The Onancock Chronicles the Eastern shore

Is that near Onancock?

Cape Charles - 40 miles south - if you havent been there I can highly recommend it

They've got a bunch of restaurants, a brewery, a distillery, a cidery, huge fishing pier (which is where that picture was taken), antique shops, ice cream parlor, couple of art galleries - bunch of stuff.

Three eating recommendations:
Kelley's Gingernut Pub - tell Gene the owner I said hi - best she-crab soup I've ever had
The Shanty
The Oyster Farm - high end - but right on the Bay with an incredible view & outside decks

3rd Largest Town on the Shore by population.
 
Cape Charles - 40 miles south - if you havent been there I can highly recommend it

They've got a bunch of restaurants, a brewery, a distillery, a cidery, huge fishing pier (which is where that picture was taken), antique shops, ice cream parlor, couple of art galleries - bunch of stuff.

Three eating recommendations:
Kelley's Gingernut Pub - tell Gene the owner I said hi - best she-crab soup I've ever had
The Shanty
The Oyster Farm - high end - but right on the Bay with an incredible view & outside decks

3rd Largest Town on the Shore by population.
We did a drive thru a while back,have to check it out again tho..
 
Cape Charles - 40 miles south - if you havent been there I can highly recommend it

They've got a bunch of restaurants, a brewery, a distillery, a cidery, huge fishing pier (which is where that picture was taken), antique shops, ice cream parlor, couple of art galleries - bunch of stuff.

Three eating recommendations:
Kelley's Gingernut Pub - tell Gene the owner I said hi - best she-crab soup I've ever had
The Shanty
The Oyster Farm - high end - but right on the Bay with an incredible view & outside decks

3rd Largest Town on the Shore by population.
Never had she crab soup but saw it on foonetwork looks delicious
 
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Onancock Volunteer Fire Department Inc.

tSp7oneSsdorhed ·
The Future!
 
The Eastern Shore Post
April 16, 2021

By Carol Vaughn

The body of a Fruitland, Md., man who died when the truck he was driving plunged off the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel in December was found on a North Carolina beach.

A Facebook page dedicated to “Finding Erik Mezick” said the family was notified Friday his body was found. “We said he would present himself when he was ready and in true Eric (sic) style he did just that today on his favorite beach!” a post on the page said. A body, later confirmed by his brother to be Mezick, was found on a beach at Cape Hatteras National Seashore, between Salvo and Avon, N.C., Friday morning, according to a report by WVEC.

The National Park Service reported an Outer Banks resident spotted the body on the beach at around 9:15 a.m. Friday, according to the report. The remains were to be transferred to the North Carolina Medical Examiner’s Office.

Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel officials identified Mezick as the driver of a box truck that plunged into the Chesapeake Bay during a northbound crossing around 8:20 a.m. Dec. 29. The truck was owned by Cloverland Green Spring Dairy. Mezick was seen exiting the truck into the water after the crash.

An extensive but unsuccessful search after the crash covered about 178 square miles and involved multiple Coast Guard crews from Cape Charles, the Coast Guard Cutter Hawk, and Coast Guard Air Station Elizabeth City, N.C. Boat and shore crews from the Maritime Incident Response Team, Virginia Resources Commission, Virginia Beach Fire Department, and Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel Police also assisted the search.

After the multi-agency search was called off, Mezick’s brother, Kevin Mezick, and volunteers continued searching for his body. The crash was the 16th case of a vehicle going over the side of the bridge-tunnel, according to a report in the Virginian-Pilot. Mezick, 47, left behind a wife of 24 years and two children, according t
o the Facebook page.
 
The Eastern Shore Post
April 16, 2021

By Carol Vaughn

The body of a Fruitland, Md., man who died when the truck he was driving plunged off the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel in December was found on a North Carolina beach.

A Facebook page dedicated to “Finding Erik Mezick” said the family was notified Friday his body was found. “We said he would present himself when he was ready and in true Eric (sic) style he did just that today on his favorite beach!” a post on the page said. A body, later confirmed by his brother to be Mezick, was found on a beach at Cape Hatteras National Seashore, between Salvo and Avon, N.C., Friday morning, according to a report by WVEC.

The National Park Service reported an Outer Banks resident spotted the body on the beach at around 9:15 a.m. Friday, according to the report. The remains were to be transferred to the North Carolina Medical Examiner’s Office.

Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel officials identified Mezick as the driver of a box truck that plunged into the Chesapeake Bay during a northbound crossing around 8:20 a.m. Dec. 29. The truck was owned by Cloverland Green Spring Dairy. Mezick was seen exiting the truck into the water after the crash.

An extensive but unsuccessful search after the crash covered about 178 square miles and involved multiple Coast Guard crews from Cape Charles, the Coast Guard Cutter Hawk, and Coast Guard Air Station Elizabeth City, N.C. Boat and shore crews from the Maritime Incident Response Team, Virginia Resources Commission, Virginia Beach Fire Department, and Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel Police also assisted the search.

After the multi-agency search was called off, Mezick’s brother, Kevin Mezick, and volunteers continued searching for his body. The crash was the 16th case of a vehicle going over the side of the bridge-tunnel, according to a report in the Virginian-Pilot. Mezick, 47, left behind a wife of 24 years and two children, according t
o the Facebook page.
Good news for his family..
 
The rebuilding if the launch ramp down at the Onancock Wharf is finally underway........


ramp1.jpg
ramp2.jpg


The Onancock Historic District and Town Wharf has been coined the "Gem of the Eastern Shore". Explored by Captain John Smith in 1607 and chartered in 1680, Onancock is one of King James' original 12 royal ports in Colonies. Blessed with deep water access to the Chesapeake Bay and offering a natural safe haven from stormy weather, Onancock was for over 250 years the trade center of the Eastern Shore, closely tied in maritime commerce to Baltimore and Norfolk. Onancock today remains a working port for watermen and waterborne commerce while offering recreational boaters a unique port of call.
 
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