Wash DC to the Outer Banks Trip
My daughter and I are visiting from GB and wish to make a trip from Washington DC to outer banks and return. Can anyone recommend a good round trip route to take in the best to see, do and stay. Also great inexpensive & quirky places to eat enroute. We want to do it in 2 (or 3 if required) days?
Thanks for any good advice or suggestions.
More Time Would Be a Big Help
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The area you're going to be driving through is so gorgeous and so chock full of history that it would really be a shame to rush through. Two days barely lets you make the drive and a few quick stops. Three or even four days would be so much better if you can possibly swing it. You will be richly rewarded for your time. So let me describe a 'little' loop trip and just some of the sights along the way, so you can decide for yourself whether finding a little extra time will be worth it.
From Washington head east on US-50 to Annapolis, the capital of Maryland, home to the US Naval Academy and a great walking town. Then cross the Chesapeake Bay Bridge to the Eastern Shore and possibly make a stop at the quaint (but definitely touristy) town of St. Michaels and the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum. Continue on US-50 to Salisbury, the main city on the Delmarva Peninsula, and US-13 south. Just after crossing into Virginia, take VA-175 east past the NASA launch facility at Wallops Island to the Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge, home to a herd of wild ponies. Return to US-13 and continue down to the tip of the peninsula and use the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel to cross over to Norfolk on the 'mainland'.
From Norfolk take VA-168 down to US-158 and onto the Outer Banks, Fortunately, some (but by no means all) of the best attractions of the Banks are at the northern end, including Kitty Hawk, the site of the Wright Brothers' first flight and Fort Raleigh in Manteo, the site of the first English settlement in the New World. Not too far south, you'll be in the Pea Island National Wildlife Refuge with unspoiled beaches facing the Atlantic.
When you're done on the Banks, head back up through Norfolk and cross over to Hampton via I-64. Just north of the urban area is one of the richest troves of American (and British) history, known as the Historic Triangle, and consisting of Jamestown, the first 'permanent' English settlement in America, Williamsburg, the restored colonial capital of Virginia, and Yorktown, site of the final battle in the American Revolutionary War. As you return to Washington, you can either use the Interstates to head inland to the Richmond area and its rich Civil War history or hug the Chesapeake Bay shoreline and visit George Washington's birthplace and his later home at Mount Vernon.
But you're certainly not going to fit all that into two days!
AZBuck