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Village Craftsmen
170
Howard Street
PO Box
248
Ocracoke Island,
NC 27960
252-928-5541
info@villagecraftsmen.com
Ocracoke Newsletter
April 21, 2008
Portsmouth Island Homecoming, 2008:
Honoring the Life Savers
On Saturday, April 19, more than 400 people gathered on Portsmouth
Island, just across the inlet from Ocracoke. The occasion
was the biennial Homecoming event sponsored by Friends of Portsmouth Island and the Cape Lookout National Seashore.
Portsmouth Village, as seen from the Tower of the Life Saving Station:

(Click on photo to view larger image. Photo by Amy Howard.)
No one has lived permanently on Portsmouth Island since the very
early 1970s. Henry Pigott, the island's last male resident, died
in 1971. Shortly thereafter the island's remaining two residents,
Marian Babb and Elma Dixon, moved to the mainland. Without paved roads,
electricity, municipal water, or ferry service, Portsmouth was
abandoned.
Eighteen years later the organization Friends of Portsmouth Island
was formed. Since that time an impressive amount of restoration
and other work has been done on extant public buildings and
private homes that remain in this "village forgotten by time."
This year the focus of the day was on the historic Life Saving
Station and the many heroic men who served there from 1895 until 1937,
and for two additional years when the station was
reactivated during World War II to protect our shores from attack.
Boats to Portsmouth left the National Park Service docks on Ocracoke
starting at 7:30 a.m. and continued to run into the late morning.
Captain Eric Ferrying Folks to Portsmouth:

(Click on photo to view larger image. Photo by Amy Howard.)
Along the sandy path into the village volunteers had tables set up to
register everyone who had ever lived on the island or whose family had,
or whose ancestors had served in the Life Saving Station.
Typical Island Home:

(Click on photo to view larger image. Photo by Jim Fineman.)
Once on the island, visitors could stop by the old post office to mail
letters with a special postmark honoring the day.
Portsmouth Post Office:

(Click on photo to view larger image. Photo by Jim Fineman.)
Ocracoke's post
office staff was there, behind the simple wooden counter, stamping
letters and post cards, while folks perused the shelves stocked
with merchandise typical of the years when the small building also
served as a general store.
Inside the Portsmouth Post Office:

(Click on photo to view larger image. Photo by Amy Howard.)
From 9 o'clock until 10 o'clock visitors gathered in the lawn of the
Dixon-Salter home (now the Visitors Center) to listen
to stories told by descendants of island residents.
Dixon-Salter Home:

(Click on photo to view larger image. Photo by Amy Howard.)
At
9:30 some folks filed into the pews of the Methodist Church for an old
time hymn sing.
Portsmouth Methodist Church:

(Click on photo to view larger image. Photo by Jim Fineman.)
Classic hymns such as What a Friend We Have in Jesus, I Need Thee Every Hour, and In the Garden
echoed through the historic structure bringing life back into a church
that has not had a full-time preacher for almost a century, nor a congregation
since 1971.
Inside the Church:

(Click on photo to view larger image. Photo by Jim Fineman.)
Throughout the day there was opportunity to stroll through the village
and admire the now empty homes and other structures that were alive
with residents several generations ago.
Recently Restored Island Home:

(Click on photo to view larger image. Photo by Jim Fineman.)
Portsmouth Schoolhouse (note the round wooden cistern):

(Click on photo to view larger image. Photo by Jim Fineman.)
Henry Pigott's House:

(Click on photo to view larger image. Photo by Jim Fineman.)
Another View of Henry's House:

(Click on photo to view larger image. Photo by Jim Fineman.)
The central program of the day convened under an expansive canvas tent
at 10:30. After recognizing Portsmouth families and guests,
Frances Eubanks, granddaughter of a prominent island couple, read a
history of Portsmouth. Afterwards, Connie Mason sang one of her original tunes,
"Marian's Song," to celebrate life as it once was on this remote
outpost. At the conclusion of the song James Carter, a cousin of
Henry Pigott, read a passage of scripture from Henry's Bible.
LCDR David Obermeir, representing the US Coast Guard, delivered brief
remarks before Ed Burgess, President of Friends of Portsmouth, asked
all present to join him in a moment of silence to honor the families of
Portsmouth, members of the US Life Saving Service, and the US Coast
Guard.
Portsmouth Life Saving Station:

(Click on photo to view larger image. Photo by Amy Howard.)
Stairway in the Station:

(Click on photo to view larger image. Photo by Amy Howard.)
Sleeping Quarters:

(Click on photo to view larger image. Photo by Amy Howard.)
His Great-great Grandfather's Bunk &Trunk?:

(Click on photo to view larger image. Photo by Amy Howard.)
Special music and a closing prayer by Ocracoke's Methodist minister,
Joyce Reynolds, ended the program, or at least the formal
presentations. But a special treat awaited. Everyone moved
closer to the now unused grass landing strip for a demonstration of an
historic rescue operation by Coast Guard personnel and the
Chicamacomico Life Saving Station Historical Association from Hatteras
Island.
Life Saving Drill Begins:

(Click on photo to view larger image. Photo by Jim Fineman.)
Readying the Beach Cart:

(Click on photo to view larger image. Photo by Amy Howard.)
The Lyle Gun:

(Click on photo to view larger image. Photo by Amy Howard.)
Firing the Shot Line:

(Click on photo to view larger image. Photo by Amy Howard.)
The Breeches Buoy:

(Click on photo to view larger image. Photo by Amy Howard.)
After the demonstration folks lined up under a tent for a delicious pot
luck dinner on the grounds. There were copious amounts of shrimp,
chicken, ham, potato salad, deviled eggs, beans, and much more, as well
as all manner of sweets and fancy desserts.
There was also ample time to enjoy the simple pleasures of Portsmouth
Island, such as a walk through one of the sandy paths that meander
through cedar, pine, and live oak.
A Quiet Stroll:

(Click on photo to view larger image. Photo by Amy Howard.)
As the festivities wound down, hugs, handshakes, tears, and heartfelt goodbyes prevailed as old
friends, distant family members, and new acquaintances bid each other
adieu. All agreed that the weather was superb (bright sunshine,
gentle breezes, and warm sunshine prevailed)...and that the mosquitoes
were exceptionally considerate (most declined to join in the
festivities!). By late in the afternoon everyone (with the
exception of a handful of hearty folks) had been transported back to
Ocracoke or to the mainland.
Ready to Leave:

(Click on photo to view larger image. Photo by Amy Howard.)
Special thanks to the Friends of Portsmouth Island for the following histories:
Portsmouth 255 Years
To protect Ocracoke Inlet and at the same time provide suitable
facilities for the hundreds of vessels using it as a port of entry, the
North Carolina Colonial Assembly in 1753 passed an act "laying out a
Town on Core Banks, near Ocracoke Inlet, in Carteret County, and for
appointing Commissioners for completing the fort at or near the same
place."
Under the terms of this act Joseph Bell of Carteret County, John
Williams and Joseph Leech of New Bern, Michael Coutanch of Bath Town,
and John Campbell of Edenton were named commissioners "with full power
and authority to lay out fifty acres of land on core Banks, most
convenient to the said harbour, adjoining the said Banks for a town, by
the name of Portsmouth, with lots of half an acre each, with convenient
streets, as they may think requisite."
Because "the said Town will be a Maratime Town far distant from the
bulk of Inhabitants of this Province, and liable to the Depredations of
an Enemy in Time of War, and Insults from Pirates and other rude People
in Time of Peace," the 2,000 pounds previously authorized for a fort to
guard Ocracoke Inlet was to be turned over to the new commissioners for
the construction of a fortification to be known as Fort Granville.
Thus Portsmouth was founded over 255 years ago. Though it has
endured wars, hard economic times, and storms, Portsmouth continues to
live as a village and as a memory in hearts and minds -- a memory of
hand working people and of a less complicated time when one could care
for families and neighbors. These Homecomings allow the renewal
of friendships and reestablishment of roots in this wonderful village
of memories.
Portsmouth Life-Saving Station
Congress authorized a Life-Saving Station at Portsmouth, North Carolina
in 1888; but for unknown reasons, development of the station did not
begin for five more years. The site of the station was chosen by
the District superintendent of construction Captain C.A. Abbey, civil
engineer Paul Bausch, and a committee that included the Keeper of the
Cape Lookout Life-Saving Station William H. Gaskill, all of whom
visited the site sometime between June 8 and June 11, 1893.
In a letter to the General superintendent dated July 3, 1894, Abbey
reported that the Portsmouth station had been completed on June 28,
1894. The first Keeper, F.F. Terrell, was on duty at the end of
September 1894; but without a crew. The first full entries in the
Station's log book do not appear until November 3, 1894, when Keeper
Terrell listed what was apparently a temporary crew of six. The
first permanent crew signed articles of agreement for service on March
11, 1895.
The station was decommissioned on June 1, 1937. After Pearl
Harbor, Portsmouth was reactivated to meet the war-time need for
coastal observation. In 1942 or 1943 the station was remodeled
and for two years during the war, the beaches of Portsmouth were
patrolled by coast Guardsmen on horseback.
In 1945, the Coast Guard permanently closed the station. In the
early 1950s, the Brant Rock Rod and Gun Club acquired the old station
for a private club house. They created a landing strip for planes
and occupied the building on a seasonal basis until it was incorporated
into Cape Lookout National Seashore in 1977.
The design and plan for the Portsmouth Life-Saving Station followed
with some variation, those developed by Life-Saving Service architect
George R. Tolman in 1891 for a station at Quonochontaug near
Charleston, Rhode Island. This design was used for construction
of some twenty Life-Saving stations in the 1890s. Over half of
these have been destroyed and all others with the exception of the
Portsmouth station have had major modification.s The Portsmouth
Life-Saving Station is a true historical and architectural jewel that
is treasured by the citizens of North Carolina and the United
States.
Click here to read more about Portsmouth Island & to see more photos.
Click here to join Friends of Portsmouth Island!
Portsmouth Church & Marsh:

(Click on photo to view larger image. Photo by Jim Fineman.)
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