Newport News, Virginia "Newport News"

Newport News .

Newport News, Virginia City of Newport News The downtown Newport News horizon as seen from 26th Street and I-664 overpass in August 2013 The downtown Newport News horizon as seen from 26th Street and I-664 overpass in August 2013 Official seal of Newport News, Virginia Newport News, Virginia is positioned in the US Newport News, Virginia - Newport News, Virginia Newport News is an autonomous town/city located in the Commonwealth of Virginia.

Newport News is encompassed in the Hampton Roads urbane area.

It is at the southeastern end of the Virginia Peninsula, on the northern shore of the James River extending southeast from Skiffe's Creek along many miles of coastline to the river's mouth at Newport News Point on the harbor of Hampton Roads.

The region now known as Newport News was once a part of Warwick County.

Huntington, whose new Peninsula Extension of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway from Richmond opened up transit along the Peninsula and provided a new pathway for the barns to bring West Virginia bituminous coal to port for coastal shipping and around the world export.

In 1896, the new incorporated town of Newport News, which had briefly replaced Denbigh as the governmental center of county of Warwick County, had a populace of 9,000.

In 1958, by mutual consent by popular vote, Newport News was merged with the former Warwick County (itself a separate town/city from 1952 to 1958), rejoining the two localities to roughly their pre-1896 geographic size.

The more widely known name of Newport News was chose as they formed what was then Virginia's third biggest autonomous town/city in population. With many inhabitants provided jobs to at the expansive Newport News Shipbuilding, the joint U.S.

Newport News also serves as a junction between the rails and the sea with the Newport News Marine Terminals positioned at the East End of the city.

Served by primary east-west Interstate Highway 64, it is linked to the rest of the metros/cities of Hampton Roads by the circumferential Hampton Roads Beltway, which crosses the harbor on two bridge-tunnels.

The initial area near the mouth of the James River was first alluded to as Newportes Newes as early as 1621. The origin of the name "Newport News" is not known with certainty.

Probably the best-known explanation holds that when an early group of Jamestown colonists left to return to England after the Starving Time amid the winter of 1609 1610 aboard a ship of Captain Christopher Newport, they encountered another fleet of supply ships under the new Governor Thomas West, 3rd Baron De La Warr in the James River off Mulberry Island with reinforcements of men and supplies.

Another possibility is that the improve may have derived its name from an old English word "news" meaning "new town".

Another origin gave the initial name as New Port Newce, titled for a person with the name Newce and the town's place as a new seaport.

Several old maps where the name is given as Newport Ness, being the mariner's way of saying Newport Point. The fact that the name formerly appeared as "Newport's News" is verified by various early documents and maps, and by small-town tradition.

The change to Newport News came about through usage, for by 1851 the Post Office Department sanctioned "New Port News" (three words) as the name of the first postal service.

Main articles: History of Newport News, Virginia; Timeline of Newport News, Virginia; and Warwick County, Virginia The newly constructed USS Birmingham is launched from the Newport News yards in 1942 At that time, pioneer began clearing territory along the James River (the navigable part of which was called Hampton Roads) for plantations, including the present region of Newport News.

In 1619, the region of Newport News was encompassed in one of four huge corporations of the Virginia Company of London.

It became known as Elizabeth Cittie and extended west all the way to Skiffe's Creek (currently the border between Newport News and James City County).

The region of Newport News became part of Warwick River Shire, which became Warwick County in 1637.

Newport News was a non-urban area of plantations and a small fishing village until after the American Civil War.

The region that formed the present-day southern end of Newport News had long been established as an unincorporated town.

During Reconstruction, the reconstructionafter the American Civil War, the new City of Newport News was essentially established by California merchant Collis P.

In the 1880s, he oversaw extension of the C&O's new Peninsula Subdivision, which extended from the Church Hill Tunnel in Richmond southeast down the peninsula through Williamsburg to Newport News, where the business advanced coal piers on the harbor of Hampton Roads. His next universal was to precarious Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Company, which became the world's biggest shipyard.

In addition to Collis, other members of the Huntington family played primary part s in Newport News.

A primary feature of Newport News, the Mariners' Museum has grown to turn into one of the biggest and finest maritime exhibitions in the world. In 1958, the citizenry of the metros/cities of Warwick and Newport News voted by popular vote to consolidate the two cities, choosing to assume the better-known name of Newport News.

The boundaries of the City of Newport News today are essentially the boundaries of the initial Warwick River Shire and the traditional one of Warwick County, with the exception of minor border adjustments with neighbors. The city's initial downtown area, on the James River coastline, changed quickly from a farm trading town to a new town/city in the last quarter of the 19th century.

In July 1989 the United States Navy commissioned the third naval vessel titled after the town/city with the entry of the Los Angeles-class nuclear submarine USS NEWPORT NEWS (SSN-750), assembled at Newport News Shipbuilding, into active service.

In conjunction with this milestone, a song was written by a town/city indigenous and formally adopted by Newport News City Council in July 1989.

(Chorus): Strength wrought from steel/And a citizens 's fortitude/Such is the timeless legacy/Of a place called Newport News Newport News interval in populace from the 1960s through the 1990s.

The town/city began to explore New Urbanism as a way to precarious areas midtown.

The town/city invested $82 million of enhance financing in the project. Closely following Oyster Point, Port Warwick opened as an urban residentiary improve in the new midtown company district.

Newport News, Hampton, Portsmouth and Norfolk, Virginia from space, July 1996 (Newport News is seen in the upper left quadrant) Newport News is positioned at 37 4 15 N 76 29 4 W (37.071046, 76.484557).

The town/city is positioned at the Peninsula side of Hampton Roads in the Tidewater region of Virginia, bordering the Atlantic Ocean.

The Hampton Roads Metropolitan Travel Destination (officially known as the Virginia Beach-Norfolk-Newport News, VA-NC MSA) is the 37th biggest in the country with a 2014 populace estimate of 1,716,624.

The region contains the Virginia metros/cities of Norfolk, Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, Hampton, Newport News, Poquoson, Portsmouth, Suffolk, Williamsburg, and the counties of Gloucester, Isle of Wight, James City, Mathews, Surry, and York, as well as the North Carolina counties of Currituck and Gates.

Newport News serves as one of the company centers on the Peninsula.

Newport News shares territory borders with James City County on the northwest, York County on the north and northeast, and Hampton on the east.

Newport News shares water borders with Portsmouth on the southeast and Suffolk on the south athwart Hampton Roads, and Isle of Wight County on the southwest and west and Surry County on the northwest athwart the James River.

Newport News Victory Arch, downtown Newport News The city's downtown region was part of the earliest advanced area which was initially incorporated as an autonomous town/city in 1896.

Original First Baptist Church in downtown Newport News Along with some newer residentiary areas, primary features of the northwestern end include the reservoirs of the Newport News Water System (which include much of the Warwick River), the expansive Newport News Park, a number of enhance schools, and the military installations of Fort Eustis and a small portion of the Naval Weapons Station Yorktown. In downtown Newport News, the Victory Arch, assembled to memorialize the Great War, sits on the downtown coastline.

The downtown region has a number of landmarks and architecturally interesting buildings, which for some time were mostly abandoned in favor of building new areas in the northwest areas of the town/city (a strategy aided by tax incentives in the postwar years).

City leaders are working to bring new life into this area, by renovating and building new homes and attracting businesses.

The culmination of Interstate 664 restored the region to access and through traffic which had been largely rerouted with the culmination of the Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel in 1958 and discontinuance of the Newport News-Norfolk ferry service at that time.

While the downtown region had long been the region of the town/city that offered the traditional urban layout, the town/city has supported a number of New Urbanism projects.

City Center at Oyster Point, positioned near Port Warwick, has been touted as the new "downtown" because of its new geographic centrality on the Virginia Peninsula, its adjacency to the retail/business nucleus of the city, etc.

Newport News is also home to a small Korean ethnic enclave on Warwick Boulevard near the Denbigh neighborhood on the northern end of the city.

Newport News has many diverse ive communities and neighborhoods inside its boundaries, including Brandon Heights, Brentwood, City Center, Colony Pines, Christopher Shores-Stuart Gardens, Denbigh, Glendale, East End, Hidenwood, Hilton Village, Hunter's Glenn, Beaconsdale, Ivy Farms, North End Huntington Heights (Historic District approximately from 50th to 75th street, along the James River), Jefferson Avenue Park, Kiln Creek, Lee Hall, Menchville, Maxwell Gardens, Morrison (also known as Harpersville and Gum Grove), Newmarket Village, Newsome Park, Oyster Point, Parkview, old North Newport News (Center Ave.

Newport News is positioned in the humid subtropical climate zone, with cool to mild winters, and hot, humid summers.

Climate data for Newport News, Virginia (1981 2010 normals) Source: NOAA (temperature and total rain normals at Newport News Int'l, all the rest at Norfolk Int'l), HKO (sun only 1961 1990) Map of ethnic distribution in Newport News, 2010 U.S.

Crime (per 100,000 citizens ) Newport News, Virginia (2007) National average Newport News experienced 20 murders giving the town/city a murder rate of 10.8 per 100,000 citizens in 2005.

The total crime index rate for Newport News is 434.7; the United States average is 320.9. According to the Congressional Quarterly Press' "2008 City Crime Rankings: Crime in Metropolitan America," Newport News ranked as the 119th most dangerous town/city larger than 75,000 inhabitants. The neighborhood with the highest crime rates in Newport News is the East End.

Newport News Shipbuilding, owned by Huntington Ingalls Industries, and the large coal piers supplied by barns enormous CSX Transportation, the undivided Fortune 500 successor to the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway (C&O).

Miles of the coastline can be seen by automobiles crossing the James River Bridge and Monitor-Merrimac Memorial Bridge-Tunnel, which is a portion of the circumferential Hampton Roads Beltway, linking the town/city with each of the other primary cities of Hampton Roads via Interstate 664 and Interstate 64.

Defensive trade suppliers are based in Newport News, and these and close-by military bases employ many residents, in addition to those working at the shipyard and in other harbor-related vocations.

Newport News plays a part in the maritime industry.

At the end of CSX barns tracks lies the Newport News Marine Terminal.

Newport News' locale next to Hampton Roads along with its rail network has provided advantages for the city.

As technology-oriented companies flourished in the 1990s, Newport News became a county-wide center for technology companies. Additional companies headquartered out of Newport News include Ferguson Enterprises and L-3 Flight International Aviation. Newport News Shipbuilding serves as the city's biggest employer with over 15,000 employees.

Newport News School System creates over 5000 jobs and acts as the city's third biggest employer. The Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility (TJNAF) is homed in Newport News.

Main article: Culture of Newport News, Virginia As with most of Virginia, Newport News is most often associated with the larger American South.

The first undivided duel of ironclad warships, the Battle of Hampton Roads, took place not far off Newport News Point in 1862. Newport News has been the home to sports franchises, including the semi-pro football Mason Dixon League's Peninsula Pirates and Peninsula Poseidons and now the Virginia Crusaders. The Christopher Newport University Captains field fourteen sports and compete in the Capital Athletic Conference in Division III of the NCAA. Sporting stars such as Michael Vick, Mike Tomlin, Al Toon, Aaron Brooks, Antoine Bethea and NBA Hall of Fame star Allen Iverson are from Newport News.

Additional sports options can be found just outside Newport News.

In Virginia Beach, the Hampton Roads Piranhas field men's and women's experienced soccer teams. The Atlantic 10 Conference has been headquartered in Newport News since 2009.

Main articles: List of parks in Newport News, Virginia and Newport News Department of Parks, Recreation and Tourism Newport News Parks is responsible for the maintenance of 32 town/city parks.

The largest, Newport News Park, is 8,065 acres (32.64 km2), the second-largest town/city park in the United States.

Newport News Park is in the northern part of the city.

There are over 30 miles (48 km) of trails in the Newport News Park complex.

Newport News Park offers an archery range, disc golf course, and an "aeromodel flying field" for remote-controlled airplane , complete with a 400 ft (120 m) runway. Newport News's everyday journal is the Daily Press.

Other papers include the Port Folio Weekly, the New Journal and Guide, the Hampton Roads Business Journal, and the James River Journal.

Christopher Newport University prints its own newspaper, The Captain's Log. Hampton Roads Magazine serves as a bi-monthly county-wide magazine for Newport News and the Hampton Roads area. Hampton Roads Times serves as an online periodical for all the Hampton Roads metros/cities and counties.

Newport News is served by a range of airways broadcasts on the AM and FM dials, with towers positioned around the Hampton Roads area. Newport News is also served by a several tv stations.

Newport News inhabitants also can receive autonomous stations, such as WSKY transmitting on channel 4 from the Outer Banks of North Carolina and WGBS-LD transmitting on channel 11 from Hampton. Newport News is an autonomous town/city with services that counties and metros/cities in Virginia provide, such as a sheriff, civil services, and a court system.

Newport News operates under a council-manager form of government, which comprises of a town/city council with delegates from three districts serving in a legislative and supervision capacity, as well as a popularly voted for, at-large mayor.

Newport News has a federal courthouse for the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia.

A new courthouse will be constructed in the future. Additionally, Newport News has its own General District and Circuit Courts which convene downtown. The town/city is in the Virginia's 1st congressional district, served by U.S.

The chief provider of major and secondary education in the town/city is Newport News Public Schools.

The school fitness contains many elementary schools, six middle schools, and the high schools, Denbigh High School, Heritage High School, Menchville High School, Warwick High School and Woodside High School.

Several private schools are positioned in the area, including Denbigh Baptist Christian School, Hampton Roads Academy, Peninsula Catholic High School, Trinity Lutheran School, and Warwick River Christian School. The town/city includes Christopher Newport University, a enhance university.

Newport News Shipbuilding operates The Apprentice School, a vocational school teaching various shipyard and related trades. See also: Newport News (Amtrak station) Newport News has an elaborate transit network, including interstate and state highways, bridges and a bridge-tunnel, freight and traveler barns service, small-town transit bus and intercity bus service, and a commercial airport.

Newport News is served by three airports.

Newport News/Williamsburg International Airport, in Newport News; Norfolk International Airport, in Norfolk; and Richmond International Airport all of which cater to travelers from Hampton Roads.

In 2012, Newport News became home to its own airline, Peopl - Express, which launched with command posts at the Newport News/Williamsburg airport.

The bus station is on Warwick Boulevard in the Denbigh area. Transportation in the city, as well as with other primary cities of Hampton Roads is served by a county-wide bus service, Hampton Roads Transit. A connecting service for small-town routes serving Williamsburg, James City County, and upper York County is directed by Williamsburg Area Transit Authority at Lee Hall. Skiffe's Creek Reservoir of the Newport News Waterworks, positioned at border of James City County and the City The Newport News Waterworks was begun as a universal of Collis P.

Huntington as part of the evolution of the lower peninsula with the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway, the coal piers on the harbor of Hampton Roads, and massive shipyard which were the primary sources of industrialized growth which helped found Newport News as a new autonomous town/city in 1896.

A county-wide water provider, in undivided times it is owned and directed by the City of Newport News, and serves over 400,000 citizens in the metros/cities of Hampton, Newport News, Poquoson, and portions of York County and James City County. Newport News is served by two acute care hospitals.

In 1963 the Riverside Hospital was moved to the present 56-acre locale in Newport News on J.

Clyde Morris Boulevard in the heart of the town/city of Newport News.

Newport News has three sister cities: List of Mayors of Newport News, Virginia National Register of Historic Places listings in Newport News, Virginia Newport News Department of Parks, Recreation and Tourism Newport News Sheriff's Office Newport News Trivia and Fun Facts, newport-news.org; accessed June 21, 2009.

"Why Does Newport News Have Such an Odd Name?", The Mariner's Museum website; accessed April 3, 2008.

"History of Newport News", William & Mary Quarterly, 1901, scanned on Rootsweb.com; accessed April 3, 2008.

"Newport News History Timeline".

Newport News Public Library System.

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Editorial: "Changing Place", Daily Press (Newport News, VA).

City Center at Oyster Point, citycenteratoysterpoint.com; accessed April 3, 2008.

Newport News, Virginia (VA) profile: population, maps, real estate, averages, homes, statistics, relocation, travel, jobs, hospitals, schools, crime, moving, homes, sex offenders...

Overview Northrop Grumman Newport News Shipbuilding.

Newport News Marine Terminal Virginia Port Authority.

Economy Economic Base Newport News Economic Development Authority.

Economy Largest Employers Newport News City Economic Development Authority.

CNU Athletics Christopher Newport University; accessed February 26, 2017.

Todd Stadium 2005 Schedule Newport News Public Schools.

Athletics, Newport News Public Schools, sbo.nn.k12.va.us; accessed April 17, 2008.

Parks, Squares, and Plazas Newport News Department of Parks, Recreation, and Tourism; accessed April 3, 2008.

Newport News Park Newport News Department of Parks, Recreation, and Tourism; accessed April 3, 2008.

"Hilton Pier Dedicated," Daily Press (Newport News, VA) July 10, 2005, B1-B2 Parks Division Newport News Department of Parks, Recreation, and Tourism; accessed April 3, 2008.

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Newport News City Council.

Courts Newport News courthouse.

Newport News Circuit Court City of Newport News; accessed April 3, 2008.

Newport News Public Schools.

Amtrak Newport News Station, amtrak.com; accessed April 3, 2008.

Waterworks City of Newport News website; accessed April 3, 2008.

Sister Cities designated by Sister Cities International, Inc.

Newport News, Virginia Hampton Roads Economic Development Alliance serving Newport News Newport News Digital Library -NNPLS Newport News City of Newport News

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Cities in Virginia - Newport News, Virginia - Populated places on the James River (Virginia)Hampton Roads - Populated places established in 1619 - Former county seats in Virginia - 1619 establishments in Virginia