Why is the Aquarium located in Pine Knoll
Shores and not at what would seemingly be a more reasonable and perhaps more
obvious location such as Morehead City, Beaufort, Harkers Island or Fort Macon?
Answering that question takes us back many years and involves the
Roosevelts, the emerging community of PKS and an ongoing concern for the
environment.
The
North Carolina Aquarium at Pine Knoll Shores had its beginning in the 1960s. A group of concerned Carteret County citizens came together to build upon the many marine-related activities in the
county. These activities, some dating back centuries, included boat
building; commercial fishing; seafood processing and seafood restaurants;
marine education, research and exploration; weather studies; boating; and
various water-related recreational activities.
The
first formal marine-science group in the area was organized as a result of the
federal Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, which awarded grants to
innovative projects in education. A grant from this act allowed Carteret
County to hire Mr. Will Hon to head a County Marine Science Program. The program’s
initial focus was education, and they produced course curriculum to provide
students the background to succeed in marine-related industries as well as
general marine educational literature and speakers.
By
the late 1960s, the mission and make-up of the group had expanded to include
marine-related interests beyond education. [i]
The
expanded group called Carteret Marine Science Council worked as a board of
directors for Mr. Hon’s project, which was now called the Regional Marine
Science Project. These efforts fueled a desire to have a facility
dedicated to educating residents and visitors about the sea around us.
The
Marine Science Council produced an organizational concept and architectural
rendering of an educational facility in the late 1960s. It was named
SeaLab and was to be located in Morehead City on
vacant land across from the hospital, the current site of Carteret County’s
Visitors Center and, much earlier, the site of Camp Glenn[ii]. (See location at bottom of post)
Conceptually, the notion of such a
facility was positively received, but the proposed site was considered
confining and inadequate for the anticipated number of visitors. The
members of the Roosevelt Trust, being concerned about environmentally
respectful coastal development and marine sciences education, in 1971, donated
292 acres in Pine Knoll Shores to the State of North Carolina for a nature
preserve with the stipulation that 25 acres would be used for marine education[iii]. The road entrance to this
parcel is on Pine Knoll Blvd. Adding to the attractiveness of this
mid-island location was the possibility of a third bridge crossing the
sound. During the 1960s and early 1970s
active planning was on-going for a bridge from Pine Knoll Blvd, then called
Bridge St, linking to the mainland near Spooners Creek.
This
marked the second time the Roosevelts were instrumental in the formation of an
important cultural institution in Carteret County. In
1900, President Teddy Roosevelt had signed an act that led to the Marine Lab
on Pivers Island[iv].
In
1976, the state opened the Marine Resource Center on the land in Pine Knoll
Shores, and in 1986, the
Center’s name was changed to The NC Aquarium at PKS. A major rebuild and
expansion of this facility was completed in 2006.
________________
Post Author: Walt Zaenker revised 3/4/14
To contact the author or the History Committee
To contact the author or the History Committee
[i] The
1950’s and 1960’s were a period in the United States that was greatly
influenced by the extensive writings of the marine biologists and
environmentalist Rachel Carson. Her
essays and articles appeared in many periodicals, both popular and
scholarly. Her books ‘The Edge of the
Sea’, ‘The Sea Around Us’, and ‘Silent Spring’, were professionally acclaimed
and enjoyed much success on the bestseller list. In Carteret County the
establishment of the Rachel Carson Coastal Reserve, located across Taylor Creek
from down town Beaufort, NC celebrates her contributions.
[ii] The
North Carolina Highway Historical Marker Program, http://www.ncmarkers.com/Markers.aspx?MarkerId=C-63
[iii] In a
letter of May 12 1971 to Tony Seamon (owner Sanitary Fish market) Theodore
Roosevelt III said in discussing the land gift ‘we have been anxious to do
something of this nature for a long time…in reading about the various programs
available for children. . .Carteret County would seem to be far ahead of other
areas in this type of estuarine ecological education.”
[iv]
Beaufort, North Carolina Historyhttp://beaufortartist.blogspot.com/2008/03/origins-of-marine-lab.html
other sources:
The News-Times, Morehead City and Beaufort, NC, October
21, 1966
The Carteret Marine Science Council presentation on
SeaLab, 1970
The staff at the MC Aquarium at PKS, in particular Sherry White
The staff at the MC Aquarium at PKS, in particular Sherry White