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What's in a name? Graveyard of the Atlantic

Posted to: News North Carolina

The steamship "Metropolis," wrecked in a gale off Currituck Beach, on the night of January 31st, with the loss of one hundred railroad operatives, on their way to Brazil. (Library of Congress)

The steamship "Metropolis," wrecked in a gale off Currituck Beach, on the night of January 31st, with the loss of one hundred railroad operatives, on their way to Brazil. (Library of Congress)


Legend has it that Alexander Hamilton, the early American statesman, gave the Outer Banks its colorful moniker, one that over time came to romanticize what mariners once dreaded. According to author Ben Dixon MacNeill in "The Hatterasman," published in 1958, Hamilton "passed Cape Hatteras on a summer night in 1773 and thereafter remembering the night's terror, he spoke of that portion of the sea as the Graveyard of the Atlantic."

Hamilton's story was a creation of the imaginative MacNeill, said Kevin Duffus, author of the 2007 "Shipwrecks of the Outer Banks, An Illustrated Guide."

"Unfortunately," Duffus said, "many, many writers and historians have repeated this."

Over the years, "Graveyard of the Atlantic" has come to broadly describe the area where an extraordinary number of shipwrecks are scattered off the waters of the Outer Banks, or more correctly, off the coast from Cape Henry to Cape Fear.

Hamilton, who as U.S. secretary of the treasury under George Washington encouraged construction of coastal lighthouses, was on a vessel heading from the West Indies to Boston at age 14 when the ship caught fire. But there is nothing in historic records indicating that Hamilton was off the coast of Hatteras when his boat caught fire, Duffus said, or that the ominous description can be attributed to him.

"Nowhere in Alexander Hamilton's personal writings did he ever say that he was in danger of being shipwrecked off the Outer Banks," Duffus said.

"There is absolutely no credible evidence that he had anything to do with Cape Hatteras or concerning the phrase Graveyard of the Atlantic. "

Numerous dangerous areas off the nation's coastlines have earned the morbid maritime nickname, Duffus said, including off New Jersey, Cape Cod and Sable Island. None of them, however, have close to the number of vessels lying in watery graves off North Carolina's Graveyard of the Atlantic - where more than 1,000 vessels over 400 years were claimed by storms, wars or pirates.

Many historic accounts tell of southbound ships that were lost as they attempted to navigate past Diamond Shoals, shallow fingers of sand stretching off Cape Hatteras, where the Labrador Current meets the Gulf Stream.

"You can stand on Cape Point at Hatteras on a stormy day and watch two oceans come together in an awesome display of savage fury," wrote author David Stick in the 1952 classic, "Graveyard of the Atlantic: Shipwrecks of the North Carolina Coast."

"Thus is formed the dreaded Diamond Shoals, its fang-like shifting sand bars pushing seaward to snare the unwary mariner. Seafaring men call it the Graveyard of the Atlantic."

Duffus said the late historian's research has stood the test of time. And it was Stick's popular book, which is still in print, not Hamilton's remark, that with one phrase melded the Outer Banks to its dramatic maritime history.

"There's no dispute," Duffus said, "that it really was David Stick who put Graveyard of the Atlantic on the map."

Catherine Kozak, (252) 441-1711, cate.kozak@pilotonline.com

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Graveyard of the Atlantic applied to hatteras in 1904

Katherine, I love your column--it's a gift to area residents--but I must take issue with the opinion that Cape Hatteras was not called the "Graveyard of the Atlantic" until the 1950s. Government reports concerning the development of an intercoastal water route in North Carolina, published ca. 1904, applied the term to Hatteras in a way that made it seem as if it had been in use since at least the late 1800s.

Keep up the good work!

Article has wrong title

I was also looking for the origin of the name "Cape Hatteras". Hatteras was used as another name for the Croatan Indians by the English before 1700. Check out "http://www.lost-colony.com/disappearing.html".

Wikepedia

The name Hatteras is the sixth oldest surviving English place-name in the U.S. An inlet north of the cape was named "Hatrask" in 1585 by Sir Richard Grenville, the admiral leading the Roanoke Colony expedition sent by Sir Walter Raleigh. It was later applied to the island and cape as well, and modified to "Hatteras

Philipt

You should have written the article, because I, like the other posters, have no idea what on earth she was talking about. At all. Ever.

Maybe...

"Seafaring men" named it and Stick made it popular?

dang..thanks for that.

glad you all agreeed...wheres the beef?

Hello--anyone in there?

So how about the origin of the name? Or was this article poorly titled? Proofreading is a lost art.

?

So, like the article title implies, where did the name Cape Hatteras come from? Did I miss something?

I guess I missed the answer

I guess I missed the answer too, and why does friscobiscuit's submittal time read 10:20 pm and it is only 9:26 pm?

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