Norfolk is an independent city in the Commonwealth of Virginia
in the United States. With a population of
234,403 as of the 2000
census, it is Virginia's second-largest incorporated city
behind its eastern neighbor, Virginia Beach
.
Norfolk is
located at the core of the Hampton Roads
metropolitan area, named for the large natural harbor of the same name located at the mouth
of Chesapeake Bay. It is one
of nine cities and seven counties that constitute the Hampton Roads
metro area, officially known as the
Virginia
Beach-Norfolk-Newport News, VA-NC MSA. The city is bordered to
the west by the
Elizabeth
River and to the north by the
Chesapeake Bay.
It also shares land
borders with the independent cities of Chesapeake
to its south and Virginia Beach
to its east. One of the oldest of the Seven Cities of
Hampton Roads
, Norfolk is considered to be the historic, urban,
financial, and cultural center of the region.
The city has a long history as a strategic military and
transportation point.
Norfolk Naval Base
is the world's largest such base, and the world's
largest military alliance, the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization
has its defense headquarters here. The city
also has the corporate headquarters of
Norfolk Southern Railway, one of
North America's principal
Class I
railroads, and
Maersk Line,
Limited, who manages the world's largest fleet of
US-flag vessels. As the city is bordered by
multiple bodies of water, Norfolk has many miles of riverfront and
bayfront property. It is linked to its neighbors by an extensive
network of
Interstate
highways,
bridges,
tunnels, and
bridge-tunnel complexes.
History
In 1619, the Governor for the
Virginia
Colony,
Sir George Yeardley
established four incorporations, termed citties (sic), for the
developed portion of the colony. These formed the basis for
colonial representative government in the newly minted
House of Burgesses. What would become
Norfolk was put under the
Elizabeth Cittie
incorporation.
In 1622,
Adam Thoroughgood (1604-1640) of
King's
Lynn
, Norfolk, England
, came to
Virginia as an indentured
servant. At the end of his contracted servitude, he
earned his freedom and became a leading citizen of the fledgling
colony.
In 1634
King Charles I
reorganized the colony into a system of
shires. The former
Elizabeth Cittie became
Elizabeth City Shire. After
persuading 105 people to settle in the colony, Thoroughgood was
granted a large land holding along the
Lynnhaven River in 1636.
When the
South Hampton Roads
portion of the shire was partitioned off, Thoroughgood suggested
the name of his birthplace for the newly formed
New Norfolk County. One year
later, it split into two counties,
Upper Norfolk County and
Lower Norfolk County (present
day Norfolk), chiefly on Thoroughgood’s recommendation.

Tricentennial half dollar
commemorative
Where one of Lord Dunmore's shells landed
grew in the late 1600s as a "Half Moone" fort was constructed and
were acquired in exchange for 10,000 pounds of tobacco. The House
of Burgesses established "Towne of Lower Norfolk County" in 1680.
In 1691, a final county subdivision took place when Lower Norfolk
County split to form
Norfolk
County (present day Norfolk, Chesapeake, and parts of
Portsmouth) and
Princess Anne
County (present day Virginia Beach). Norfolk was incorporated
in 1705 and in 1736,
George
II granted Norfolk a royal charter as a borough.By 1775,
Norfolk developed into what contemporary observers argued was the
most prosperous city in Virginia. It was an important port for
exporting goods to the British Isles and beyond. In part because of
its merchants' numerous trading ties with other parts of the
British Empire, Norfolk served as a strong base of
Loyalist support during the
early part of the
American
Revolution.
After fleeing the colonial capitol of
Williamsburg
, Lord Dunmore, the
Royal Governor of Virginia, tried to reestablish control of the
colony from Norfolk. Dunmore secured small victories at
Norfolk but was forced into exile by the American rebels, commanded
by
Colonel Woodford. His departure
brought an end to more than 168 years of British colonial rule in
Virginia.
On New Year's Day, 1776, Lord Dunmore's fleet of three ships
shelled the city of Norfolk for over eight hours. The damage from
the shells, and fires started by the British and spread by the
patriots, destroyed over 800 buildings, almost two-thirds of the
city. The patriots destroyed the remaining buildings for strategic
reasons in February.
Only the walls of Saint Paul's Episcopal Church
survived the bombardment and subsequent
fires. A cannonball from the bombardment (fired by the
Liverpool) remains
within the wall of Saint Paul's.
Following recovery from the Revolutionary War's burning, the 19th
century began inauspiciously for Norfolk and her citizens. In 1804,
another serious fire along the city’s waterfront destroyed some 300
buildings and the city experienced a serious economic
setback.
During the 1820s, agrarian communities across the
American South suffered a prolonged
recession, which caused many families to migrate to other areas.
Many
moved west into the Piedmont, or into Kentucky
and Tennessee
. Such migration also followed the exhaustion
of soil due to
tobacco cultivation in the
Tidewater. Virginia made various attempts to phase out
slavery, either through law (see
Thomas Jefferson Randolph's 1832
resolution) or through "
repatriation" of blacks to Africa.
Many
emigrants to Africa from Virginia and North Carolina
embarked from the port of Norfolk.
Joseph Jenkins Roberts, a native of
Norfolk, was an emigrant who became the first president of Liberia
.
In early 1861, Norfolk voters instructed their delegate to vote for
ratification of the ordinance of secession. Virginia voted to
secede from the
Union. In
the spring of 1862, the
Battle
of Hampton Roads took place off the northwest shore of the
city's
Sewell's Point Peninsula,
marking the first fight between two
ironclads, the
USS
Monitor and the
CSS
Virginia. The battle ended in a stalemate, but forever
changed the course of naval warfare; from then on,
warships were fortified with metal. In May 1862,
Norfolk Mayor William Lamb surrendered the city to
General John
E. Wool and
Union forces. They held the city under
martial law for the duration of the Civil War.
Thousands of slaves escaped to Union lines to gain their freedom
and set up schools in Norfolk so they could start learning before
the end of the war.
1907 brought both the
Virginian
Railway and the
Jamestown
Exposition to
Sewell's Point. The
large
Naval Review at the Exposition
demonstrated the peninsula's favorable location and laid the
groundwork for the world's largest naval base. Commemorating the
300th anniversary of the founding of Jamestown, the exposition
featured many prominent officials, including President
Theodore Roosevelt,
members of Congress, and
diplomat from 21 countries.

Logo for Jamestown Exposition in
1907
By 1917, as the US built up to enter
World
War I, the Naval Air Station Hampton Roads had been constructed
on the former exposition grounds.
In the first half of the twentieth century, Norfolk expanded its
borders through annexation.
In 1906, the City annexed the incorporated town of Berkley
, which stretched the city limits across the
Elizabeth River.
In 1923,
the city expanded to include Sewell's Point, Willoughby
Spit
, the town of Campostella, and the Ocean
View
area. The City included the Navy Base and miles of
beach property fronting on Hampton Roads
and Chesapeake
Bay. After a smaller annexation in 1959, and a
1988 land swap with Virginia Beach
, the city assumed its current
boundaries.
With the dawn of the
Interstate Highway System, new
highways opened in the region.
A series of bridges and tunnels constructed
during fifteen years linked Norfolk with the
Peninsula
, Portsmouth
, and Virginia Beach
. In 1952, the Downtown Tunnel
opened to connect Norfolk with the city of
Portsmouth. In 1991, the new Downtown Tunnel
/Berkley Bridge
complex opened a new system of multiple lanes of
highway and interchanges connecting Downtown Norfolk and Interstate 464 with the Downtown Tunnel
tubes. Additional bridges and tunnels included the
Hampton
Roads Bridge-Tunnel
in 1957, the Midtown Tunnel in 1962,
Hampton Roads Bridge Tunnel
and the
Virginia
Beach-Norfolk Expressway (
Interstate 264 and
State Route 44) in
1967.
In
reaction to the Supreme Court
ruling in the 1954 Brown v.
Board of
Education case which held that
segregated schools were
unconstitutional and order
integration, Virginia pursued a policy of
"
massive resistance."
The
Virginia
General Assembly
prohibited state funding for integrated public
schools. Norfolk's
private
schools had voluntarily integrated by choosing to comply with
the
Brown decision. In 1958,
United States district courts
in Virginia ordered schools to open for the first time on a
racially-integrated basis. In response,
Governor James Lindsay Almond, Jr. ordered
the schools closed.
Six Norfolk public schools serving over 10,000 Norfolk children
were closed.
The Virginia
Supreme Court of Appeals
declared the state law to
be in conflict with the state
constitution and ordered all public schools to be funded,
whether integrated or not. About 10 days later, Almond
capitulated and asked the General Assembly to rescind several
"massive resistance" laws. In September 1959, 17 black children
entered six previously segregated Norfolk public schools.
Virginian-Pilot editor
Lenoir Chambers editorialized
against massive resistance and earned the
Pulitzer Prize for
Editorial Writing.
After desegregation, and with new
suburban
developments beckoning, many white middle-class residents
moved out of the city along new highway routes,
and Norfolk's population fell. In the late 1960s and early 1970s,
the advent of newer suburban shopping destinations along with
freeways spelled demise for the fortunes of downtown's
Granby Street commercial corridor, located
just a few blocks inland from the waterfront. The opening of malls
and large shopping centers drew off retail business from Granby
Street.
Norfolk's city leaders began a long push to
revive its urban core. While Granby Street
underwent decline, Norfolk city leaders focused on the waterfront
and its collection of decaying piers and warehouses. Many obsolete
shipping and warehousing facilities were demolished. In their
place, planners created a new boulevard, Waterside Drive, along
which many of the high-rise buildings in Norfolk's
skyline were erected.
The City
and The Rouse Company developed
the Waterside
festival marketplace in 1983 to attract people to
the waterfront and catalyze further downtown redevelopment.
Other
facilities opened in the ensuing years, including the Harbor Park
baseball stadium, home of the Norfolk Tides Triple-A minor league baseball team. In
1995, the Park was named the finest facility in minor league
baseball by
Baseball
America.
Norfolk's efforts to revitalize its downtown have attracted acclaim
from economic development and urban planning circles throughout the
country. Downtown's rising fortunes helped to expand the city's
revenues and allowed the city to direct attention to other
neighborhoods.
Geography
According to the
United
States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of
96.3 square miles (249.4 km²), of which, 53.7 square
miles (139.2 km²) of it is land and 42.6 square miles
(110.3 km²) of it (44.22%) is water. Norfolk is located at
(36.885747° N, 76.2599° W)
The city
is located at the southeastern corner of Virginia
at the junction of the Elizabeth and James rivers,
bordering the Chesapeake Bay.
The Hampton Roads
Metropolitan Statistical
Area (officially known as the
Virginia
Beach-Norfolk-Newport News, VA-NC MSA) is the
34th
largest in the United States, with a total population of
1,576,370.
The area includes the Virginia cities of
Norfolk, Virginia
Beach
, Chesapeake
, Hampton
, Newport News
, Poquoson
, Portsmouth
, Suffolk
, Williamsburg
, and the counties of Gloucester
, Isle of Wight
, James City
, Mathews
, Surry
, and York
, as well as the North Carolina
county of Currituck
. The city of Norfolk is recognized as the
central business district, while the Virginia Beach oceanside
resort district and Williamsburg
are primarily centers of tourism. Virginia
Beach is the most populated city within the MSA though it functions
more as a suburb.
In
addition to extensive riverfront property, Norfolk has miles of
bayfront resort property and beaches in the Willoughby
Spit
and Ocean View
communities.
Climate
Norfolk has a
humid
subtropical climate with moderate changes of seasons. Spring
arrives in March with mild days and cool nights, and by late May,
the temperature has warmed up considerably to herald warm summer
days. Summer temperatures can be unpleasantly hot, often topping 90
°F (32 °C) with high humidity. On average, July is the warmest
month of the year, with the maximum average precipitation.
Hurricanes and tropical storms usually brush Norfolk and only
rarely make landfalls in the area.
Fall is
marked by mild days and cooler nights. Winter is usually mild in
Norfolk, with the coldest days featuring lows near or slightly
above freezing and highs in the upper 40s to mid 50s. On average,
the coldest month of the year is January. Norfolk's record high was
105 °F (40 °C) on August 7, 1918, and record low was -3 °F (-19 °C)
recorded on January 21, 1985. Snow falls every winter, although
averaging only per season.
Cityscape

A home in Ghent (Norfolk,
Virginia).
When Norfolk was first settled, homes were made of wood and
frame construct iron, similar
to most medieval English-style homes. These homes had wide
chimneys and
thatch roofs.
After the town was first laid out in 1682, the
Georgian architectural style, which was popular
in the
South at the time, was
used.
Brick was considered more substantial
construction; patterns were made by brick laid and Flemish bond.
This style evolved to include projecting center pavilions,
Palladian windows,
balustraded roof decks, and two-story
porticoes. By 1740, homes, warehouses, stores,
workshops, and taverns began to dot Norfolk's streets.
Norfolk was burned down during the
Revolutionary War. After the
Revolution, Norfolk was rebuilt
in
Federal style, based on
Roman ideals. Federal-style homes kept Georgian symmetry, though
they had more refined decorations to look like
New World homes. Federal homes had features such
as narrow sidelights with an embracing
fanlight around the doorway, giant porticoes, gable
or flat roofs, and projecting bays on exterior walls. Rooms were
oval, elliptical or octagonal. Few of these federal
rowhouses remain standing today. A majority of
buildings were made of wood and had simple construction.
In the early 1800s,
Neoclassical architectural
elements began to appear in the federal style row homes, such as
iconic
columns in the porticoes and
classic motifs over doorways and windows. Many Federal-style row
houses were modernized by placing a Greek-style porch at the front.
Greek and Roman elements were integrated into public buildings such
as the old City Hall, the old Norfolk Academy, and the Customs
House.
Greek-style homes gave way to
Gothic Revival in the 1830s,
which emphasized
pointed arches,
steep
gable roofs, towers and tracer-lead
windows. The Freemason Baptist Church and St. Mary's Catholic
Church are examples of Gothic Revival.
Italianate elements emerged in the
1840s including
cupolas,
verandas, ornamental
brickwork, or
corner quoins. Norfolk still had simple
wooden structures among its more ornate buildings.
High-rise buildings were first built in
the late 1800s when structures such as the current Commodore Maury
Hotel and the Royster Building were constructed to form the initial
Norfolk skyline. Past styles were revived during the early years of
the 20th century. Bungalows and apartment buildings became popular
for those living in the city.
As the
Great Depression wore on,
Art Deco emerged as a popular building
style, as evidenced by the Post Office building downtown.
Art Deco consisted of streamlined
concrete faced appearance with smooth
stone or metal, with
terracotta, and trimming consisting of
glass and colored
tiles.
Neighborhoods
- See also: List
of neighborhoods in Norfolk
Norfolk has a variety of historic neighborhoods.
Some neighborhoods,
such as Berkley
, were formerly cities and towns.
Others,
such as Willoughby
Spit
and Ocean View
, have a long history tied to the Chesapeake Bay. Today neighborhoods
such as Downtown
and Ghent have
transformed with the revitalization that the city has
undergone.
Demographics

Population age distribution for
Norfolk
As of the
census of 2000, there were 234,403
people, 86,210 households, and 51,898 families residing in the
city. The
population density was
4,362.8 people per square mile (1,684.4/km²). There were 94,416
housing units at an average density of 1,757.3/sq mi
(678.5/km²). The racial makeup of the city was 48.36%
White, 44.11%
African American, 0.46%
Native American, 2.81%
Asian, 0.11%
Pacific Islander, 1.67% from
other
races, and 2.48% from two or more races.
Hispanics or Latinos of any
race were 3.80% of the population.
There were 86,210 households out of which 30.3% had children under
the age of 18 living with them, 36.9% were
married couples living together, 18.8% had a female
householder with no husband present, and 39.8% were non-families.
30.2% of all households were made up of individuals and 9.6% had
someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average
household size was 2.45 and the average family size was 3.07.
The age distribution was 24.0% under the age of 18, 18.2% from 18
to 24, 29.9% from 25 to 44, 16.9% from 45 to 64, and 10.9% who were
65 years of age or older. The median age was 30 years. For every
100 females there were 104.6 males. For every 100 females age 18
and over, there were 104.8 males. This large
gender imbalance is due to the military presence
in the city, most notably Naval Station Norfolk.
The median income for a household in the city was $31,815, and the
median income for a family was $36,891. Males had a median income
of $25,848 versus $21,907 for females. The
per capita income for the city was
$17,372. About 15.5% of families and 19.4% of the population were
below the
poverty line, including 27.9%
of those under age 18 and 13.2% of those age 65 or over.
For the year of 2007, Norfolk had a total crime index of 514.7. The
national average is 320.9. For 2007, the city experienced 48
homicides giving Norfolk a murder rate of 21.1 per 100,000
residents. Total crime has decreased when compared to the year
2000, which the city had a total crime index of 546.3. The highest
murder rate Norfolk has experienced for the 21st century was in
2005 when the city experienced a rate of 24.5 per 100,000
residents. For the year 2007 per 100,000, Norfolk experienced 21.1
murders, 42.6 rapes, 399.3 robberies, 381.3 assaults, 743.3
burglaries, and 450.6 automobile thefts. According to the
Congressional Quarterly Press '2008 City Crime Rankings: Crime in
Metropolitan America, Norfolk,Virginia ranks as the 87th most
dangerous city larger than 75,000 inhabitants.
Economy
Since Norfolk serves as the commercial and cultural center for the
somewhat unique geographical region of Hampton Roads (and in its
political structure of independent cities), it can be difficult to
separate the economic characteristics of Norfolk from that of the
region as a whole.
The waterways which almost completely surround the Hampton Roads
region play an important part in the local economy. As a strategic
location at the mouth of the
Chesapeake
Bay, its protected
deep-water channels serve as a
major trade artery for the
import and
export of goods from across the
Mid-Atlantic,
Mid-West, and
internationally.
In
addition to commercial activities, Hampton Roads is a major
military center, particularly for the United States Navy, and Norfolk serves as
the home for the most important of these regional installations,
Naval Station
Norfolk
, the world's largest naval station. Located
on
Sewell's Point Peninsula, in the
northwest corner of the city, the installation is the current
headquarters of the
United States Fleet Forces
Command (formerly known as the Atlantic Fleet), as well as
being home port for the
Second Fleet, which compromises
approximately 62,000 active duty personnel, 75 ships, and 132
aircrafts.
The base also serves as the headquarters to
the Allied Command
Transformation (NATO
) and the
United States Joint
Forces Command.
The region also plays an important role in defense contracting,
with particular emphasis in the shipbuilding and ship repair
businesses for the city of Norfolk.
Major private shipyards located in
Norfolk or the Hampton
Roads
area include: Northrop Grumman Shipbuilding
(formerly Northrop Grumman Newport News) in Newport News, BAE Systems Norfolk Ship Repair,
Metro Machine Corporation, and Colonna's Shipyard Inc., while the
US Navy's Norfolk
Naval Shipyard
is just across the Downtown Tunnel
in Portsmouth
. Most contracts fulfilled by these shipyards
are issued by the Navy, though some private commercial repair also
takes place. Over 35% of Gross Regional Product (which includes the
entire Norfolk-Newport News-Virginia Beach MSA), is attributable to
defense spending, and that 75% of all regional growth since 2001 is
attributable to increases in defense spending.
A view of Norfolk from Portsmouth
After the military, the second largest and most important industry
for Hampton Roads and Norfolk based on economic impact are the
region's cargo ports.
Headquartered in Norfolk, the Virginia Port Authority (VPA) is a
Commonwealth
of Virginia
owned-entity that, in turn, owns and operates three
major port facilities in Hampton Roads for break-bulk and container
type cargo. In Norfolk,
Norfolk
International Terminals (NIT) represents one of those three
facilities and is home to the world's largest and fastest container
cranes. Together, the three terminals of the VPA handled a total of
over 2 million
TEUs and 475,000
tons of breakbulk cargo in 2006, making it the second busiest port
on the east coast of North America by total cargo volume after the
Port of New York and New Jersey.
In addition to NIT, Norfolk is home to Lambert's Point Docks, the
largest coal trans-shipment point in the Northern Hemisphere, with
annual throughput of approximately 48 million tons.
Bituminous coal is primarily sourced from
the Appalachian mountains in western Virginia, West Virginia
, and Kentucky
. The coal is loaded onto trains and sent to
the port where it is unloaded onto large breakbulk cargo ships and
destined for New England, Europe, and Asia.
Between
1925 and 2007, Ford Motor Company
operated Norfolk
Assembly
, a manufacturing plant located on the Elizabeth River that had produced
the Model T, sedans and station wagons before building
F-150s. Before it closed, the plant employed more than 2,600
people at the facility.
Dominion Square, headquarters of Dominion Enterprises
Most major shipping lines have a permanent presence in the region
with some combination of sales, distribution, and/or logistical
offices, many of which are located in Norfolk. In addition, many of
the largest international shipping companies have chosen Norfolk as
their North American headquarters. These companies are either
located at the Norfolk World Trade Center building or have
constructed buildings in the Lake Wright Executive Center
office park.
The French firm CMA
CGM, the Israeli firm Zim Integrated Shipping
Services, and Maersk Line Limited, a subsidiary of the world's
largest shipping line, A.
P.
Moller-Maersk Group
, have their North American headquarters in
Norfolk. Major companies headquartered in Norfolk include
Norfolk Southern,
Landmark Communications,
Dominion Enterprises, FHC Health
Systems (parent company of
ValueOptions), Portfolio Recovery Associates,
and BlackHawk Products Group.

Nauticus and USS
Wisconsin
Though
Virginia
Beach
and Williamsburg
have traditionally been the centers of tourism for
the region, the rebirth of downtown Norfolk and the construction of
a cruise ship pier at the foot of Nauticus
in downtown has driven tourism to become an
increasingly important part of the city's economy. The
number of cruise ship passengers who visited Norfolk increased from
50,000 in 2003, to 107,000 in 2004 and 2005. Also in April 2007,
the city completed construction on a $36 million state-of-the-art
cruise ship terminal alongside the pier. Partly due to this
construction, passenger counts dropped to 70,000 in 2006, but is
expected to rebound to 90,000 in 2007, and higher in later years.
Unlike most cruise ship terminals which are located in industrial
areas, the downtown location of Norfolk's terminal has received
favorable reviews from both tourists and the cruise lines who enjoy
its proximity to the city's hotels, restaurants, shopping, and
cultural amenities.
Arts & Culture
Norfolk is the cultural heart of the Hampton Roads region. In
addition to its outstanding museums, Norfolk is the principal home
for several major performing arts companies. Norfolk also plays
host to numerous yearly festivals and parades, mostly at
Town Pointe Park in downtown.

Nauticus
The
Chrysler
Museum of Art
, located in the Ghent
district, is the region's foremost art museum and is considered
by the The New York
Times to be the finest in the state. Of particular
note is the extensive glass collection and American
neoclassical marble sculptures.
Nauticus
, the National Maritime Center, opened on the
downtown waterfront in 1994. It features hands-on exhibits,
interactive theaters,
aquaria, digital
high-definition films and an extensive variety of educational
programs.
Since 2000, Nauticus has been home to the
battleship USS
Wisconsin
, the second to last battleship to be built in the
United States. It served briefly in
World War II and later in the
Korean and
Gulf Wars.The
General
Douglas MacArthur
Memorial, located in the 19th century Norfolk court house and city
hall in downtown, contains the tombs of the late General and his
wife, a museum and a vast research library, personal belongings
(including his famous corncob pipe) and a short film that
chronicles the life of the famous
General of the
Army.
The Hermitage Foundation Museum, located in an early 20th century
Tudor style home on a estate fronting
the
Lafayette River, features an
eclectic collection of Asian and Western art, including Chinese
bronze and ceramics, Persian rugs, and ivory carvings.
has a variety of performing groups with regular seasons.
The
Virginia Opera was founded in
Norfolk in 1974. Its artistic director since its inception has been
Peter Mark, who conducted his 100th opera
production for the VOA in 2008. Though performances are staged
statewide, the company's principal venue is the
Harrison Opera House in the
Ghent district.
The
Virginia Stage Company, founded in 1968, is one of the country's
leading regional theaters and produces a full season of plays in
the Wells
Theatre
downtown. The Company shares facilities with
the
Governor's School for
the Arts.
The
Virginia Symphony
Orchestra, founded in 1920 and directed by
JoAnn Falletta, has been a regular staple on
the regional fine arts scene.
Most Norfolk performances take place at
Chrysler Hall in the Scope
complex downtown. The orchestra also
provides musicians for many other performing arts organizations in
the area.
Large
scale concerts are held at either the Norfolk Scope
arena or Ted Constant Convocation
Center
at ODU
while The Norva
provides a more intimate atmosphere for smaller groups.
Other Norfolk cultural venues include the
Attucks Theatre, the Jeanne and George Roper
Performing Arts Canter (formerly the Loew's State Theater) and the
Naro Expanded Cinema. The
Free Reign
Theatre provides independent theatre.
The revitalization of downtown Norfolk has helped to improve the
Hampton Roads cultural scene. In particular, a large number of
clubs, representing a wide range of music interests and
sophistication, now line the lower Granby Street area. Some of the
clubs include the newly opened Club Seven and the Granby Theater,
which formerly hosted plays but now is a restaurant and club.
Not far
away, the Waterside Festival
Marketplace
has also continued to be successful as a nightclub
and bar venue.
Sports

Harbor Park
From 1970
to 1976, Norfolk served as home court (along with Hampton
, Richmond
and Roanoke
) for the Virginia
Squires regional professional basketball franchise of the
now-defunct American
Basketball Association (ABA). From 1970 to 1971, the
Squires played their Norfolk home games at the
Old Dominion University
Fieldhouse.
In November 1971, the Virginia Squires
played their Norfolk home games at the new Norfolk Scope
arena, until the team and the ABA league folded in
May 1976.
In 1971,
Norfolk built the region's first entertainment and sports complex,
featuring Chrysler Hall and the
13,800-seat Norfolk
Scope
indoor arena, located in the northern section of
downtown. Norfolk Scope has served as a venue of major
events including the American Basketball Association's All-Star
Game in 1974, and the first and second
NCAA Women's
Division I Basketball Championships (also known as the
Women's Final Four) in 1982 and 1983. The Norfolk Scope
has served as the site of many professional wrestling events,
including
Total Nonstop
Action Wrestling's
Destination X
and
World Championship
Wrestling's
World War 3.
Norfolk Scope was also the site of an infamous episode of
WCW Monday Nitro, where several
World Wrestling Federation
wrestlers literally drove a tank to the entryway of the Scope, thus
"invading" the competition.
Currently, Norfolk serves as home to the two highest level
professional franchises in the state of Virginia, the
Norfolk Tides of the
International League and the
Norfolk Admirals of the
American Hockey League.
On the collegiate
level, the Old Dominion
Monarchs and the Norfolk State University
Spartans provide many sports including football
(coming to Old Dominion in 2009), basketball, and baseball.
Virginia Wesleyan College
also provides sports at the NCAA Division III level.
Parks and Recreation
Town Point Park in downtown plays host to a wide variety of annual
events from early spring through late fall. Harborfest, the
region's largest annual festival, celebrated its 30th year in 2006.
It is held during the first weekend of June and celebrates the
region's proximity and attachment to the water. The Parade of Sail
(numerous tall sailing ships from around the world form in line and
sail past downtown before docking at the marina), music concerts,
regional food, and a large fireworks display highlight this
three-day festival. Bayou Boogaloo and Cajun Food Festival, a
celebration of the
Cajun people and culture,
had small beginnings. This three-day festival during the third week
of June has become one of the largest in the region and, in
addition to serving up
Cajun cuisine,
also features Cajun music. Norfolk's
Fourth of July celebration
of American independence, contains a spectacular fireworks display
and a special Navy reenlistment ceremony. The Norfolk Jazz
Festival, though smaller by comparison to some of the big city jazz
festivals, still manages to attract the country's top jazz
performers. It is held in August. The Town Point Virginia Wine
Festival has become a showcase for Virginia-produced wines and has
enjoyed increasing success over the years. Virginia's burgeoning
wine industry has become noted both within the United States and on
an international level. The festival has grown with the industry.
Wines can be sampled and then purchased by the bottle and/or case
directly from the winery kiosks. This event takes place during the
third weekend of October. There is also a Spring Wine Festival held
during the second weekend of May.
The
St. Patrick's Day annual parade in
the city's Ocean
View
neighborhood, celebrates Ocean View's rich Irish
heritage.

Virginia Zoo
Norfolk has a variety of parks and open spaces in its city parks
system.
The city maintains three beaches on its
north shore in the Ocean View
area. Five additional parks contain picnic
facilities and playgrounds for children. The city also has some
community pools open to city citizens.
The
Norfolk
Botanical Garden
, opened in 1939, is a botanical garden and arboretum located near the Norfolk International
Airport. It is open year round.
The
Virginia
Zoological Park
, opened in
1900, is a zoo with hundreds of animals on
display, including the critically endangered Siberian Tiger and threatened White Rhino.
The city is also known for its "Mermaids on Parade," a public art
program launched in 2002 to place mermaid statues all over the
City. Tourists can take a walking tour of downtown and locate 17
mermaids while others can be found further afield.
Government

Norfolk, as seen from
Portsmouth.
Norfolk is an
independent
city with services that both counties and cities in Virginia
provide, such as a
sheriff, social services,
and a court system. Norfolk operates under a council-manager form
of government.
Norfolk city government consists of a
city
council with representatives from seven districts serving in a
legislative and oversight capacity, as
well as a popularly elected, at-large
mayor.
The
city manager serves as head of the
executive branch and
supervises all City departments and executing policies adopted by
the Council. Citizens in each of the six wards elect one council
representative each to serve a four-year term. An additional
council member is elected from a city wide "Superward 7." The city
council meets at City Hall weekly and, as of September, 2007,
consists of: Mayor Paul D. Fraim; Vice Mayor Anthony L. Burfoot,
Ward 3; Daun S. Hester, Superward 7; Paul R. Riddick, Ward 4; Dr.
Theresa W. Whibley, Ward 2; Donald L. Williams, Ward 1; Barclay C.
Winn, Ward 6; W. Randy Wright, Ward 5.
City government has infrastructure to create close working
relationships with its citizens. Norfolk's city government provides
services for neighborhoods, including service centers and civic
leagues that interact directly with members of City Council. Such
services include preserving area histories, home rehabilitation
centers, outreach programs, and a university that trains citizens
in neighborhood clean-up, event planning, neighborhood leadership,
and financial planning. Norfolk's police department also provides
support for neighborhood watch programs including a citizens'
training academy, security design, a police athletic program for
youth, and business watch programs.
Norfolk also has a federal courthouse for the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of
Virginia. The Walter E. Hoffman United States Courthouse in
Norfolk has four judges, four magistrate judges, and two bankruptcy
judges. Additionally, Norfolk has its own General District and
Circuit Courts which convene downtown.
Norfolk is located in the , served by U.S. Representative
Glenn Nye and in the , served by U.S.
Representative
Robert C. Scott.
Education
Norfolk City Public Schools, the public school system, comprises 5
high schools, 8 middle schools, 34 elementary schools, and 9
special-purpose/preschools. In 2005, Norfolk Public Schools won the
$1 million Broad Prize for Urban Education award for having
demonstrated, "the greatest overall performance and improvement in
student achievement while reducing achievement gaps for poor and
minority students". The city had previously been nominated in 2003
and 2004.
There are also a number of private schools located in the city, the
oldest of which, Norfolk
Academy
, was founded in 1728. Religious schools
located in the City include St. Pius X Catholic School, Holy
Trinity Parish School, Alliance Christian School, Christ the King
School, St Patrick Catholic School, and Norfolk Christian School.
The City
also hosts the Governor's
School for the Arts which holds performances and classes at the
Wells
Theatre
.

The Jones Institute for Reproductive
Medicine at Eastern Virginia Medical School
Norfolk is home to three public universities and one private. It
also hosts a
community college
campus in downtown.
Old Dominion University
, founded as the Norfolk
Division of the College of William and Mary
in 1930, became an independent institution in
1962 and now offers degrees in 68 undergraduate and 95 (60
masters/35 doctoral) graduate degree programs. Eastern
Virginia Medical School
, founded as a community medical school by the
surrounding jurisdictions in 1973, is noted for its research into
reproductive medicine and is located in the region's major medical
complex in the Ghent district.
Norfolk
State University
is the largest majority black university in
Virginia and offers degrees in a wide variety of liberal arts. Virginia Wesleyan College is a
small private
liberal arts college, and
shares its eastern border with the neighboring city of Virginia
Beach.
Tidewater Community
College offers two-year degrees and specialized training
programs, and is located in downtown.
Norfolk Public Library, Virginia's first public library, offer ten
locations around the city and a bookmobile. The library also has a
local history and genealogy room and contains government documents
dating back to the 19th century. The libraries offer services such
as computer classes, book reviews, tax forms, and online book
clubs.
Media
Norfolk's daily newspaper is
The
Virginian-Pilot. Norfolk's alternative weekly papers
include the (now defunct)
Port
Folio Weekly and the
New Journal and Guide. The
Hampton Roads
Business Journal serves the regional business community
with local business news.
Local
universities publish their own newspapers: Old Dominion
University
's Mace and Crown, Norfolk
State University
's The Spartan Echo, and Virginia Wesleyan College's
Marlin Chronicles. Hampton Roads Magazine serves as a
bi-monthly regional magazine for Norfolk and the Hampton Roads
area. Norfolk is served by a variety of radio
stations on the AM and FM dials, with towers located around the
Hampton
Roads
area. These cater to many different
interests, including
news,
talk radio, and
sports, as
well as an eclectic mix of
musical
interests.
Norfolk is also served by several television stations. The Hampton
Roads
designated market area (DMA) is
the 42nd largest in the U.S. with 712,790 homes (0.64% of the total
U.S.).
The major network television affiliates are
WTKR-TV
3 (CBS), WAVY
10
(NBC), WVEC-TV
13 (ABC), WGNT
27
(CW), WTVZ
33
(MyNetworkTV), WVBT
43
(Fox), and WPXV
49
(Ion Television). The Public Broadcasting Service
station is WHRO-TV
15. Norfolk residents also can receive
independent stations, such as WSKY
broadcasting on channel 4 from the Outer Banks of North Carolina
and WGBS broadcasting on channel 7 from
Hampton
.
Several major
motion picture have been filmed
in and around Norfolk include
Rollercoaster (filmed at the
former
Ocean View Amusement
Park),
Navy Seals,
and
Mission: Impossible
III (partially filmed at the
Chesapeake Bay Bridge
Tunnel).
Infrastructure
Transportation
Norfolk is linked with its neighbors through an extensive network
of arterial and
Interstate
highways,
bridges,
tunnels, and
bridge-tunnel complexes. The major east-west
routes are
Interstate 64,
U.S. Route 58 (
Virginia Beach Boulevard) and
U.S. Route 60 (Ocean View Avenue). The
major north-south routes are
U.S. Route 13 and
U.S. Route 460, also known as
Granby Street. Other main roadways in Norfolk
include
Newtown Road,
Waterside Drive,
Tidewater Drive, and
Military Highway. The Hampton Roads Beltway
(I-64 and its spurs I-264, I-464, and I-664) makes a loop around
Norfolk.
Norfolk
is primarily served by the Norfolk International Airport
, now the region's major commercial airport.
The
airport is located near Chesapeake Bay, along the city limits
straddling neighboring Virginia Beach
. Seven airlines provide nonstop services to
twenty five destinations. ORF had 3,703,664 passengers take off or
land at its facility and 68,778,934 pounds of cargo were processed
through its facilities.
Newport News/Williamsburg International
Airport
also provides commercial air service for the
Hampton
Roads
area. The Chesapeake Regional Airport
provides general aviation services and is
located five miles (8 km) outside the city
limits.
Norfolk
is served by Amtrak through the Newport
News
station, via connecting buses. The line runs west
along the Virginia
Peninsula
to Richmond
and points beyond. A high speed rail
connection at Richmond to both the
Northeast Corridor and the
Southeast High Speed Rail
Corridor are also under study.
Greyhound provides service from a central bus terminal in downtown
Norfolk.
Bus services to New York City
via the Chinatown bus, Today's Bus, is located on
Newtown road.
In April 2007, construction of the new $36 million
Half Moone
Cruise Terminal was completed downtown adjacent to the
Nauticus Museum, providing a state-of-the-art permanent structure
for various cruise lines and passengers wishing to embark from
Norfolk. Previously, makeshift structures were used to
embark/disembark passengers, supplies, and crew.
The
Intracoastal Waterway
passes through Norfolk. Norfolk also has extensive frontage and
port facilities on the navigable portions of the Western and
Southern branches of the
Elizabeth River.

Ferry To Portsmouth
A transit
bus system and
paratransit service are provided by
Hampton Roads Transit (HRT), a
regional
public transport system
headquartered in Hampton. HRT buses operate throughout Norfolk and
South Hampton Roads and onto the Peninsula all the way up to
Williamsburg.
Other routes travel to Smithfield
. HRT offers a ferry service from downtown
Norfolk to Old Town Portsmouth.
Additional services include an HOV express
bus to the Norfolk
Naval Base
, paratransit services, park-and-ride lots, and the
Norfolk Electric Trolley, which provides service in the downtown
area.A
light rail service has
recently begun construction with operations beginning in 2010.
The light
rail will be called The Tide and
will have a starter route running along the southern portion of
Norfolk, commencing at Newtown Road and passing through stations
serving areas such as Norfolk State University
and Harbor Park
before going through the heart of downtown Norfolk
and terminating at Sentara Norfolk General
Hospital
.
Utilities
Water and sewer services are provided by the City's Department of
Utilities.
Norfolk receives its electricity from
Dominion Virginia Power
which has local sources including the Chesapeake Energy Center (a
gas power plant), coal-fired plants in Chesapeake
and Southampton County
, and the Surry Nuclear Power Plant.
Norfolk
headquartered Virginia Natural Gas, a
subsidiary of AGL Resources,
distributes natural gas to the City from
storage plants in James City County
and Chesapeake
.
Norfolk's water quality has been recognized as the fourth best in
the United States by
Men's
health. The City of Norfolk owns nine reservoirs: Lake
Whitehurst, Little Creek Reservoir, Lake Lawson, Lake Smith, Lake
Wright, Lake Burnt Mills, Western Branch Reservoir, Lake Prince and
Lake Taylor. The Virginia tidewater area has grown faster than the
local freshwater supply. The river water has always been salty, and
the fresh groundwater is no longer available in most areas.
Currently, water for the tidewater area is
pumped from Lake
Gaston
, which straddles the Virginia-North Carolina
borderm along with the Blackwater and Nottoway rivers. The
pipeline is long and in diameter. Much of its follows the former
right-of-way of an abandoned
portion of the
Virginian Railway.
It is capable of pumping 60 million gallons of water per
day(60MGD), Virginia Beach and Chesapeake are partners in the
project.
The City provides wastewater services for residents and transports
wastewater to the regional Hampton Roads Sanitation District
treatment plants.
Healthcare

Sentara Norfolk General Hospital
Because of the prominence of the Portsmouth Naval Hospital and V.A.
Hospital in Hampton, Norfolk has had a strong role in medicine.
Norfolk is served by Sentara Norfolk General Hospital, Sentara
Leigh Hospital, Bon Secours DePaul Medical Center, and the Lake
Taylor Hospital. The City is also home to the Children's Hospital
of The King's Daughters.
Norfolk
is home to Eastern Virginia Medical
School
, which is known for its specialists in diabetes, dermatology, and
obstetrics. It achieved international fame on March 1, 1980,
when Drs. Georgianna and Howard Jones opened the first
in vitro fertilization clinic in the
U.S. at EVMS. The country's first in vitro
test-tube baby was born there in December
1981.
The international headquarters of
Operation Smile, a nonprofit organization
that specializes in repairing facial deformities in underprivileged
children from around the globe, is also based in the city.
Sister cities
Norfolk has seven
sister cities:
See also
References
- Guy, Louis L. jr. Norfolk's Worst Nightmare, Norfolk Historical
Society Courier (Spring 2001)- accessed 2008-01-03
- Seasonal Temperature and Precipitation Information from
The Weather Channel." Retrieved on July 11,
2007.
- " Quick Data View Norfolk." National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration. 1971-2000.
- http://www.city-data.com/city/Norfolk-Virginia.html
-
http://os.cqpress.com/citycrime/MetroCrime2008_Rank_Rev.pdf
- Hermitage Foundation Museum
- Virginia Opera Website
- Norfolk Nightlife - Frommer's Travel Guide
- U.S. Courts - Norfolk courthouse
- Norfolk Courts Dockets
- Holmes, Gary. " Nielsen Reports 1.1% increase in U.S. Television
Households for the 2006-2007 Season." Nielsen
Media Research. September 23, 2006. Retrieved on September
28, 2007.
- " Titles with locations including Norfolk, Virginia,
USA." IMDB. Retrieved on September
28, 2007.
- Utilities Water Resources, City of Norfolk
- VA Places, Gaston Pipeline
- VA Beach Government, Department of Public
Utilities
- Sister Cities designated by Sister Cities International, Inc. (SCI). Retrieved on
August 18, 2006.
External links