Norfolk, 18th Century
1736 -- By charter
from George II, Norfolk and its suburbs were incorporated
into a borough. Samuel Boush became our first mayor.
1739 - St. Paul's
Episcopal Church erected on property deeded to the
Borough by Samuel Boush.
1746 - The inhabitants
of Norfolk Borough manifest their loyalty by celebrating
the defeat of the Pretender by His Royal Highness, the Duke of
Cumberland, at the Battle
of Culoden, fought on 6 April of this year.
1749 - Hurricane lays down Willoughby
Spit and forms Willoughby Bay.
1754 - A silver
mace, ancient symbol of royal authority, is presented to
the Norfolk Borough council
by Lt. Gov. Robert Dinwiddie.
1761 - Norfolk's first free
school.
1766 - Inhabitants
of Norfolk Borough and Norfolk County assemble at
courthouse and organize
the Sons of Liberty, to oppose and protest against
the Stamp Act.
1774 - First
Norfolk newspaper published, the Virginia Gazette or Norfolk
Intelligencer, edited
by John Hunter Holt. The paper was put out of business
when its press was seized by British troops in 1775.
1776 -- On New
Year's Day, English ships under the command of Lord Dunmore
opened fire on Norfolk,
burning many of the buildings to the ground. The destruction
was completed by Colonial troops in order that the British
might not occupy the
borough. Norfolk was the only American town completely
destroyed and rebuilt. A British cannonball in the wall of St.
Paul's Church is a reminder
of the Revolutionary War.
1782 - Norfolk
Charter amended to allow the Common Council to be elected by
a vote of the people.
1783 - British blockade lifted
and Norfolk begins to rebuild.
1787 -- The first
U.S. Marine Hospital was established in Norfolk County.
It later became the U.S.
Public Health Hospital.
1788 - Norfolk's
first organized volunteer fire fighting company was
established. By 1827
there were 3 volunteer fire companies in the city.
1788 - First
newspaper published in Borough after the Revolution, known as
The Norfolk and Portsmouth
Chronicle.
1790 - Courthouse
built on Main Street, east of Church. The population of
the Borough was nearly
3000.
1792 - The Myers
House, one of the first brick buildings to be constructed
in Norfolk after the
Revolution, was built by Moses Myers. Myers was a
shipping merchant who
came to Norfolk in 1787 from New York.
1793 - Haitian
refugees with free blacks as well as slaves arrive in
Norfolk.
1795 - Federal government buys
land and orders building of Fort Norfolk.
1797 - The Borough
of Norfolk adopts an ordinance to govern a Watch. This
was the beginning of
our modern Police Department.
> 19th Century
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