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Entries in Island Facts (2)

ISLAND FACTS 101

Here are some more great facts aboout Bald Head Island... enjoy!

· Of Bald Head Island’s 12,000 acres, 10,000 acres are protected and will remain undeveloped — 2,000 acres are set aside for development.

· Bordering the island to the north, protected salt marsh and tidal creeks are ideal for fishing, canoeing and kayaking.

· Bald Head Island boasts a large maritime forest that is among the largest and most prized examples of its kind on the East Coast. Here, the island is dense with live oaks, dogwoods, sabal palms, cedars, yaupons, wax myrtles and junipers.

· Bald Head Island is one of the East Coast’s most important nesting grounds for loggerhead turtles. The Bald Head Island Conservancy is a nonprofit group that monitors loggerhead nesting on the island and works to protect this endangered species.

· The Cape Fear Light, a second lighthouse for Bald Head Island completed in 1903, was torn down in 1958. The lighthouse foundation remains and is a popular tourist destination.

· In close proximity to the Cape Fear Light foundation is Captain Charlie’s’ Station, three homes originally constructed in 1903 to house the Cape Fear Lighthouse keepers and their families. The three homes have been restored and are now available as rental cottages.

· Several infamous pirates, such as Stede Bonnet and Edward Teach (commonly known as Blackbeard) used Bald Head Island as a hideout and combat base in the 1700's.

As you can see the island has a ton of history... it is pretty neat to think of all of the amazing things that have happened on this little island and all of the crazy cool people that have stepped foot there, like Black Beard!

- Millie

Posted on Monday, September 17, 2007 at 09:07PM by Registered CommenterEditor in | CommentsPost a Comment

Island History

Over the next several months I will be giving you details, fun facts, history and stories about the Island... stay tuned for more neat information!

Lighthouses, Legends and Loggerheads

Bald Head Island’s history is peppered with colorful people and connections. Through the years, the island has been a breeding ground for wild boar, a prime hangout for bootleggers, a supplier of materials for cedar pencils, a Civil War fort, a nesting ground for loggerhead turtles, and a produce farm and fruit orchard. Pirates, lighthouse keepers, Indians, river pilots, ruffians, soldiers, farmers, and entrepreneurs of all types have come and gone, and yet, Bald Head Island’s essence is unchanged. This can only be because the island itself is a living thing, with its own integrity and spirit, its wild beauty more or less disregarding man’s inclination to tinker.

In the 17th and 18th centuries, when pirates ruled the waters off the coast of North Carolina with greed and terror, Bald Head Island was a favorite refuge and base for these notorious buccaneers. In all, the waters surrounding Cape Fear were a hideaway for hundreds of pirates, the most famous of which were Edward Teach, better known as Blackbeard, and Stede Bonnet, the gentleman pirate.

Bonnet, the so-called “Gentleman Pirate” from Barbados, was an educated retired military officer who turned to piracy in 1717 as a second career in order to escape what one historian tactfully referred to as “the discomforts he found in a married state.” During his short stint as a pirate, Bonnet terrorized the Carolina and Virginia coasts aboard his sailing sloop Revenge with 10 guns and 70 men.

For a brief time, Bonnet even linked up with Blackbeard, a pirate who never carried the title “gentleman.” In 1718 Blackbeard was cornered and killed aboard his sloop, Adventure, by two warships sent by the governor of Virginia. Just three weeks later, Bonnet was captured at Bonnet’s Creek in Southport by Colonel William Rhett of South Carolina and hanged near Charlestown. Their deaths marked a dramatic end to the Golden Age of Piracy in North Carolina.

Long before pirates ever discovered Bald Head Island’s nooks and crannies, Native Americans hunted Bald Head Island and fished its surrounding waters in the spring and summer while maintaining permanent settlements on the mainland. The island was, in effect, a seasonal retreat for the Native Americans when supplies of corn or grain began running low.

Early river pilots were responsible for giving Bald Head Island its unique and descriptive name. Eager to offer their navigational services to ships approaching the entrance to the Cape Fear River, they took up watch on a high dune headland on the southwest point of the island. According to local lore, the headland was worn bare of vegetation, making it stand out in contrast to the forest behind it. This “bald” headland served as a reference point for ships entering the river, and the name Bald Head Island has endured.

(the above story taken from www.baldheadisland.com)

- Millie

Posted on Wednesday, September 5, 2007 at 06:30PM by Registered CommenterEditor in | CommentsPost a Comment