(Most photos are from the Our State website.)
Jeri Rowe, Our State magazine’s Editor at Large, has made it his business for nearly 40 years to “chase stories across North Carolina.”
Lucky for us in Carteret County, N.C., he made his way to Cape Lookout National Seashore to spin a yarn that appeared in the magazine’s June edition, its “Annual Coastal Issue.”
It begins: “After decades of quiet, a historic Coast Guard Station will soon open its doors to Down East visitors to explore the science, stories and wild beauty of North Carolina’s coast.”
Rowe wrote: “In 2024,
James H. “Bud” Doughton (of Raleigh) helped secure a 20-year lease for the Cape
Lookout Coast Guard Station, reviving the longtime vision of an environmental
studies program.”
A project of the Cape Lookout Foundation, the plan is to restore the 2,000-square-foot, two-story building, which was built in 1917 and decommissioned in 1982.
Doughton’s family
vacationed at Cape Lookout when he was a boy. Rowe said that although Doughton
is now 72 and a semi-retired commercial real estate broker, he still remembers:
“One of the most amazing
things out here is a full moon on a clear night. The sand reflects the light,
and it’s unbelievable how bright it is. On the nights when there is no moon,
you’ll see every star there is.”
As a young man, Doughton periodically crewed aboard the sailboat ferry named the Diamond City, which ran visitors from Harkers Island over to the Cape on a regular basis. The boat was owned and operated by the legendary captain Josiah Bailey. Those were the good old days.
With the full support of the National Park Service, the foundation is making great progress to breathe new life into the old Coast Guard station, Rowe said.
Author and outdoorsman T. Edward Nickens of Morehead City is a regular contributor to Our State. He said he and his wife, Julie, live about three blocks away from Parrot’s on Eleventh, a cozy restaurant on the edge of the Promise Land section of town.
Nickens said they always
enjoy the fine dining experience in a casual coastal setting, preferring a
table on the front porch of the old home that was converted to restaurant in
2014.
Also featured in this issue of Our State is the historic Beaufort waterfront home of best-selling novelist Christy Woodson Harvey, who has earned the reputation as “Queen of the Beach Read” by reviewers. Several of her books contain “familiar” Crystal Coast landmarks.
Wide and gracious porches
make the Harvey family’s Front Street house, built in 1903, a real charmer. She
writes:
“I love to stand on the widow’s walk and think about the generations of women before me, waiting for boats to return to this same spot. I love that no matter how often I sweep, granules of sand still stick in the grooves between the age-old hardwood planks….” She said these grains of sand connect her to family beach vacation memories.
Christy also has a good
view of the Rachel Carson Reserve in Beaufort.
Our State contributor Ryan Stancil noted that Carrot Island, Bird Shoal, Town Marsh and Horse Island constitute “Rachel Carson’s Muse.” It’s the ecological home turf that propelled Rachel Carson to prominence as “one of the nation’s most consequential writers and a leader in the modern environmental movement.”
Regular Our State food columnist Lynn Wells, wrote about her favorite happy place, where she goes to unwind – Harkers Island.
She said while lounging in a beach chair and listening
to the “seagulls gossip,” she dreams of beachside dishes, like pickled shrimp,
dilled butter beans and crab pie.























































