologically diverse natural areas on the East Coast, including rare bald cypress swamps, maritime forest dominated by live oaks, and coastal dune systems.<ref>[https://www.dcr.virginia.gov/state-parks/first-landing "First Landing State Park"], ''Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation'', dcr.virginia.gov, accessed January 2025.</ref> Managed by the Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation (DCR), it holds designations as both a National Natural Landmark and a National Historic Landmark, reflecting its dual significance as an ecological preserve and a key site in the history of English colonization in North America. | ||
Formerly known as Seashore State Park, the park was renamed First Landing State Park in 1997 to | Formerly known as Seashore State Park, the park was renamed First Landing State Park in 1997 to honor the specific historical event that took place at Cape Henry: the first landfall of the Virginia Company's colonists on American soil.<ref>[https://www.dcr.virginia.gov/state-parks/first-landing "First Landing State Park"], ''Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation'', dcr.virginia.gov, accessed January 2025.</ref> It is consistently ranked as one of Virginia's most visited state parks, drawing more than one million visitors annually to its beaches, trails, campgrounds, and historical interpretive sites.<ref>[https://www.dcr.virginia.gov/state-parks/first-landing "First Landing State Park"], ''Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation'', dcr.virginia.gov, accessed January 2025.</ref> | ||
== History == | == History == | ||
=== The 1607 Landing === | |||
The | On April 26, 1607, three ships arrived at Cape Henry after a voyage of roughly four months from England. The ''Susan Constant'', the ''Godspeed'', and the ''Discovery'' carried approximately 105 colonists under contract with the Virginia Company of London. The expedition's commander was Captain Christopher Newport, not Captain John Smith, who was one of several prominent figures aboard but did not lead the voyage.<ref>[https://encyclopediavirginia.org/entries/cape-henry-first-landing-1607/ "Cape Henry, First Landing (1607)"], ''Encyclopedia Virginia'', encyclopediavirginia.org, accessed January 2025.</ref> Newport led the landing party ashore, where the colonists erected a wooden cross near the landing site and conducted a reconnaissance of the surrounding area. That same evening, members of the Chesapeake tribe, whose territory encompassed the Cape Henry region, attacked the landing party and wounded two men. It was a sharp early signal of the tensions that would define relations between English settlers and the indigenous peoples of the Tidewater for decades. | ||
The site | The colonists spent several days at Cape Henry before Newport led them west along the James River in search of a more defensible settlement site. They chose Jamestown Island, approximately 60 miles upriver from Cape Henry, where they founded the first permanent English settlement in North America on May 14, 1607.<ref>Horn, James. ''A Land As God Made It: Jamestown and the Birth of America''. Basic Books, 2005, pp. 58–72.</ref> Cape Henry was not Jamestown. It was the point of first contact with the Virginia landscape, the moment that set the colonial enterprise in motion. | ||
=== Indigenous History === | |||
The park's historical significance is shaped substantially by its location within the territories of the Powhatan Confederacy, a network of Algonquian-speaking tribes led by the paramount chief Wahunsenacah, known to the English as Chief Powhatan. The Chesapeake tribe, whose territory included modern-day Virginia Beach, was notably not part of the Confederacy at the time of the 1607 landing. In the years just before English arrival, Powhatan had driven the Chesapeake people to near-extinction, reportedly in response to a prophecy that a nation from the east would threaten his power.<ref>Rountree, Helen C. ''Pocahontas's People: The Powhatan Indians of Virginia Through Four Centuries''. University of Oklahoma Press, 1990, pp. 12–17.</ref> The Cape Henry landing site is therefore embedded in a longer and more complex Indigenous history that predates the English by centuries and was already in violent flux when Newport's ships arrived. | |||
The | Pocahontas, daughter of Chief Powhatan and a member of the Pamunkey people within the Confederacy, is frequently discussed in the context of early Jamestown history. Her story intersects with the broader First Landing narrative in that the colonists who came ashore at Cape Henry were the same group who would later encounter her father's confederacy. Historians have substantially revised popular accounts of her life. The legend of her interceding to save John Smith's life, in particular, is not documented in Smith's own writings until years after the alleged event, and scholars now treat it with considerable skepticism.<ref>Rountree, Helen C. ''Pocahontas, Powhatan, Opechancanough: Three Indian Lives Changed by Jamestown''. University of Virginia Press, 2005, pp. 40–55.</ref> | ||
Archaeological excavations in and around the park have recovered ceramics, metal tools, and evidence of early encampments, contributing to a body of physical evidence about the earliest days of English presence in Virginia. The Virginia Department of Historic Resources maintains records of these findings, which continue to inform interpretive programs at the park. | |||
=== Twentieth-Century Development === | |||
The park | The park was originally established in 1936 as Seashore State Park, developed in part through the labor of the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), a federal New Deal program that built infrastructure at state parks across Virginia and the rest of the country during the 1930s.<ref>[https://www.dcr.virginia.gov/state-parks/first-landing "First Landing State Park"], ''Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation'', dcr.virginia.gov, accessed January 2025.</ref> CCC workers constructed many of the trails, facilities, and structures that formed the foundation of the park's visitor infrastructure. The park operated under the Seashore State Park name for more than six decades before the 1997 renaming formalized its connection to the 1607 landing. | ||
The site was recognized as a National Historic Landmark in 1960, formalizing its place in the national record of historically significant locations.<ref>[https://www.nps.gov/subjects/nationalhistoriclandmarks/index.htm "National Historic Landmarks Program"], ''National Park Service'', nps.gov, accessed January 2025.</ref> Its designation as a National Natural Landmark followed, recognizing the ecological significance of its bald cypress swamp system and the rare combination of habitat types preserved within its boundaries. | |||
=== Historical Interpretation === | |||
The park's on-site museum features exhibits on the 1607 landing, the material culture of early colonial life, and the history of the Powhatan people. The museum's exhibits have been revised over the years to reflect more current historical scholarship, including more accurate representations of Powhatan culture and the consequences of colonization for Indigenous communities. Educational programs and seasonal historical reenactments are offered throughout the year, drawing school groups and researchers alongside general visitors. | |||
Captain John Smith's association with the site has sometimes overshadowed the roles of others involved in the expedition. Smith was present on the voyage and would go on to become a central figure at Jamestown, but Christopher Newport commanded the landing party at Cape Henry. Smith's writings, including ''A Map of Virginia'' (1612) and ''The Generall Historie of Virginia'' (1624), remain valuable primary sources, but historians now read them as one colonist's self-promotional account among many perspectives.<ref>[https://encyclopediavirginia.org/entries/smith-john-1580-1631/ "Smith, John (1580–1631)"], ''Encyclopedia Virginia'', encyclopediavirginia.org, accessed January 2025.</ref> | |||
Near the park boundary, the Cape Henry Memorial, a granite cross erected in 1896 by the Daughters of the American Colonists, marks the approximate site of the 1607 landing. The memorial is administered by the National Park Service and stands on federal land at Joint Expeditionary Base Fort Story, adjacent to the state park.<ref>[https://www.nps.gov/came/index.htm "Cape Henry Memorial"], ''National Park Service'', nps.gov, accessed January 2025.</ref> It's one of several overlapping commemorative and natural sites clustered at the tip of Cape Henry, including the historic Cape Henry Lighthouses. | |||
== | == Geography == | ||
The park's | First Landing State Park sits at Cape Henry, the northern headland at the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay, within the city limits of Virginia Beach. The park's eastern edge faces the Atlantic Ocean, while its western and northern edges border the Chesapeake Bay, placing it at a dramatic intersection of coastal environments. It is not located on the York River or near the mouth of the James River, a common geographic misconception among first-time visitors.<ref>[https://www.dcr.virginia.gov/state-parks/first-landing "First Landing State Park"], ''Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation'', dcr.virginia.gov, accessed January 2025.</ref> | ||
The park's 2,888 acres sit on the Atlantic Coastal Plain, a low-lying region shaped by millennia of sediment deposition, erosion, and fluctuating sea levels. Elevations rarely exceed 75 feet above sea level. Sandy soils dominate the upland areas, while tidal marshes and swamp forests occupy the lower-lying zones closer to the bay. This combination of substrates and hydrological conditions produces an unusually rich variety of plant communities within a compact area. | |||
The maritime forest along the dunes is dominated by live oaks, American holly, and wax myrtle, species adapted to salt spray and sandy, nutrient-poor soils. Farther inland, the landscape gives way to one of the northernmost stands of bald cypress swamp in the United States, a globally rare ecosystem more commonly associated with the Gulf Coast and Deep South. These swamps, fed by freshwater seepage and seasonal flooding, support a dense canopy of bald cypress and water tupelo rising from still, dark water. The coastal dunes along the Atlantic shoreline are part of a dynamic system shaped continuously by wind and wave action, providing critical habitat for nesting shorebirds and serving as a natural buffer against storm surge. The tidal flats and salt marshes bordering the Chesapeake Bay support populations of blue crab, striped bass, and various species of migratory waterfowl. | |||
== | == Ecology and Natural Significance == | ||
First Landing State Park was designated a National Natural Landmark in recognition of the exceptional ecological value of its bald cypress swamp system and the rare assemblage of habitats preserved within its boundaries. The combination of maritime forest, freshwater swamp, salt marsh, and barrier beach within a single contiguous protected area is considered scientifically significant and draws researchers from institutions across the Mid-Atlantic region.<ref>[https://www.dcr.virginia.gov/state-parks/first-landing "First Landing State Park"], ''Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation'', dcr.virginia.gov, accessed January 2025.</ref> | |||
The park | Birdwatchers find the park particularly rewarding throughout the year. The mix of habitats supports a wide range of species. Ospreys nest along the bay shore in summer. Great blue herons and great egrets wade the tidal shallows. Barred owls call from the cypress swamp after dark, and during migration the park lies along the Atlantic Flyway, drawing waves of warblers, thrushes, and shorebirds in spring and fall. Red foxes, river otters, and white-tailed deer are among the mammal species regularly observed on the trails. | ||
The | Visitors walking the boardwalk trails through the swamp areas sometimes notice a shimmering, iridescent sheen on the surface of the water. Not pollution. The phenomenon is caused by natural biofilm: thin films of iron-oxidizing bacteria and decomposing organic matter that form on the water's surface as plant material breaks down in low-oxygen conditions.<ref>[https://www.vims.edu "Coastal Wetland Ecology Resources"], ''Virginia Institute of Marine Science'', vims.edu, accessed January 2025.</ref> There's a simple field test for distinguishing natural biofilm from petroleum contamination. An oil sheen holds its shape when disturbed and reforms after being poked. Natural biofilm fractures apart and doesn't reform quickly. The sheen in the park's swamps is the latter: evidence of active decomposition and nutrient cycling, not contamination. The swamp is functioning exactly as it should. | ||
Conservation management within the park focuses on controlling invasive plant species, maintaining the integrity of the dune system, and monitoring the health of the cypress swamp ecosystem. Rising sea levels and increasing storm intensity pose long-term threats to the park's low-lying habitats, and the DCR has conducted ongoing assessments of the park's vulnerability to climate-driven coastal change. | |||
== Conservation Challenges == | |||
The | The park's natural areas face pressure from proposed development in the surrounding region. A planned extension of Nimmo Parkway, a roadway project that would connect existing infrastructure to the Sandbridge area of Virginia Beach, would pass through or immediately adjacent to sections of the nature preserve, according to public planning documents reviewed by local advocacy groups.<ref>[https://www.facebook.com/groups/1630407693975633/posts/2722952024721189/ "First Landing State Park protects natural resources"], ''VB Bayfront Communities'', Facebook, accessed January 2025.</ref> Community members and environmental organizations have raised concerns about the project's potential impact on the park's wetland ecosystems and wildlife corridors. The proposed route has been a recurring subject of debate at Virginia Beach City Council meetings, with opponents arguing that the road would fragment habitat and introduce stormwater runoff into sensitive swamp areas. | ||
The DCR, local conservation organizations, and engaged residents have been tracking the planning process closely. The outcome of the Nimmo Parkway decision will have direct implications for one of the most ecologically intact natural areas remaining within the Virginia Beach city limits. Wetland loss in this section of the Chesapeake Bay watershed carries implications beyond the park itself: healthy tidal marshes and swamp systems contribute to water quality and provide habitat for commercially important species including blue crab and striped bass throughout the wider bay system. | |||
== | == Recreation == | ||
The park's trail system, 19 miles in total, is its primary draw for repeat visitors. The Cape Henry Trail, a multi-use path, runs the length of the park and can be accessed at several trailheads. Several shorter loop trails branch off into the cypress swamp and maritime forest, with boardwalk sections that allow dry passage through the wettest areas. Trails are open to hikers and cyclists, and some sections accommodate equestrians as well.<ref>[https://www.dcr.virginia.gov/state-parks/first-landing "First Landing State Park"], ''Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation'', dcr.virginia.gov, accessed January 2025.</ref> | |||
The park's beach along the Chesapeake Bay offers a different experience from the Atlantic oceanfront nearby: calmer water, less wave action, and a better vantage point for watching the steady maritime traffic entering and leaving the bay. Swimming, fishing, and wildlife observation are all common activities along the bay shore. The Cape Henry Lighthouses, located just outside the park boundary on federal land at Joint Expeditionary Base Fort Story, are closely associated with the First Landing site. The Old Cape Henry Lighthouse, completed in 1792, was the first lighthouse commissioned by the federal government of the United States.<ref>[https://www.nps.gov/came/index.htm "Cape Henry Memorial"], ''National Park Service'', nps.gov, accessed January 2025.</ref> | |||
The on-site museum provides interpretive context for the 1607 landing, with exhibits on the voyage from England, the early days of Cape Henry exploration, and the Indigenous communities of the Tidewater. Artifact displays include reproductions of colonial-era tools and maps alongside original objects recovered from archaeological sites in the region. Seasonal programming includes guided kayak tours of the bay and swamp waterways, historical walking tours, and family-oriented nature programs. | |||
The park's campground offers 222 campsites, including 20 cabins, and operates year-round. Year-round operation is relatively unusual for Virginia state parks and reflects the park's consistent popularity across all seasons.<ref>[https://www.dcr.virginia.gov/state-parks/first-landing "First Landing State Park"], ''Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation'', dcr.virginia.gov, accessed January 2025.</ref> Kayak and canoe rentals, guided programs, and event facilities add additional visitor options beyond the campground itself. | |||
== | == Economy == | ||
First Landing State Park is a significant driver of tourism in Virginia Beach, drawing visitors who combine the park with visits to other nearby historical sites including Colonial Williamsburg, the Jamestown Settlement, | |||
Revision as of 04:09, 1 June 2026
```mediawiki Template:Infobox park
First Landing State Park sits at Cape Henry on the southwestern shore of the Chesapeake Bay in Virginia Beach, Virginia, at the site where English colonists first came ashore in April 1607 before sailing west to establish Jamestown. The park spans approximately 2,888 acres and contains one of the most ecologically diverse natural areas on the East Coast, including rare bald cypress swamps, maritime forest dominated by live oaks, and coastal dune systems.[1] Managed by the Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation (DCR), it holds designations as both a National Natural Landmark and a National Historic Landmark, reflecting its dual significance as an ecological preserve and a key site in the history of English colonization in North America.
Formerly known as Seashore State Park, the park was renamed First Landing State Park in 1997 to honor the specific historical event that took place at Cape Henry: the first landfall of the Virginia Company's colonists on American soil.[2] It is consistently ranked as one of Virginia's most visited state parks, drawing more than one million visitors annually to its beaches, trails, campgrounds, and historical interpretive sites.[3]
History
The 1607 Landing
On April 26, 1607, three ships arrived at Cape Henry after a voyage of roughly four months from England. The Susan Constant, the Godspeed, and the Discovery carried approximately 105 colonists under contract with the Virginia Company of London. The expedition's commander was Captain Christopher Newport, not Captain John Smith, who was one of several prominent figures aboard but did not lead the voyage.[4] Newport led the landing party ashore, where the colonists erected a wooden cross near the landing site and conducted a reconnaissance of the surrounding area. That same evening, members of the Chesapeake tribe, whose territory encompassed the Cape Henry region, attacked the landing party and wounded two men. It was a sharp early signal of the tensions that would define relations between English settlers and the indigenous peoples of the Tidewater for decades.
The colonists spent several days at Cape Henry before Newport led them west along the James River in search of a more defensible settlement site. They chose Jamestown Island, approximately 60 miles upriver from Cape Henry, where they founded the first permanent English settlement in North America on May 14, 1607.[5] Cape Henry was not Jamestown. It was the point of first contact with the Virginia landscape, the moment that set the colonial enterprise in motion.
Indigenous History
The park's historical significance is shaped substantially by its location within the territories of the Powhatan Confederacy, a network of Algonquian-speaking tribes led by the paramount chief Wahunsenacah, known to the English as Chief Powhatan. The Chesapeake tribe, whose territory included modern-day Virginia Beach, was notably not part of the Confederacy at the time of the 1607 landing. In the years just before English arrival, Powhatan had driven the Chesapeake people to near-extinction, reportedly in response to a prophecy that a nation from the east would threaten his power.[6] The Cape Henry landing site is therefore embedded in a longer and more complex Indigenous history that predates the English by centuries and was already in violent flux when Newport's ships arrived.
Pocahontas, daughter of Chief Powhatan and a member of the Pamunkey people within the Confederacy, is frequently discussed in the context of early Jamestown history. Her story intersects with the broader First Landing narrative in that the colonists who came ashore at Cape Henry were the same group who would later encounter her father's confederacy. Historians have substantially revised popular accounts of her life. The legend of her interceding to save John Smith's life, in particular, is not documented in Smith's own writings until years after the alleged event, and scholars now treat it with considerable skepticism.[7]
Archaeological excavations in and around the park have recovered ceramics, metal tools, and evidence of early encampments, contributing to a body of physical evidence about the earliest days of English presence in Virginia. The Virginia Department of Historic Resources maintains records of these findings, which continue to inform interpretive programs at the park.
Twentieth-Century Development
The park was originally established in 1936 as Seashore State Park, developed in part through the labor of the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), a federal New Deal program that built infrastructure at state parks across Virginia and the rest of the country during the 1930s.[8] CCC workers constructed many of the trails, facilities, and structures that formed the foundation of the park's visitor infrastructure. The park operated under the Seashore State Park name for more than six decades before the 1997 renaming formalized its connection to the 1607 landing.
The site was recognized as a National Historic Landmark in 1960, formalizing its place in the national record of historically significant locations.[9] Its designation as a National Natural Landmark followed, recognizing the ecological significance of its bald cypress swamp system and the rare combination of habitat types preserved within its boundaries.
Historical Interpretation
The park's on-site museum features exhibits on the 1607 landing, the material culture of early colonial life, and the history of the Powhatan people. The museum's exhibits have been revised over the years to reflect more current historical scholarship, including more accurate representations of Powhatan culture and the consequences of colonization for Indigenous communities. Educational programs and seasonal historical reenactments are offered throughout the year, drawing school groups and researchers alongside general visitors.
Captain John Smith's association with the site has sometimes overshadowed the roles of others involved in the expedition. Smith was present on the voyage and would go on to become a central figure at Jamestown, but Christopher Newport commanded the landing party at Cape Henry. Smith's writings, including A Map of Virginia (1612) and The Generall Historie of Virginia (1624), remain valuable primary sources, but historians now read them as one colonist's self-promotional account among many perspectives.[10]
Near the park boundary, the Cape Henry Memorial, a granite cross erected in 1896 by the Daughters of the American Colonists, marks the approximate site of the 1607 landing. The memorial is administered by the National Park Service and stands on federal land at Joint Expeditionary Base Fort Story, adjacent to the state park.[11] It's one of several overlapping commemorative and natural sites clustered at the tip of Cape Henry, including the historic Cape Henry Lighthouses.
Geography
First Landing State Park sits at Cape Henry, the northern headland at the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay, within the city limits of Virginia Beach. The park's eastern edge faces the Atlantic Ocean, while its western and northern edges border the Chesapeake Bay, placing it at a dramatic intersection of coastal environments. It is not located on the York River or near the mouth of the James River, a common geographic misconception among first-time visitors.[12]
The park's 2,888 acres sit on the Atlantic Coastal Plain, a low-lying region shaped by millennia of sediment deposition, erosion, and fluctuating sea levels. Elevations rarely exceed 75 feet above sea level. Sandy soils dominate the upland areas, while tidal marshes and swamp forests occupy the lower-lying zones closer to the bay. This combination of substrates and hydrological conditions produces an unusually rich variety of plant communities within a compact area.
The maritime forest along the dunes is dominated by live oaks, American holly, and wax myrtle, species adapted to salt spray and sandy, nutrient-poor soils. Farther inland, the landscape gives way to one of the northernmost stands of bald cypress swamp in the United States, a globally rare ecosystem more commonly associated with the Gulf Coast and Deep South. These swamps, fed by freshwater seepage and seasonal flooding, support a dense canopy of bald cypress and water tupelo rising from still, dark water. The coastal dunes along the Atlantic shoreline are part of a dynamic system shaped continuously by wind and wave action, providing critical habitat for nesting shorebirds and serving as a natural buffer against storm surge. The tidal flats and salt marshes bordering the Chesapeake Bay support populations of blue crab, striped bass, and various species of migratory waterfowl.
Ecology and Natural Significance
First Landing State Park was designated a National Natural Landmark in recognition of the exceptional ecological value of its bald cypress swamp system and the rare assemblage of habitats preserved within its boundaries. The combination of maritime forest, freshwater swamp, salt marsh, and barrier beach within a single contiguous protected area is considered scientifically significant and draws researchers from institutions across the Mid-Atlantic region.[13]
Birdwatchers find the park particularly rewarding throughout the year. The mix of habitats supports a wide range of species. Ospreys nest along the bay shore in summer. Great blue herons and great egrets wade the tidal shallows. Barred owls call from the cypress swamp after dark, and during migration the park lies along the Atlantic Flyway, drawing waves of warblers, thrushes, and shorebirds in spring and fall. Red foxes, river otters, and white-tailed deer are among the mammal species regularly observed on the trails.
Visitors walking the boardwalk trails through the swamp areas sometimes notice a shimmering, iridescent sheen on the surface of the water. Not pollution. The phenomenon is caused by natural biofilm: thin films of iron-oxidizing bacteria and decomposing organic matter that form on the water's surface as plant material breaks down in low-oxygen conditions.[14] There's a simple field test for distinguishing natural biofilm from petroleum contamination. An oil sheen holds its shape when disturbed and reforms after being poked. Natural biofilm fractures apart and doesn't reform quickly. The sheen in the park's swamps is the latter: evidence of active decomposition and nutrient cycling, not contamination. The swamp is functioning exactly as it should.
Conservation management within the park focuses on controlling invasive plant species, maintaining the integrity of the dune system, and monitoring the health of the cypress swamp ecosystem. Rising sea levels and increasing storm intensity pose long-term threats to the park's low-lying habitats, and the DCR has conducted ongoing assessments of the park's vulnerability to climate-driven coastal change.
Conservation Challenges
The park's natural areas face pressure from proposed development in the surrounding region. A planned extension of Nimmo Parkway, a roadway project that would connect existing infrastructure to the Sandbridge area of Virginia Beach, would pass through or immediately adjacent to sections of the nature preserve, according to public planning documents reviewed by local advocacy groups.[15] Community members and environmental organizations have raised concerns about the project's potential impact on the park's wetland ecosystems and wildlife corridors. The proposed route has been a recurring subject of debate at Virginia Beach City Council meetings, with opponents arguing that the road would fragment habitat and introduce stormwater runoff into sensitive swamp areas.
The DCR, local conservation organizations, and engaged residents have been tracking the planning process closely. The outcome of the Nimmo Parkway decision will have direct implications for one of the most ecologically intact natural areas remaining within the Virginia Beach city limits. Wetland loss in this section of the Chesapeake Bay watershed carries implications beyond the park itself: healthy tidal marshes and swamp systems contribute to water quality and provide habitat for commercially important species including blue crab and striped bass throughout the wider bay system.
Recreation
The park's trail system, 19 miles in total, is its primary draw for repeat visitors. The Cape Henry Trail, a multi-use path, runs the length of the park and can be accessed at several trailheads. Several shorter loop trails branch off into the cypress swamp and maritime forest, with boardwalk sections that allow dry passage through the wettest areas. Trails are open to hikers and cyclists, and some sections accommodate equestrians as well.[16]
The park's beach along the Chesapeake Bay offers a different experience from the Atlantic oceanfront nearby: calmer water, less wave action, and a better vantage point for watching the steady maritime traffic entering and leaving the bay. Swimming, fishing, and wildlife observation are all common activities along the bay shore. The Cape Henry Lighthouses, located just outside the park boundary on federal land at Joint Expeditionary Base Fort Story, are closely associated with the First Landing site. The Old Cape Henry Lighthouse, completed in 1792, was the first lighthouse commissioned by the federal government of the United States.[17]
The on-site museum provides interpretive context for the 1607 landing, with exhibits on the voyage from England, the early days of Cape Henry exploration, and the Indigenous communities of the Tidewater. Artifact displays include reproductions of colonial-era tools and maps alongside original objects recovered from archaeological sites in the region. Seasonal programming includes guided kayak tours of the bay and swamp waterways, historical walking tours, and family-oriented nature programs.
The park's campground offers 222 campsites, including 20 cabins, and operates year-round. Year-round operation is relatively unusual for Virginia state parks and reflects the park's consistent popularity across all seasons.[18] Kayak and canoe rentals, guided programs, and event facilities add additional visitor options beyond the campground itself.
Economy
First Landing State Park is a significant driver of tourism in Virginia Beach, drawing visitors who combine the park with visits to other nearby historical sites including Colonial Williamsburg, the Jamestown Settlement,
- ↑ "First Landing State Park", Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation, dcr.virginia.gov, accessed January 2025.
- ↑ "First Landing State Park", Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation, dcr.virginia.gov, accessed January 2025.
- ↑ "First Landing State Park", Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation, dcr.virginia.gov, accessed January 2025.
- ↑ "Cape Henry, First Landing (1607)", Encyclopedia Virginia, encyclopediavirginia.org, accessed January 2025.
- ↑ Horn, James. A Land As God Made It: Jamestown and the Birth of America. Basic Books, 2005, pp. 58–72.
- ↑ Rountree, Helen C. Pocahontas's People: The Powhatan Indians of Virginia Through Four Centuries. University of Oklahoma Press, 1990, pp. 12–17.
- ↑ Rountree, Helen C. Pocahontas, Powhatan, Opechancanough: Three Indian Lives Changed by Jamestown. University of Virginia Press, 2005, pp. 40–55.
- ↑ "First Landing State Park", Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation, dcr.virginia.gov, accessed January 2025.
- ↑ "National Historic Landmarks Program", National Park Service, nps.gov, accessed January 2025.
- ↑ "Smith, John (1580–1631)", Encyclopedia Virginia, encyclopediavirginia.org, accessed January 2025.
- ↑ "Cape Henry Memorial", National Park Service, nps.gov, accessed January 2025.
- ↑ "First Landing State Park", Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation, dcr.virginia.gov, accessed January 2025.
- ↑ "First Landing State Park", Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation, dcr.virginia.gov, accessed January 2025.
- ↑ "Coastal Wetland Ecology Resources", Virginia Institute of Marine Science, vims.edu, accessed January 2025.
- ↑ "First Landing State Park protects natural resources", VB Bayfront Communities, Facebook, accessed January 2025.
- ↑ "First Landing State Park", Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation, dcr.virginia.gov, accessed January 2025.
- ↑ "Cape Henry Memorial", National Park Service, nps.gov, accessed January 2025.
- ↑ "First Landing State Park", Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation, dcr.virginia.gov, accessed January 2025.