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Portsmouth, North Carolina

Portsmouth Village
Portsmouth Church Cape Lookout NPS.jpg
Portsmouth Church
Portsmouth, North Carolina is located in North Carolina
Portsmouth, North Carolina
Portsmouth, North Carolina is located in the US
Portsmouth, North Carolina
Location North end of Portsmouth Island, Portsmouth, North Carolina
Coordinates 35°4′11″N 76°3′49.64″W / 35.06972°N 76.0637889°W / 35.06972; -76.0637889Coordinates: 35°4′11″N 76°3′49.64″W / 35.06972°N 76.0637889°W / 35.06972; -76.0637889
Area 250 acres (100 ha)
Architectural style Bungalow/craftsman, Stick/eastlake
NRHP Reference # 78000267
Added to NRHP November 29, 1978

Portsmouth was a fishing and shipping village located on Portsmouth Island on the Outer Banks in North Carolina. Portsmouth Island is a tidal island connected, under most conditions, to north end of the North Core Banks, across Ocracoke Inlet from the village of Ocracoke. The town lies in Carteret County, was established in 1753 by the North Carolina Colonial Assembly, and abandoned in 1971. Its remains are now part of the Cape Lookout National Seashore.

Ocracoke Inlet was a popular shipping lane during colonial times. Established in 1753, the town of Portsmouth functioned as a lightering port, where cargo from ocean-going vessels could be transferred to shallow-draft vessels capable of traversing Pamlico and Core Sounds. Portsmouth grew to a peak population of 685 in 1860. Though small, Portsmouth was one of the most important points-of-entry along the Atlantic coast in post-Revolutionary America.

In 1846, two strong hurricanes cut Oregon Inlet and deepened the existing Hatteras Inlet to the northeast, making Ocracoke Inlet a less desirable shipping lane by comparison. The waters around Portsmouth's harbor also began to shoal up, hastening its decline as a port. The Civil War was yet another blow as many people fled to the mainland when Union soldiers came to occupy the Outer Banks. Many didn't return after the war had ended and the Village of Portsmouth continued its decline, sped along by the occasional hurricane. The mammoth 1933 Atlantic hurricane season also served as a benchmark in the island's population decline, though more as a focal point of memory and a symbol of decline than the real cause of it. (These were the same hurricanes that led to the depopulation of the barrier islands on the Eastern Shore of Virginia and Maryland.)


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