South Norfolk
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Raymond L. Harper
Author and local historian Raymond L. Harper celebrates the greater Chesapeake area of a bygone era, when the city wore a much different countenance and life moved at a much slower pace, through a fascinating selection of old photographs and postcards. Whether a longtime native who remembers the city under an assortment of different names and boundaries or a newcomer to Chesapeake, Norfolk County will prove an entertaining and educational addition to any library.
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South Norfolk - Raymond L. Harper
Rudis.
INTRODUCTION
On November 18, 1618, the Virginia Company’s London Council ordered that the Virginia Colony be divided into four large corporations. For purposes of local administration each was to be a parish of the Church of England, and was to have its own chief executive and military officer and, later, either justices or a court of law. Since each corporation was an ecclesiastical parish, it was required to have a minister, churchwardens, and vestry.
Between the years of 1632 and 1634 the Virginia Colony was divided into eight shires or counties. The eight original shires were Accawmack, Charles City, Charles River, Elizabeth City, Henrico, James City, Warrosquyoake, and Warwick River. Elizabeth City County extended on both sides of Hampton Roads. The area from which South Norfolk eventually emerged was successively part of Elizabeth City County in 1634, New Norfolk County in 1636, Lower Norfolk County in 1637, and Norfolk County in 1691. In 1639, South Norfolk was part of the Southern Shore Parish, and soon after 1643, it was included in the Elizabeth River Parish. South Norfolk as a community had its beginning in 1661 when the Southern Branch Chapel of the Church of England was built on a site between Scuffletown Creek and Jones’ Creek in the vicinity of present-day Lakeside Park. There were settlers before then, but the opening of the chapel marked the beginning of the formal record keeping of events like births, deaths, and marriages. Upon division of the Elizabeth River Parish in 1761, the area became a part of the St. Brides Parish.
The area that became South Norfolk experienced some settlement during the Colonial period but remained rural until the late 19th century. The City of Norfolk, located across the Eastern Branch of the Elizabeth River, did not reach its full potential until after the post-Civil War depression, when railroads began to bring coal and produce from the west and south. The new railroads were a boon to Norfolk and also to the farms and villages of Norfolk County. Norfolk’s location on the Elizabeth River gave it a prime position for shipping, but prohibited a natural expansion across the river’s Eastern Branch. When the railroads came through Norfolk County, they encouraged development all along the line. New industries grew up along the Eastern and Southern Branches of the Elizabeth River, and new businesses and housing appeared near the railroad line.
Just prior to 1870, the entire southside was considered Berkley. Berkley was the village adjacent to the land that became South Norfolk and was incorporated as a town in 1890. Although several homes had already been built in the area, information indicates that developers began to make plans for development of South Norfolk as early as 1889. This land, south of Berkley and Norfolk, began to be developed by the laying out of streets and building lots. The farm comprising the land between Berkley and what is now Poindexter Street was known as the Green House tract. It was purchased by Alvah H. Martin and others for the sum of $3,500, divided into lots, and put upon the market under the name of Elmsley. Elmsley was bounded by Poindexter, Eighteenth, Liberty, and B
Streets. The land between B
and D
Streets was owned by W.S. Butt. Around 1887 there was a footbridge across the creek at the south end of Main Street which connected Berkley to the Butt plantation in South Norfolk. Some years later, a large part of Mr. Butt’s land was purchased by the Greenleaf Johnson Lumber Company.
During this period, South Norfolk had grown rapidly by the development of ten different tracts, including farms of considerable acreage. Among the area’s first industries were the Roanoke Railroad and Lumber Company, the J.R. Young Fertilizer Company, and Robertson Chemical Company. Prior to September 1919, South Norfolk was a flourishing community in Washington Magisterial District, Norfolk County. On September 19, 1919, the village of South Norfolk was incorporated into a town, and on January 5, 1921, it became a city of the second class. The Virginia Constitution required that a city’s population reach 10,000 before that city could qualify as first class. This requirement was met in 1950 when South Norfolk annexed the town of Portlock, and shortly thereafter in 1951, South Norfolk became a city of the first class. On Tuesday, February 13, 1962, city and county voters in a merger referendum approved the consolidation of Norfolk County and the City of South Norfolk. As a result of this action, the City of Chesapeake was born on January 1, 1963.
This book contains photographs from the 1880s to the 1960s. Come along with me to the South Norfolk of long ago. It was a close-knit, very friendly community and a wonderful place to grow