Box 5
Folder 13. Treasure – North Carolina
Item 2. Magazine Article

Transcribed Text (OCR)
GARY MANGIACOPA ARCHIVE ============================================================ Title: B5F13I2 Slug: b5f13i2 Categories: Lost Treasure Source: https://garymangiacopraarchive.com/b5f13i2 Pages: 4 scanned, 4 extracted OCR: Google Vision API (document_text_detection) Processed: 2026-06-06 ============================================================ Smithfield James River Hampton 7600 29 Chesapeake Bay INTRACOASTAL WATERWAY CHESAPEAKE BAY BRIDGE-TUNNEL Newport. Newsw 20 Hampton Roads JAMES M. VANCE, 1879 48 43 Cape Henry CHILORE, 1942 + WELAKA, 1889 FRANCISCO BELLAGAMBA, ITALIAN, 1878 75°00' JOHN MORGAN, 1943- LILLIAN LUCKENBACH, 1943 Portsmouth •Norfolk Virginia Beach THOMAS F. POLLARD, 1920 LENA HUNTER, 1885 JOANNA H. CANN, CANADIAN, 1881 EMMA F. HART, 1889 H. W. RACE, 1892 PAUGUSSETT, 1886 75 SANTORE, 1942 75 Chesapeake KINGSTON CEYLONITE, BRITISH, 1942 ALBERT C. PAIGE, 1884 a Dam Neck Mills AGNES BARTON, 1889 JENNIE HALL, 1900 BLANCHE, BRITISH, 1869 VOLTA 1841 71 TIGER, 1942 ELIZABETH, GERMAN, 1887 09 78 96 HATTIE DUNN, 1918 108 75° 138 32 - SPRING CHICKEN, 1944 108 Suffolk Deep Creek Lake Drummond Dismal .Oak Grove Great Bridge. VIRGINIA (165) Swamp NORTH CAROLINA South Mills APPOMATIOX CONFEDERATE 1862 Morgans Corners 343 NELLIE V. HOWLETT, 1903 FIGOGNA, ITALIAN, 1883 LEWIS A. ROMMELL, 1884 LEONORA, 1847 S19 CITY OF PHILADELPHIA, 1896 HORNET, 1849 CL. ALLEN, 1855 NETTIE, 1894 [AD] $3 PAN MAINE 1942 57 BACK BAY NATIONAL FLORENCE SHAY, 1908 WILDLIFE REFUGE Back By False Cape- GRAY EAGLE, 1888 PACIFIC, 1846 EXPRESS, 1902 EMILIE, FRENCH, 1845 TINTO, BRITISH, 1876 ADMIRAL, NORWEGIAN, 1879 STAFFA, BRITISH, 1897 2. CLYTHIA, NORWEGIAN, 1894 WILLIAM H. MACY, 1915 ARIO PARDEE, 1884 RALPH, JOHN S. WOOD 1889 ELIZA, BRITISH. land MACKAY NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE Sligo. •Currituck Great 158 Swamp- Coinjock .Camden Elizabeth City FORREST, CONFEDERATE 1862 BLACK WARRIOR, CONFEDERATE 1862 COAST GUARD SEA, BIRD, CONFEDERATE 1862 TANNY, CONFEDERATE, 1862 Hertford .Winfall AIR STATION totank R. 1837 90 1853 WILLIAM MUIR, CANADIAN, 1871 REVENUE, 1818 KILGORE, 1842 R. B. FORBES, FEDERAL, 1862 _ORAN SHERWOOD, 1837 VICTORIA, 1845 FAUGH A-BALLAGH, CANADIAN, 1873 BALTIC, 1857 A. ERNEST MILLS, 1929 lla NUOVA OTTAVIA, ITALIAN, 1876 M. A. FORBES, BRITISH, 1870 +N. BOYNTON, 1889 Currituck Sound GEORGIA, 1818 88 HENRIETTA PIERCE, 1853 METROPOLIS, 1878 GRACIE D. CHAMBERS, 1919 VIBILIA, CANADIAN, 1891 ORIENTE, PORTUGUESE, 1907 ADA F. WHITNEY, 1885 THOMAS J. MARTIN, 1883 HARKAWAY, BRITISH, 1885 HENRY G. FAY, 1876 MOMIE T, 1920 rth R... 159 33 Duck! CHANSFIELD, 1860 ED. J HERATY, 1877 J. B. HOLDEN, 1903 HUNTER, 1837 90 Bark Ghost Fleet of the Outer Banks coastal Ill-fated ships lie forever anchored in the sea floor. For this map NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC staff member Dorothy A. Nicholson plotted more than 500 wrecks, from the British Tiger, sunk in 1585 in Ocracoke Inlet, to the fishing trawler Sarah J., lost in 1961 in Oregon Inlet. Many vessels went aground in fog or storm. Wars took a further toll: Federal and Confederate gunboats battled to the finish, World War I U-boats sank many vessels, in- cluding the Diamond Shoals Lightship, Nazi submarines in World War Il torpedoed freighters and tankers. - Sloop Schooner Steamer Ship A Lighthouse 36130 and 32 Brig +Other wrecks Brigantine Submarine A Campground Ferry Coast Guard station Inactive Coast Guard station Soundings in feet 78 +SAMUEL WELSH, 1888 MOUNTAINEER, BRITISH, 1852 EMMA J. WARRINGTON. 1893 Southern ST. RITA, 1932 CHARLES 5. HIRSCH, 1905 HOUGH, 188 50 BYRON D BENSON, 1942 108 132 Sunbury. Chowan R 20 Edenton Alhomarlo ying machine fifted abb the denar Vith Hack D1002 1946. Ain't that wonderful?" a tie on since I came out of the service in end of the island, told me: "I haven't had island's better days. ago), but as a pealing requiem for the Sunday morning-not so much as a call to pair. He even rang the church bell each Pigott kept clean and tidy and in good re- One of the best preserved structures on worship (services were discontinued long the island is the church, which Henry letter-sorting case. spider webs covers the openings in the fine. Fred Cannon, who lived alone at one suited at least one of the five residents just Few outsiders visit Portsmouth, and that he cherished. In April of this year, his 16- that he will one day return to his little pink board and perished. Coast Guard concluded that he fell over- up on the beach. An investigation by the Sound. His personal belongings washed foot skiff was found swamped in Pamlico take him from the island's solitude which For Fred Cannon, only death could house down by a swash on the island. moved away. Mr. Pigott insists, however, hospital on the mainland, and the others One of the sisters died last January in a low sounds, the three major segments of isolated from the mainland by broad, shal- Only 500 feet wide at some points and 401 AYCOCK BROWN COLLECTION (TOP), THE MARINERS MUSEUM, MRS A. A. RONDTHALER COLLECTION we 19729 NATION CANAS 73 YORK, 1942 BUARQUE, BRAZILIAN, 1942 vivor owed his life to the Lifesaving Service, which became part of the U. S. Coast Guard in 1915. The Nomis (below) was wrecked in August 1935 with all aboard saved. Many a shipwreck sur- to safety. Midgett's feat earned him the Gold Lifesaving Medal of Honor. beach patrol, heard their cries. Dashing repeatedly through the towering breakers, he dragged all overboard, the 10 men remaining awaited certain destruction. But Rasmus S. Midgett, on solitary saving Station. After a mountainous wave swept the captain's wife, two sons, and the cabin boy seers. Damaged in the great hurricane of 1899, the barkentine ran aground near Gull Shoal Life- Desperate men once clung in terror to the deck of the Priscilla (above), here lined with sight- [PAGE BREAK] Chowan R Plymouth Sunbury. 02 Lake Drummond Edenton 22 Hertford Swamp VIRGINIA NORTH CAROLINA Morgans South Mills APPOMATIOX CONFEDERATE. 1862 Corners False Cape- Knattland MACKAY ISLAND NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE Sligo. Currituck Great Corolla 1581 Swamp- Coinjock .Camden Elizabeth Cit FORREST, CONFEDERATE, 1802 BLACK WARRIOR, CONFEDERATE 1862 SEA BIRD, CONFEDERATE +852 TANNY, CONFEDERATE, 1862 Winfall Perqui 17 COAST GUARD AIR STATION Pak R. STAFFA BRITISH, 1877 CLYTHIA, NORWEGIAN, 1894 WILLIAM H. MACY, 1915 ARIO PARDEE, 1884 RALPH, 1837 JOHN'S WOOD, 1889 ELIZA, BRITISH, 1853 WILLIAM MUIR, CANADIAN, 1871 REVENUE, 1818 KILGORE, 1842 R. B. FORBES, FEDERAL, 1862 ORAN SHERWOOD, 1837 VICTORIA 1845 FAUGH-A-BALLAGH, CANADIAN, 1873 BALTIC 1857 A. ERNEST MILLS, 1929 NUOVA OTTAVIA, ITALIAN. 1876 M. A. FORBES, BRITISH, 1870 +N BOYNTON, 1889 Currituc Sound GEORGIA, 1818 HENRIETTA PIERCE, 1853 METROPOLIS, 1878 84 plotted mo British Tiger, sunk in 1585 in Ocracoke ne to the fishing trawler Sarah J.. lost in 1961 in Oregon Inlet Many vessels went aground in fog or storm. Wars took a further toll: Federal and Confederate gunboats battled to the finish. World War I U-boats sank many vessels, in- cluding the Diamond Shoals Lightship, and Nazi submarines in World War II torpedoed freighters and tankers. 36 30 32 Brigantine -Submarine Brig +Other wrecks -Sloop GRACIE D. CHAMBERS, 1919 VIBILIA, CANADIAN, 1891 ORIENTE, PORTUGUESE, 1907 ADA F. WHITNEY, 1885 THOMAS J. MARTIN, 1883 HARKAWAY, BRITISH, 1885 HENRY G. FAY, 1876 MOMIE T., 1920 Bark Ship Schooner Steamer 90 A Lighthouse -Coast Guard station A Campground Ferry Inactive Coast Guard station Soundings in feet 78 Duck CHANSFIELD, 1860 Southern ED J. HERATY, 1877 B. HOLDEN, 1903 HUNTER, 1837 MOUNTAINEER BRITISH, 1852 EMMA J. WARRINGTON, 1893 ST. RITA, 1932 CHARLES S. HIRSCH, 1908 NOUGH, 1884 +SAMUEL WELSH, 1888 BYRON D. BENSON, 1942 108 84 132 Creswell. Pungo Lak Phelps Lake PUNGO NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE Belhaven .Scranton Albemarle Sound S riying machine fifted abo the sands near Kitty Hawk, December 17, 1903 New Lake Columbia ALLIGATOR RIVER Fairfield. MATTAMUSKEET NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE Lake Mattamuskert .Swanquarter Alligator River INTRACOASTAL WATERWAY NATIONAL ORIAL Kill Devil Hills Jockey Ridge- -YORK, 1942 78 GERHARD, SWEDISH, 1929 WILLIAM CARLTON, 1818 BUARQUE, BRAZILIAN, 1942 IRMA, 1925 OLYMPIC, PANAMANIAN, 1942 36 00 EMULOUS, 1825 HURON, 1877 GLORY, NORWEGIAN, 1933 126 90 Nags HeadHATTIE LOLLIS, 1889 LOST COLOR CURLEW Manteo ( CONFEDERATE FORT RALEIGH NATIONAL HISTORICAL SITE Whalebong Roanoke Island. Wanchese Bodie Island Fort Raleigh National Historical Site marks the first English settlement in the New World, on 1862 Roanoke Island in 1585-86. Other settlers came in 1587 PATRIOT, 1813 BAINBRIDGE, 1929 GEORGE M. ADAMS, 1897 SARAH J, 1961 HELEN Oregon Inlet, H BENEDICT, 1914 HOWARD, 1846 ADAMANTINE, 1867 LAURA NELSON, 1895 44 HARRIET N. ROGERS, 1873 LAURA A. BARNES, 1921 FLORA ROGERS, 1908 HARVEST, 1825 ENTERPRIZE, 1837 J. F. BECKER, 1903 JUNE, 1899 VOUCHER, 1817 EAGLE, 1870 WALTHAM, 1874 96 _ U-85, GERMAN, 1942 North Atlantic Ocean 114 150 -Three years later they had disappeared, leaving only the word "Croatoan" carved on a stockade post. Gibbs Point Pamlico Sound Engelhard GULL SHOAL- Cape Hatteras National Seashore (shown in green) extends from Bodie Island to Ocracoke Inlet Gull 18 Hatteras Island) 77 EDWIN, CANADIAN, 1875 PEA ISLAND NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE TAMARACK, 1921- _ MONTANA, 1904 CHARLES J. DUMAS, 1911 FLAMBEAU, 1867 _ C. C. THORN, 1846 ISABELLA PARMENTER, 1925 ANNIE E. BLACKMAN, 1889 B.T. MARTIN, 1861 108 Continental Shelf 168 120 JAMES Sandy Point 13 JOHN WOODALL, 1896 SUE WILLIAMS, 1890 MAXWELL, 1912 GEORGE L Rodanthe JOSIE TROOP, CANADIAN, 1889 Waves AMERICA, ITALIAN, 1876 MILLEDGEVILLE, 1839 Salvo HENRY NORWELL, 1896 ALFRED BRABROOK, 1899 RAYMOND T. MAULL, 1906 SE. MERWIN, 1901- FESSENDEN, 1898 MIRLO, BRITISH, 1918 SAN DELFINO BRITISH, 1942 MARORE, 1942 132 100 GENERAL G. A KOHLER, 1933 LOUISE, PANAMANIAN, 1942 SAXON, 1907 +PRISCILLA, 1899 3530 ELM CITY, 1912 -BLAISDELL, 1875 Long Point From there, Cape Lookout National extends southward nearly to Morehead City Seashore CAPE Hogl HATTERAS 5 G HART 1893 CILTVAIRA, 1942 POBERT W DASEY, 1899 DORMAN, 1900 CITY OF ATLANTA, 1942 132 PRCE 1892 1576 78 LULU M QUILLIN, 1917 NATION 68821 UN, 1942 CLACTON, 1820 ESKRIDGE, 1911 Hatteras Island Frisco SEASHORE DEN SHAY, 1889 Buxton ✓ THAMES, BRITISH, 1869 Hatteras MARTHA, 1893 CONGRESS, 1842 +Cape Hatteras Hatteras Inlet Ocracoke Island HOME 1837 +NOMIS, 1935 GEORGE W. WELLS, 1913 CARROLL A. DEERING, 1921- ANNA R. HEIDRITTER, 1942 ✓ PIONEER, 1889 CHARMER, 1899 78 31 1942 DIAMOND SHOALS+ LIZZIE S. JAMES, 1900 _ GOVERNOR. FEDERAL, 1861 JOHN N. PARKER, 1884 CITY OF NEW YORK, FEDERAL, 1862 DIAMOND SHOALS LIGHT STATION AUSTRALIA LIGHTSHIP, 1918 "Cheesebox on a raft and tin can en a shingle, Federal the Monitor, first sailors called ironclad in the Civil War Towed by a steamer, en route to South Carolina in 1862 the Monitor began to swamp in a gale The steamer rescued most of the crew, it en pent down with the gunboat somewhere off Cape Hatteras Pamlico River Gum Swamp 0. WANQUARTER NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE Tales of buried treasure abound along the Banks, a favorite haunt of pirate Edward Teach, known as Blackbeard The buccaneer's career ended in 1718 when two British war- ships caught his sloop Adventure inside Ocracoke Inlet. (7701) Bluff Point THREE FRIENDS, 1900 ANNE COMBER, 1908 MARY J. HAYNIE, 1921 ++ Ocracoke Springers Pointy Ocracoke Inlet Oriental 22 AYERBA Neuse River Morehead City Beaufort Harkers MASIDE, 1920 33 20 Portsmouth, Island LYDIA A. WILLIS, 1899 ALBATROSS, 1940 +TIGER, BRITISH, 1585 VERA CRUZ VII, PORTUGUESE, 1903 JOHN I. SNOW, 1907 CAPE HATTERAS, LIGHTSHIP. 1827 LUNA, 1918 ✓ F. W. ABRAMS, 1942 186 WILLIAM ROCKEFELLER, 1947 DE GEM ++ 1912 VIRGINIA, 1923 NEW JERSEY, 1923 CEDAR ISLAND NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE Atlantic Sound 10 BLANCHE, CANADIAN, 1890 78 MELROSE, 1908 AURORA, 1776 BERTHA ELLEN, 1880 66 JACOB TRUMPY, NORWEGIAN, 1879 .D. D. HASKELL, 1905 IDA C. SCHOOLCRAFT, 1902 THOMAS G SMITH, 1910 CHAS F. HAYEN, 1883 CAPE LOOKOUT CUMBERLAND, 1837 NATIONAL Core Core Banks 87 NUESTRA SIGNORA DE SOLIDAD, SPANISH, 1750 SEASHORE (Authorized) 69 JOSEPH RUDD, 1090 96 129 Continental Shelf ✓ PROTEUS, 1918 CATHERINE M. MONOHAN, 1910 LAMBERT TREE, 1841 _ DIXIE ARROW, 1942 132 _ MALCHASE, 1942 132 NORDAL PANAMANIAN, 1942 - MANUELA, 1942 252 276 E. M. CLARK, 1942 EUGENE, 1883 OLIVE THURLOW, 1902+ ORIENT, 1908 Cape Lookout CARROLL, 1837 LIZZIE H. PATRICK, 1911 34°39 MARTHA E. WALLACE, 1910 WILLIAM, 1837 ARGON, 1844 MONTEREY, 1851 GULF CITY, 1869 SYLVIA C. HALL, 1915 Cape Lookout CRISSIE WRIGHT, 1886 Shoals JAMES H. HAMLEN, 1903. C. S. GLIDDEN, 1903 JOSEPH W. BROOKS, 1904 EA, SPANISH, 1902 THISTLEROY, BRITISH, 1911 02 PORTLAND, 1943 CARIBSEA, 1942 SARAH D. J. RAWSON, 1905 MABERLADY BAY, BRITISH, 1889 ✓ ATLAS, 1942 HENRY W CRAMP, 1914 TENNESSEE, 1942 U-352, GERMAN, 1942 73 16°30' 120 52 ASHKABAD, RUSSIAN, 1942 150 132 210 150 NA TAMAULIPAS, 1942 BEDFORDSHIRE, BRITISH, 1942 LJUBICA MATKOVIC YUGOSLAV, 1942 222 142 76000° [AD] $100 35.00 Brig. Gen. William (Billy) Mitchell proved the vulnerability of ships to aerial bombardment when his airmen sank the Virginia and New Jersey-battleships marked for scrapping-off Diamond Shoals in 1923 3630 5994 Washington, D. C. VIRGINIA Richmond Petersburg. DELAWARE MARYLAND INTRACOASTAL WATERWAY Jamestown Norfolk 9210 Shipwreck data obtained from material compiled by Outer Banks historian David Stick, Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, The Mariners Museum. Newport News, Virginia; and U S. Navy records. Nationality of foreign ships given when known DRAWN BY VICTOR STATUTE MILES NAUTICAL MILES KELLEY, JOHN W LOTHERS AND ELIE SASHAN COMPILED BY CHRISTINE CEMOODY AND DOROTHY & NICHOLSON GEOGRAPHIC ART DIVISION NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC SOCIETY 510 -SANTIAGO, 1924 76° 30° Raleigh NORTH CAROLINA New Bern Wilmington SOUTH CAROLINA Georgetown Charleston Cape Hatteras AREA ENLARGED Gulf Stream 100 STATUTE MILKY 201 400 [PAGE BREAK] Desperate men once clung in terror to the deck of the Priscilla (above), here lined with sight- seers. Damaged in the great hurricane of 1899, the barkentine ran aground near Gull Shoal Life- saving Station. After a mountainous wave swept the captain's wife, two sons, and the cabin boy overboard, the 10 men remaining awaited certain destruction. But Rasmus S. Midgett, on solitary beach patrol, heard their cries. Dashing repeatedly through the towering breakers, he dragged all to safety. Midgett's feat earned him the Gold Lifesaving Medal of Honor. The Nomis (below) was wrecked in August 1935 with all aboard saved. Many a shipwreck sur- vivor owed his life to the Lifesaving Service, which became part of the U. S. Coast Guard in 1915. Roster of the wrecked, ships' nameboards decorate a house in Old Nags Head. Collected over the years by the cottage owners, most of the weathered boards were salvaged from vessels driven onto the shoals; others washed in from the sea. Snug harbor of Ocracoke offers sanctuary to fishing boats and pleasure craft, beckoned home by its 146-year-old lighthouse. Pilots who guided ships through Ocracoke's inlet in the early 1700's founded the village. Today ferries link it with Hat- teras Island and the mainland. Y. AYCOCK BROWN COLLECTION (TOP), THE MARINERS MUSEUM, MRS. A. A RONDTHALER COLLECTION spider webs covers the openings in the letter-sorting case. One of the best preserved structures on the island is the church, which Henry Pigott kept clean and tidy and in good re- pair. He even rang the church bell each Sunday morning-not so much as a call to worship (services were discontinued long ago), but as a pealing requiem for the island's better days. Few outsiders visit Portsmouth, and that suited at least one of the five residents just fine. Fred Cannon, who lived alone at one end of the island, told me: "I haven't had a tie on since I came out of the service in 1946. Ain't that wonderful?" One of the sisters died last January in a hospital on the mainland, and the others moved away. Mr. Pigott insists, however, that he will one day return to his little pink house down by a swash on the island. For Fred Cannon, only death could take him from the island's solitude which he cherished. In April of this year, his 16- foot skiff was found swamped in Pamlico Sound. His personal belongings washed up on the beach. An investigation by the Coast Guard concluded that he fell over- board and perished. Only 500 feet wide at some points and isolated from the mainland by broad, shal- low sounds, the three major segments of 401 the Outer Banks-Bodie (pronounced body), Hatteras, and Ocracoke Islands-form a trin- ity of subservience to the whims of the Atlan- tic. The landscape undergoes never-ending change. One piece of beach erodes away, and another gains ground; drifting sands plug one inlet, and storm-driven waves pry open an- other; a section of bridge from which fisher- men once dropped lines into 20 feet of water now spans a mud flat. Arab Ancestor Came Ashore on an Oar One thing that doesn't change, however, is the character of the Outer Banks and the people who inhabit them. Marinated in some of the richest juices of sea-oriented history, the Banks remain charged with a flavor unique in all the country. Only on these is- lands is one not overly surprised to find a descendant of a shipwrecked Arab selling homemade fig preserves. "He was my great-great-great-great-grand- father, a full-blooded Arab," Harvey Wahab told me as we sat on the screened porch of his house, across the street from the Ocracoke Post Office. "He was shipwrecked here in the 1700's. Came ashore on an oar." Harvey Wahab, 67, pronounces his name WAY-hab. "Away back, though, it was WAH- hab," he said. "Fellow from Arabia once told me it's WAH-hab over there." Born on Ocracoke Island and retired from 402 NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC - 1990S [PAGE BREAK] ght- Life- boy itary ed all Ksur- 1915. LER COLLECTION uary in a he others however, ittle pink sland. th could de which ar, his 16- Pamlico s washed on by the fell over- boints and road, shal- gments of 401 the Outer Banks-Bodie (pronounced body); Hatteras, and Ocracoke Islands-form a trin- ity of subservience to the whims of the Atlan- tic. The landscape undergoes never-ending change. One piece of beach erodes away, and another gains ground; drifting sands plug one inlet, and storm-driven waves pry open an- other; a section of bridge from which fisher- men once dropped lines into 20 feet of water now spans a mud flat. Arab Ancestor Came Ashore on an Oar the Banks remain charged with a flavor unique in all the country. Only on these is- lands is one not overly surprised to find a descendant of a shipwrecked Arab selling homemade fig preserves. "He was my great-great-great-great-grand- father, a full-blooded Arab," Harvey Wahab told me as we sat on the screened porch of his house, across the street from the Ocracoke Post Office. "He was shipwrecked here in the 1700's. Came ashore on an oar." Harvey Wahab, 67, pronounces his name One thing that doesn't change, however, is WAY-hab. "Away back, though, it was WAH- the character of the Outer Banks and the people who inhabit them. Marinated in some of the richest juices of sea-oriented history, 402 hab," he said. "Fellow from Arabia once told me it's WAH-hab over there." Born on Ocracoke Island and retired from NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC - 19905 Roster of the wrecked, ships' nameboards decorate a house in Old Nags Head. Collected over the years by the cottage owners, most of the weathered boards were salvaged from vessels driven onto the shoals; others washed in from the sea. Snug harbor of Ocracoke offers sanctuary to fishing boats and pleasure craft. beckoned home by its 146-year-old lighthouse. Pilots who guided ships through Ocracoke's inlet in the early 1700's founded the village Today ferries link it with Hat- teras Island and the mainland. G. A. KOHLER FLORA ROGERS JOSEPH G.RAY. GEO.N.REED JACKSONVILLE KODACHROMES BY EMORY KRISTOF (N.G.S. 397



