Archive for the ‘St. Paul’s Boulevard’ tag
The Cedar
Our trip away from Town Point Park will wait one more day, as I discovered photos of a couple more markers I found before leaving the park for lunch.
Location: West end of Town Point Park, near Nauticus museum.
Visited: July 3, 2009, 12:40pm
Transcription of marker: A cedar tree near this location, then known as Foure Farthing Pointe, was described in the original patent describing the western boundary of the 50 acres that comprised Norfolk Town. In August 1680 John Ferebee, surveyor for Lower Norfolk County, was instructed to survey a town site on the Elizabeth River. This was completed in October 1680, but it was not until August 1682 that the county, through its agents Anthony Lawson and William Robinson, bought the town site from Nicholas Wise, a shipwright. The price was ten thousand pounds of tobacco. The surveyed town site extended eastward from this point along Main Street, formerly Front Street, on a ridge of high land to Dun-in-the-Mire, generally where Harbor Park is now located. The other principal road, “the road that leadeth out of town,” went north from the current intersection of Main Street and St. Paul’s Boulevard. The original town site was laid out with half acre lots for houses and business. The lots were priced at 100 pounds of tobacco.
My impressions: This is a newer look at much of the same history as was found in the Four Farthing or Town Point marker I posted about on Thursday. As somebody attempting to transcribe markers, one of the things it highlights for me is how much easier it is to fully understand a marker when it is written in mixed case. A case in point: it wasn’t until I read this marker that I was sure that I had correctly transcribed “Lower Norfolk County” in the previous marker. In the earlier marker (written entirely in capital letters) there was no way to know if this was just the lower part of Norfolk County or a separate jurisdiction. It’s also nice to have the map illustration on this marker, even though these markers seem less permanent than those with raised letters.
Markeroni status: Direct-logged.
The Customhouse, 1859
Cannonball Trail
The Customhouse, 1859
Location: W Main St (opposite the foot of Granby St), Norfolk, VA 23510
Visited: June 23, 2009, 3:55pm
Transcription of marker: Construction of this customhouse began in 1852 and was completed in 1859, replacing an 1819 customhouse located at Water and Church Streets (now Waterside Drive and St. Paul’s Boulevard). This building was designed by Ammi B. Young (1798 – 1874), the first supervising architect for the United States Treasury Department, who established high architectural standards for federal buildings. During his career Young designed some 70 government buildings around the country, including the customhouses in Richmond and Petersburg. Departing from his more customary Tuscan designs, Young developed a rich Classical Revival design for this granite structure. Adapting a new material to traditional forms, both the interior columns and the capitals of the exterior columns are made of cast iron. All of the Federal agencies in Norfolk, including courts on the upper floor and the post office in the basement, were housed in this building until space needs prompted the construction of a new Federal courthouse and post office in 1900. The exterior of the building has not been significantly altered since its construction.
My impressions: This is one of those moments when I confess to a bit of fear. Unfortunately the drawing on the marker is the closest I came to taking a photo of the building, largely because I believe it is still (in part) a federal building, and while I’m still awaiting my permanent residency status, I still feel funny about doing things that might invite scrutiny. So I exercised caution, perhaps more than warranted. So, this 2005 photo, posted to Flickr by Tom Hammond under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial License, is your chance to see the glowingly-described building.

“U.S. Customhouse,” © 2005 Tom Hammond. Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial license. The marker is visible in the lower right of the photo.
All that out of the way, I love the way this building looks. It seems to me to be a typically American style; by that I mean that it isn’t a style that I saw nearly enough of back in Canada. I’m not quite sure what that says, but it’s a difference I think I’ve noticed.
Markeroni status: I have a request in about the Cannonball Trail markers, because most of them that I’ve found have not been in their database yet. This one might be in the database already under a slightly different name and I’ve sought clarification on that.
