âHAMPTON ROADSâ is a condensed version of the original name given by the regionâs settlers to the harbor in southeastern Virginia known then as: Southamptonâs Roadstead.
The term âHamptonâ dates from the early 17th century when the first royal governor, Lord de la Ware, named the area in honor of the third Earl of Southampton, Henry Wriothesley, a major investor of the Virginia Company of London, the financial backers of the Jamestown settlers. And, âRoadsteadâ is an old English word for a protected harbor.
Some things never change: just as sports stadiums, libraries, and college buildings today are named for major sponsors and donors, so it was then.
âHAMPTON ROADSâ also refers to the body of water between the Virginia Peninsula (to the North) and Southside, the southern part of southeastern Virginia. It is formed by the confluence of the James, Nansemond and Elizabeth rivers and flows into the Chesapeake Bay whose watershed covers 64,000 square miles and all or part of six states (NY, PA, WV, MD, DE and VA) and DC.
âHAMPTON ROADSâ is one of the worldâs biggest and deepest natural harbors, the largest in North America, and is home to the worldâs largest naval base at Norfolk. âHAMPTON ROADSâ has been well known within nautical and maritime communities for centuries.
âHAMPTON ROADSâ was widely adopted as the name for the surrounding region in 1984 when two planning districts and Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs) merged, placing the region in the nationâs top 50.
Yeah, I spend the summer at Virginia Beach, located in Hampton Roads.
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