Old Point Comfort is a point of land located in the independent city of Hampton. It lies at the extreme tip of the Virginia Peninsula at the mouth of Hampton Roads in the United States.

According to a combination of old records and legend, the name derived from an incident when the Jamestown settlers first arrived. Captain Christopher Newport's flagship, Susan Constant, anchored near by on 28 April 1607. Members of the crew "rowed to a point where they found a channel which put them in good comfort."Template:Citequite They named the adjacent land Cape Comfort, now known as Old Point Comfort to differentiate it from New Point Comfort 21 miles (34 km) up the Chesapeake Bay.[citation needed]

Point Comfort formed the beginning of the boundary of colonial Virginia. The Second Charter of the Virginia Company, granted in 1609, gave the company

all those Lands, Countries, and Territories, situate, lying, and being in that Part of America, called Virginia, from the Point of Land,from the pointe of lande called Cape or Pointe Comfort all alonge the seacoste to the northward two hundred miles and from the said pointe of Cape Comfort all alonge the sea coast to the southward twoe hundred miles; and all that space and circuit of lande lieinge from the sea coaste of the precinct aforesaid upp unto the lande, throughoute, from sea to sea, west and northwest . . .[1]

Because of the ambiguity as to which line was to run west, and which northwest, this charter either gave the Virginia company about 160,000 square miles (410,000 km2) of eastern North America, or about one-third of the entire continent, extending to the Pacific Ocean.[2] Unsurprisingly, the Colony of Virginia chose the larger interpretation, and the State of Virginia continued to claim much of the Ohio Valley and beyond until after the American Revolution, only relinquishing its claims to the Northwest Territory in 1784 and allowing its western claims to become Kentucky in 1790.

For most of the 19th and 20th centuries, Old Point Comfort was a summer and winter resort in the town of Phoebus in Elizabeth City County until the citizens of both the town and county voted to be consolidated with the independent city of Hampton in 1952. Old Point Comfort is the location of historic Fort Monroe, the Chamberlin Hotel, and the Old Point Comfort Light.[citation needed]

Old Point Comfort was the site where Southern Baptists and Northern Baptists inaugurated negotiations toward a comity agreement in 1909.[citation needed]

It was near Old Point Comfort that the USS Missouri (BB-63), then the only U.S. battleship in commission, was proceeding seaward on a training mission from Hampton Roads early on 17 January 1950 when she ran aground 1.6 miles (3.0 km) from Thimble Shoal Light (near Old Point Comfort). She hit shoal water a distance of three ship-lengths from the main channel. Lifted some seven feet above waterline, she stuck hard and fast. With the aid of tugboats, pontoons, and an incoming tide, she was refloated on 1 February 1950 and repaired.[citation needed]

References

37°00′02″N 76°18′41″W / 37.00056°N 76.31139°W / 37.00056; -76.31139