Time and Tide

Time and Tide

The Vanishing Culture of the North Carolina Coast

$34.95

Publication Date: 18th April 2023

A longtime coast watcher tells the story of the beautiful and ever-changing coast of North Carolina—rich in culture, history, and landscape—with words and photographs. This gorgeous, richly illustrated... Read More
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A longtime coast watcher tells the story of the beautiful and ever-changing coast of North Carolina—rich in culture, history, and landscape—with words and photographs. This gorgeous, richly illustrated... Read More
Description

A longtime coast watcher tells the story of the beautiful and ever-changing coast of North Carolina—rich in culture, history, and landscape—with words and photographs. 

This gorgeous, richly illustrated book for visitors and residents alike details the charms and controversies of the “banks” of North Carolina. Hatcher highlights the current wonders of the famous coast, as well as an intriguing history that includes the familiar Outer Banks legendary Wright Brothers flight, the Graveyard of the Atlantic, and the picturesque lighthouses, as well as the lesser known Chitlin’ Circuit beach resort, a 1898 coup d’etat, and a controversial sea bird. Told with an ear for the native language and local lore, with a taste for the water and its riches, and above all, with an eye toward the preservation of a vanishing environment and culture, this will be the go-to book for readers who want an overview of the North Carolina coastal region.

Details
  • Price: $34.95
  • Pages: 290
  • Carton Quantity: 15
  • Publisher: Blair
  • Imprint: Blair
  • Publication Date: 18th April 2023
  • Trim Size: 10 x 9 in
  • Illustration Note: 100 color photographs
  • ISBN: 9781958888032
  • Format: Paperback
  • BISACs:
    PHOTOGRAPHY / Subjects & Themes / Regional (see also TRAVEL / Pictorials)
    HISTORY / United States / 20th Century
    HISTORY / United States / State & Local / South (AL, AR, FL, GA, KY, LA, MS, NC, SC, TN, VA, WV)
    TRAVEL / United States / South / South Atlantic (DC, DE, FL, GA, MD, NC, SC, VA, WV)
Author Bio
In the past few years, Tim Hatcher has lived on the North Carolina coast with several beach cats, working on Time and Tide: The Vanishing Culture of the North Carolina Coast. He has traveled the world as a quality inspector, and later in life, taught in the field of human resources at NC State and elsewhere. He was also the editor of the Human Resource Development Quarterly. He is an avid saltwater angler, and a semi-professional, still-looking-for-that-big-break musician—a rock, country, Latin, and blues percussionist. Since the first time he drove from his home in East Tennessee to the Outer Banks and saw the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse, some five decades ago, Tim Hatcher has had an affection and respect for the NC coast and its people. He has studied and written about its tough people and its fragile environment for the better part of his adult life. This, his first book about the coast’s nature and culture, is the result.
Table of Contents

Preface

Introduction

 

Chapter 1: “The Goodliest Land”

 A Long and Diverse Coast Line: From the Outer Banks to Down East and Beyond

 The Inner Banks, Southern Banks, and the Crystal Coast

 Sand: Forever Shifting

 The Landscape for The First Flight

 Move of the Millennium: Rescuing the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse

 Pocosins, Swamps, Quagmires, and Refuges

 

Chapter 2: Aqua Vita Est, Water is Life

The Shapes of Water: Sounds, Inlets, and Rivers

America’s Intracoastal Waterway: Safe Passage for Mariners

The Gulf Stream: The Great Blue Engine of NC’s Coast

The Atlantic Ocean: Architect and Matriarch of Coastal NC

 

Chapter 3: The Weather, "Red Sky at Night"

 A Weather of Wind and Change

 A Fisherman’s Nightmare

 Storms Through History in North Carolina

 Rating Storms

 Hurricanes in the Busy 1950s and 1960s

 1970s and 1980s: Relative Quiet

 The Active 1990s

 A New Century Brings More Storms

 Most Recent Storms

 

Chapter 4 - Shaping a Culture

 A Different Way of Life

 The Allure of the Ocean

 

Chapter 5: The Past Shapes the Future

 Early Inhabitants: The Coast's First People

 Europeans’ First Explorations of the North Carolina Coast

 From First Contact to First Colony 

 Privateers, Pirates, or Pyrates?

 

Chapter 6: Saving Lives in Dangerous Water

 Danger, Destruction, and Death: The Graveyard of the Atlantic

 Saving Lives on a Treacherous Coast

 Saving Lives with Light: Lighthouse Keepers

 

Chapter 7: Commerce and Tourism

 "Red and White" Commerce: 155 Years and Counting

 The “Flipper” Factory 

 Beach Cottages of Old Nags Head: Unpainted Upper Crust

 More Old Houses and Old Money: Wilmington and Beyond

 Portsmouth Island: Bugs, Fish, and Heathens

 Buffalo City: Good Water, Good Wood, Good Whiskey, Good-Bye

 

Chapter 8: Planes, Piers, and Boats

 More than Sand and Wind: The Bankers’ Connection to the Wright Brothers

 The North Carolina Ferry System: Lifeline for Thousands

 The Carolina Flare and the Long Tradition of Boatbuilding

 Liberty City: Ugly Ducklings and the Mothball Fleet

 Piers: Another Legacy Lost

 

Chapter 9 – Controversy, Conflict, and Water Access 

 Disputed Lands and Waters

 Water Access: Drawing Lines in the Sand

 

Chapter 10 – Cape Hatteras National Seashore and Recreation Area: The Long (Winding,  Confusing, and Difficult) Road from Idea to Reality

 Early Concepts and Initial Government Involvement

 Establishment of the Park and the First Seashore Commission

 World War II-Era Developments

 A New Social Contract

 The Seashore Park Becomes a Reality

 

Chapter 11 – Trying to Fish

 Bluefish, Bluefin, and the Blues

 The Unwinnable Battle for the Atlantic Bluefin Tuna

 North Carolina’s Menhaden: The Unsavory Smell of Success

 

Chapter 12 – Plovers, Politics, and Plutocrats

 Surf Fishers

 Little Birds on the Beach

 Plover Politics

 Mixed Results

 

Chapter 13 – Legacy of Black North Carolinians on the Coast 

 The Roanoke Freedman’s Colony

 The 1898 Wilmington Coup d’Etat

 Black Resorts, Beaches, and New Music

 Beaufort’s 21st Century Land Grab

 

Chapter 14 – To Build or Not to Build

 The Saga of the Bonner and Mid-Currituck Bridges

 The Megaport Project: Unveil or Unload?

 Nutmeg: A Tasty Spice or a Just a Bad Idea?

 Rockets, Fuel, Oil, and Gas: Odd Coastal Cousins

 Beach “Nourishment”

 

Chapter 15: On the Horizon

 Global Warming and Sea Level Rise

 Scientific Initiatives to Measure Sea Level and Coastal Changes

 The Horizon

 

Appendix: NC DOT Maps of the North Carolina Coast

Bibliography

Acknowledgements

A longtime coast watcher tells the story of the beautiful and ever-changing coast of North Carolina—rich in culture, history, and landscape—with words and photographs. 

This gorgeous, richly illustrated book for visitors and residents alike details the charms and controversies of the “banks” of North Carolina. Hatcher highlights the current wonders of the famous coast, as well as an intriguing history that includes the familiar Outer Banks legendary Wright Brothers flight, the Graveyard of the Atlantic, and the picturesque lighthouses, as well as the lesser known Chitlin’ Circuit beach resort, a 1898 coup d’etat, and a controversial sea bird. Told with an ear for the native language and local lore, with a taste for the water and its riches, and above all, with an eye toward the preservation of a vanishing environment and culture, this will be the go-to book for readers who want an overview of the North Carolina coastal region.

  • Price: $34.95
  • Pages: 290
  • Carton Quantity: 15
  • Publisher: Blair
  • Imprint: Blair
  • Publication Date: 18th April 2023
  • Trim Size: 10 x 9 in
  • Illustrations Note: 100 color photographs
  • ISBN: 9781958888032
  • Format: Paperback
  • BISACs:
    PHOTOGRAPHY / Subjects & Themes / Regional (see also TRAVEL / Pictorials)
    HISTORY / United States / 20th Century
    HISTORY / United States / State & Local / South (AL, AR, FL, GA, KY, LA, MS, NC, SC, TN, VA, WV)
    TRAVEL / United States / South / South Atlantic (DC, DE, FL, GA, MD, NC, SC, VA, WV)
In the past few years, Tim Hatcher has lived on the North Carolina coast with several beach cats, working on Time and Tide: The Vanishing Culture of the North Carolina Coast. He has traveled the world as a quality inspector, and later in life, taught in the field of human resources at NC State and elsewhere. He was also the editor of the Human Resource Development Quarterly. He is an avid saltwater angler, and a semi-professional, still-looking-for-that-big-break musician—a rock, country, Latin, and blues percussionist. Since the first time he drove from his home in East Tennessee to the Outer Banks and saw the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse, some five decades ago, Tim Hatcher has had an affection and respect for the NC coast and its people. He has studied and written about its tough people and its fragile environment for the better part of his adult life. This, his first book about the coast’s nature and culture, is the result.

Preface

Introduction

 

Chapter 1: “The Goodliest Land”

 A Long and Diverse Coast Line: From the Outer Banks to Down East and Beyond

 The Inner Banks, Southern Banks, and the Crystal Coast

 Sand: Forever Shifting

 The Landscape for The First Flight

 Move of the Millennium: Rescuing the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse

 Pocosins, Swamps, Quagmires, and Refuges

 

Chapter 2: Aqua Vita Est, Water is Life

The Shapes of Water: Sounds, Inlets, and Rivers

America’s Intracoastal Waterway: Safe Passage for Mariners

The Gulf Stream: The Great Blue Engine of NC’s Coast

The Atlantic Ocean: Architect and Matriarch of Coastal NC

 

Chapter 3: The Weather, "Red Sky at Night"

 A Weather of Wind and Change

 A Fisherman’s Nightmare

 Storms Through History in North Carolina

 Rating Storms

 Hurricanes in the Busy 1950s and 1960s

 1970s and 1980s: Relative Quiet

 The Active 1990s

 A New Century Brings More Storms

 Most Recent Storms

 

Chapter 4 - Shaping a Culture

 A Different Way of Life

 The Allure of the Ocean

 

Chapter 5: The Past Shapes the Future

 Early Inhabitants: The Coast's First People

 Europeans’ First Explorations of the North Carolina Coast

 From First Contact to First Colony 

 Privateers, Pirates, or Pyrates?

 

Chapter 6: Saving Lives in Dangerous Water

 Danger, Destruction, and Death: The Graveyard of the Atlantic

 Saving Lives on a Treacherous Coast

 Saving Lives with Light: Lighthouse Keepers

 

Chapter 7: Commerce and Tourism

 "Red and White" Commerce: 155 Years and Counting

 The “Flipper” Factory 

 Beach Cottages of Old Nags Head: Unpainted Upper Crust

 More Old Houses and Old Money: Wilmington and Beyond

 Portsmouth Island: Bugs, Fish, and Heathens

 Buffalo City: Good Water, Good Wood, Good Whiskey, Good-Bye

 

Chapter 8: Planes, Piers, and Boats

 More than Sand and Wind: The Bankers’ Connection to the Wright Brothers

 The North Carolina Ferry System: Lifeline for Thousands

 The Carolina Flare and the Long Tradition of Boatbuilding

 Liberty City: Ugly Ducklings and the Mothball Fleet

 Piers: Another Legacy Lost

 

Chapter 9 – Controversy, Conflict, and Water Access 

 Disputed Lands and Waters

 Water Access: Drawing Lines in the Sand

 

Chapter 10 – Cape Hatteras National Seashore and Recreation Area: The Long (Winding,  Confusing, and Difficult) Road from Idea to Reality

 Early Concepts and Initial Government Involvement

 Establishment of the Park and the First Seashore Commission

 World War II-Era Developments

 A New Social Contract

 The Seashore Park Becomes a Reality

 

Chapter 11 – Trying to Fish

 Bluefish, Bluefin, and the Blues

 The Unwinnable Battle for the Atlantic Bluefin Tuna

 North Carolina’s Menhaden: The Unsavory Smell of Success

 

Chapter 12 – Plovers, Politics, and Plutocrats

 Surf Fishers

 Little Birds on the Beach

 Plover Politics

 Mixed Results

 

Chapter 13 – Legacy of Black North Carolinians on the Coast 

 The Roanoke Freedman’s Colony

 The 1898 Wilmington Coup d’Etat

 Black Resorts, Beaches, and New Music

 Beaufort’s 21st Century Land Grab

 

Chapter 14 – To Build or Not to Build

 The Saga of the Bonner and Mid-Currituck Bridges

 The Megaport Project: Unveil or Unload?

 Nutmeg: A Tasty Spice or a Just a Bad Idea?

 Rockets, Fuel, Oil, and Gas: Odd Coastal Cousins

 Beach “Nourishment”

 

Chapter 15: On the Horizon

 Global Warming and Sea Level Rise

 Scientific Initiatives to Measure Sea Level and Coastal Changes

 The Horizon

 

Appendix: NC DOT Maps of the North Carolina Coast

Bibliography

Acknowledgements