- Skiffe's Creek
Skiffe's Creek is located in James City County and the
independent city of Newport News in theVirginia Peninsula area of theHampton Roads region of southeasternVirginia in theUnited States . It is a tributary of the James River.Early history 17th-19th centuries
In the early 17th century, Skiffe's Creek bordered
Martin's Hundred , a proprietary settlement dating to 1618 in the BritishColony of Virginia . The creek formed one of the borders betweenJames City Shire andWarwick Shire when they were formed in 1634 by theHouse of Burgesses as directed by King Charles I as two of the eight originalshires of Virginia .For over 300 years it was part of the boundary between James City County and Warwick County. The latter consolidated into the city of Newport News in 1958. The creek continues ot be the dividing line between the two
political subdivisions of Virginia .In 1881, Skiffe's Creek was bridged by a trestle of the new Peninsula Subdivision as the
Collis P. Huntington led the development of theChesapeake and Ohio Railway through the newChurch Hill Tunnel and down theVirginia Peninsula through Williamsburg to reachcoal pier s located on the harborHampton Roads , the East Coast of the United State's largestice-free port . During the ten years from 1878 to 1888, C&O's coal resources began to be developed and shipped eastward. Coal became a staple of the C&O's business at that time, and still did over 125 years later under successorCSX Transportation .About 2 miles east of the Skiffe's Creek crossing, the Lee Hall depot was built in 1881-82, and later expanded. The station served tens of thousands of soldiers based at what became nearby
Fort Eustis duringWorld War I andWorld War II .Skiffe's Creek Reservoir
Skiffe's Creek Reservoir is a portion of the Newport News Waterworks, a regional water provider, owned and operated by the City of Newport News, that serves over 400,000 people in the cities of Hampton, Newport News, Poquoson, and portions of York County and James City County. [ [http://www.nngov.com/waterworks Waterworks — City of Newport News ] ] The regional water system, which included initially an impingement of the Warwick River in western Warwick County, was begun as a project of
Collis P. Huntington as part of the development of the lower peninsula with theChesapeake and Ohio Railway , thecoal pier s on the harbor ofHampton Roads , and massive shipyard which were the major sources of industrial growth which helped found Newport News as a new independent city in 1896.19th-21st centuries
In the early 20th century, Skiffe's Creek was bridged by the new U.S. Route 60. In modern times, most through traffic uses the nearby four-laned Interstate 64 or State Route 143. Two-laned Route 60 now primarily links local traffic between the Grove community of southeastern James City County and the Lee Hall community of Newport News, with each attempting to retain some of their rural aspects as their respective localities are more fully developed.
A small portion of the expansive
Naval Weapons Station Yorktown is in the Skiffe's Creek watershed. [ http://www.protectedwithpride.org/watershed101_sheds_temp.html ]In the late 20th century, the larger-than-normal rural two story frame depot at Lee Hall was saved from demolition and is highly valued by rail fans and rail preservationists.
In June 2007, a CSX hopper train derailed at the Skiffe's Creek Trestle, with no injuries.
References
External links
* [http://www.protectedwithpride.org/watershed101_sheds_temp.html James City County Watersheds]
* [http://www.nngov.com/waterworks Newport News Waterworks]
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