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As you might expect, Frisco was already populated by Native
Americans when the Europeans first arrived. Folklore relates
that, despite the rumors that the Lost Colony on Manteo to the
north was devastated by Native Americans, the truth is that
early Hatteras Island inhabitants actually got along well with
the Native Americans and even "intermingled."
Learn more about the Native Americans in Frisco at the
Native
American Museum. Old Timers tell that the
Island had an early social "pecking order" which
started in the Village of Hatteras and then moved north with
Trent Woods being very close and related to the Village of
Hatteras inhabitants.
But that's getting ahead of things. Hatteras Island was
considered a "filling station" for the earliest
European explorers. Most of these early explorations had small
ships running ahead of the main exploration to scout out the
need for things like safe harbor and the wood from our live
oak trees to make hull repairs. The vastly wooded Hatteras
Island was a main stopping point for these explorers. People
and animals (like the ponies at Ocracoke) were the earliest
European inhabitants.
Hatteras even once had a train track running the length of
the island to haul out its huge supply of cut lumber. You can
still see the remnants of an old trestle on the sound side as
you pass an area called "new Inlet." Yep, that was
once an inlet that eventually filled back in. That's why you
will see signs entering the island from the north that refer
to Pea Island which was once a separate island from Hatteras
Island. Atlantic storms and the ever shifting sands of this
island are constantly slowly changing its location similar
to the turning of the tracks on a tank. |