South Hampton Roads is a region located in the extreme southeastern portion of Virginia in the United States.
Hampton Roads is the common name for the metropolitan area that surrounds the body of water Hampton Roads Harbor. The land portion of Hampton Roads is divided into two regions, the Peninsula, on the north side, and South Hampton Roads, on the south side, where most of the area's population lives.
Locally, South Hampton Roads is commonly called the Southside (not to be confused with Southside Virginia, which is a separate region of the south central portion of Virginia located farther inland).
South Hampton Roads is part of the Virginia Beach-Norfolk-Newport News, VA-NC MSA (Metropolitan Statistical Area) with a population about 1.6 million. The Hampton Roads MSA is the fourth largest metropolitan area in the southeastern United States, and is the largest between Washington, D.C. and Atlanta, Georgia.
U.S. military installations
South Hampton Roads is home to several
United States Military bases.
City of Portsmouth
Norfolk Naval Shipyard is located in Portsmouth, as are the
Naval Medical Center, Portsmouth, two historic and important facilities, as well as several smaller facilities. The shipyard was founded as the Gosport Shipyard on
November 1,
1767, and has the county's first
dry dock. The name was changed after the
American Civil War. (Although it is located in Portsmouth, the name Norfolk was chosen to avoid confusion with another U.S. Navy shipyard at
Portsmouth, New Hampshire which is about 50 miles (80 km) north of
Boston, Massachusetts, at the southernmost tip of
Maine.)
City of Norfolk
Across the
Elizabeth River, at
Sewell's Point near the mouth of Hampton Roads is the
Norfolk Navy Base, the central hub of the
United States Navy's
Atlantic Fleet. The base was founded in 1917, and is now the largest naval facility in the world.
City of Virginia Beach
Virginia Beach is home to the U.S. Navy's
Naval Air Station Oceana (NAS Oceana) and
Naval Amphibious Base Little Creek (NAB Little Creek). NAS Oceana is the largest employer in Virginia Beach, and both bases there, like the Norfolk Navy Base, are considered to be the largest of their respective kinds in the world. Furthermore, adjacent to Oceana is
NAVSEA Dam Neck. Virginia Beach is the also the home of
Fort Story, operated by the
United States Army, which is located at
Cape Henry.
City of Chesapeake
St. Juliens Creek Annex is a facility of the U.S. Navy located in Chesapeake on the Southern Branch of the Elizabeth River. It began operations in 1849 and occupies approximately 490 acres (200
ha), including 407 acres (165 ha) of land, 14 acres (6 ha) of marsh, and 69 acres (28 ha) of surface water. It is currently considered part of the Norfolk Navy Base.
Chesapeake is also home to U.S. Naval Auxiliary Landing Field Fentress, an auxiliary landing facility for NAS Oceana.
Local government
In Colonial times, and even in the first 150 years of the United States, much like Virginia as a whole, South Hampton Roads was in an almost constant state of change in terms of local government, largely due to growth, as counties were divided and towns were formed as the population grew. Some towns grew to become cities. Under the state constitutional changes in
1871, extant and future cities in Virginia became
independent cities of the counties they had formerly been located within.
However, in the second half of the 20th century, an unprecedented wave of city-county-town local government consolidations took place in South Hampton Roads and on the Virginia Peninsula. Nowhere else in Virginia have rural areas and more dense cities been combined in such a manner as these two areas. The changes resulted in the area having Virginia's cities with the largest land areas and the most farming, even over 30 years after the consolidations in some instances.
Current cities, counties and towns
The South Hampton Roads region includes five
independent cities, two counties, and five incorporated towns. There were also a number of political subdivisions which are now extinct, primarily due to growth and consolidation of local government (see section below).
Independent cities
Counties
Incorporated towns
Surry County
Isle of Wight County
Extinct political subdivisions
Exclusive of towns which became cities and still have the same name, no less than 2 shires, 6 counties, 1 town, and 2 entire cities no longer exist in the South Hampton Roads area. For search of genealogical, land, and other historical records, it may be necessary to find these old names.
The following is a listing of these 11 extinct shire, counties, towns, and cities, with the approximate dates they existed:
Highways, bridges, tunnels, bridge-tunnels
Generally surrounded by water, the South Hampton Roads region is accessed from the north by a network of highways,
bridges,
tunnels and
bridge-tunnels across the
James and
Elizabeth Rivers, the harbor of Hampton Roads and the
Chesapeake Bay. The area is bordered on the east by the
Atlantic Ocean, on the south by the State of
North Carolina, and on the west by several counties which are considered to be in the
Southside Virginia region.
Major bridges, tunnels, and bridge tunnels
Interstate highways and Expressways
U.S. Highways and Major State Highways
See also
Geography of Virginia