
Photo by Mark Rhodes
Andy and Evelyn Turner, originally from Roanoke, retired permanently to their longtime
hideaway in Deltaville.
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Castles
on the
Bay
There's a booming real estate market for vacation getaways and
retirement homes
along the Commonwealth's
Platinum Coast. |
By ESTELLE JACKSON
After 40 years of commuting 257 miles every summer between Roanoke and the Middle
Peninsula, Andy and Evelyn Turner decided the five-hour drive was too grueling a price for
peaceful days in their summer place, an old, red house lodged between the serene waters of
Jackson Creek and Fishing Bay. Two years ago they packed their bags and moved to
Deltaville.
"Our friends in Roanoke thought we were out of our minds," says Evelyn
Turner. After all, the couple had raised their six children in a 17-room residence that
also boasted a five-room guesthouse. But the newly remodeled and enlarged getaway proved
big enough on one occasion at least to accommodate 27 people overnight. Most
of the old wraparound screen porch remains, but the Turners have added a great room, a
bedroom, a master suite and four baths. The former master bedroom became a deluxe kitchen.
"I like the laid-back lifestyle here," says Andy, the retired CEO of Turner
Distributing Co. "And I like to look at the water and be on the water." Picture
windows on both floors frame shimmering views of both the creek and the bay.
The Turners have joined a host of other urban refugees moving to Chesapeake Bay
country, the area that extends through 12 counties on the Peninsula, the Northern Neck and
the Eastern Shore. A robust economy has encouraged more "come-heres" to buy
second homes on the waterfront many intended sooner or later for retirement
with some prices surpassing $500,000.
"There is most definitely an increase in sales," says Mike Vest, president of
C.D. Vest & Co. Inc. in Deltaville, who deals mostly in properties in the $100,000 to
$350,000 range. He slides into Peninsula lingo: "The come-heres have contributed
quite a lot to Deltaville. Now they far outnumber the been-heres."
Emily Carter, associate broker with Jim & Pat Carter Inc., with offices in White
Stone and Irvington, agrees that business is on an upswing. "People want this rural
lifestyle. They want to get away from the hustle and bustle." People want amenities,
too. But, she insists, "it has not changed the nature of the area."
* * *
It's been called the Platinum Coast to distinguish it from glitzier gold coasts
in other areas and the name still is valid: Virginia waterfront property is
expensive, beautiful and increasingly rare.
Still, as a visitor drives toward one of the waterfront areas, the view inland does
seem to be that of 50 years ago. Neat, well-kept houses stand on green flatlands, with
little if any intrusion from commercial signs. Gulls forage in a fallow field. At dusk, a
flock of wild turkeys straggles toward the woods.
But on the waterfront, new and renovated housing creates a different scene. Almost gone
are the simple "rivah" houses that were rural retreats for Virginia's city folk
in past generations.
Now two cultures exist side by side. Urbanites bring their own interests and lifestyle
to the waterside, while longtime residents stick to the way of life and income that their
forbears mostly farmers and watermen enjoyed before them. There are still
local fairs, bingo nights and country music shows. They've been joined, though, by upscale
restaurants and symphony concerts.
When M.T. "Tim" Blackwood, a retired executive who owns a waterfront home in
Deltaville, looked at the new 450-seat auditorium of the St. Clare Walker Middle School on
Route 33, he was impressed by its potential as a concert hall. Blackwood, who serves on
the board of the Richmond Symphony, began pulling people together to arrange for the
symphony to travel down the road to Middlesex County. Half of the traveling costs came
from a touring grant from the Virginia Commission for the Arts; the other half came from
contributions from the people of Middlesex County.
The fifth season of concerts will begin Nov. 13 and continue through April 1. News that
the Richmond Symphony will also play in Kilmarnock in January and that the Roanoke
Symphony is coming to Gloucester in April doesn't disturb Blackwood. "The more
symphony we have, the bigger audience we'll have."
Jeanine Gisvold, a medical malpractice attorney, and her husband, Robert Voth, a health
care consultant, arrived at their Victorian house on the East River in Mathews in a
roundabout way. Three and half years ago they sailed their 58-foot power boat from San
Francisco through the Panama Canal and up the East Coast, looking in Florida and elsewhere
for waterfront property for retirement. On their way from Bar Harbor, Maine, they saw an
ad in a real estate magazine that led them to a Victorian house on the East River
and to a new business sideline, an upscale restaurant.
After some months living in Mathews they noted that "people were traveling long
distances for a nice meal in a nice place," she says. The couple had long dreamed of
starting such a business, "so the need and the desire were there."
In March, Daffodils restaurant opened on Mathews' Main Street, with Voth managing the
business side and Gisvold designing its Victorian decor. They're continuing their careers
she's with the firm of Williams and Lavecchia in Richmond while a staff
conducts day-to-day operations six days a week. "Business is good," she says.
* * *
The region offers an escape from the metropolis. Emmett and Betty Wier, who moved to
Urbanna from Richmond in 1993, are in close contact with both their new town and their old
city. For several years, Emmett Wier drove 146 miles daily to and from Richmond to work as
a corporate credit manager. Betty Wier drives to Richmond regularly to attend club
meetings. Her husband still travels a few days every month. But he always dreamed of
living on the water.
The Wiers live in Cedar Pointe, a waterfront development with residents from far-flung
locales. "One is a pilot who saw Urbanna from the air. One couple from Pittsburgh
sailed their boat here originally." Other neighbors hail from Austin, Texas, and New
York City. In Urbanna, the Wiers belong to a dinner group of 18 couples, "which
incorporated us come-heres. It's super," Betty Wier says.
The scale of the town population 550 is no drawback. "One night we
sat in an ice cream parlor downtown, outside, at night, and thought, 'Where else could we
do this?'" says Betty Wier. "As soon as we exit off Route 64, all our troubles
and burdens melt away."
The transition of Middlesex and Mathews counties from an agricultural and fishing area
to one increasingly dependent on newcomers eager to join "the land of pleasant
living" is repeated in some degree in all 12 counties that make up the Bay and
Eastern Shore areas.
The growth is steady in an area where, according to the 1990 census, 10 of the 12
member counties had populations of around 13,000 or less. Only Accomack, with a population
of 31,703, and Gloucester, with 30,131, exceeded that number. With the exception of
Northampton County, however, all are growing and so is their prosperity.
Gloucester County analyzed median home values in the six Middle Peninsula counties and
found a dramatic rise between 1980 and 1990: In Middlesex and Mathews counties, values
nearly doubled. Gloucester County had the highest median value, $84,000 in 1990, compared
with $45,800 in 1980. The number of housing units there grew from only 8,312 in 1980 to
12,451 in 1990.
As the fastest-growing county in the area, Gloucester owes its growing population, not
only to an influx of vacationers and retirees, but also to its attractiveness as a Hampton
Roads bedroom community, says Tim Rowe of the Gloucester office of Remax. Newcomers are
not interested in second homes or retirement homes, he says. The magic road has been Route
17, which leads from Gloucester into the Newport News area, home of Langley Air Force Base
and such big employers as Anheuser-Busch and the new Gateway computer plant. Gloucester's
appeal as a bedroom community is enhanced, he says, by lower housing prices, lower taxes
and a safe environment for raising children.
Some people in Yorktown and Newport News are willing to pay a premium for a water view,
however. Full-time residences on the river can cost from $300,000 to $400,000, he says.
Others have looked a long time for a place to retire and found it on the banks
of the York.
Harry and Fran Borbe he was a medical administrator and she was a nurse in
Morristown, N.J. had been vacationing for 20 years in a timeshare in Williamsburg.
They loved "the historic nature of the area, the activities, [and] its being a
wonderful place for children." But the water was an irresistible draw, says Fran
Borbe. They bought property on the York River about five years ago, started making plans
for a new house, and moved into their retirement home in Gloucester Point about a year and
a half ago.
Adjustment has been easy, says Fran Borbe. "The people here are very warm, very
gracious, and when you think of retirement, that is important."
* * *
While the Lancaster County area abounds in attractive bed and breakfasts, far and away
the most famous hostelry is The Tides Inn and its companion establishment, The
Tides Lodge founded more than 50 years ago and still Irvington's showplace.
"Many people were introduced to this area by way of The Tides Inn," says
Carter, the real estate broker.
"There are plenty of perfectly good guests who turn into neighbors," says Lee
Stephens, president of The Tides Inn. "It's a bittersweet thing. ... There are
probably dozens, if not hundreds."
Former guests continue to patronize the resort's facilities, says John Dufour, director
of sales and marketing. According to Carter, their presence in the community has raised
the level of expected amenities. Today there are "wine and cheese stores, book
stores, a hospital, an art league, a lot more cultural events and quite a few
restaurants."
The Tides Inn's presence could arguably also have raised property values. Carter, whose
firm deals largely in upscale real estate, says the greatest demand seems to be for homes
in the $300,000 to $500,000 price range. "People want waterfront property. They want
a gorgeous home with deep water and protection for yachts."
Some prospective buyers are in their fifties, looking for a second home that will
eventually be a retirement haven. But others are in their thirties, she says. "It
fascinates me to have a young couple with a baby walk in," she says. "This
generation is willing to enjoy their profits. They're not waiting; they are smarter about
money."
But both generations want the same things, she says: a view, an open floor plan, and
private bedrooms and baths. And they want a house in turnkey condition. "They're not
willing to put sweat equity in. They want to move right in." While many look for
marinas and there are dozens in the bay area others go for golf. Carter's
husband, Dave Donofrio, is formerly supervisor of The Golden Eagle golf course at The
Tides Inn, where the couple met. He is constructing a public golf course between Irvington
and Kilmarnock.
The course is only the first segment of his Hills Quarter project, which covers 450
acres and will include housing and a commercial area. The first stage will include 100
home sites, although he has plans for 500 to 600 cottages, town houses and detached town
houses ranging from $125,00 to $250,000.
On the Eastern Shore of Virginia, vacationers are showing increased interest in
possible second homes, as well. No fewer than 18 real estate firms are operating in
Northampton and Accomack counties.
The Eastern Shore is easily accessible from the Norfolk-Virginia Beach area via the
17.6-mile Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel with a $10 toll charge. But inquiries come
from other areas, too. "We get calls all the time from people moving from up
north," says Debbie Pruitt, an executive with the Eastern Shore Association of
Realtors. "We're really getting bombarded with questions about the taxes and not
having to lock your cars."
"A lot of them are joining the country club, and it's better for it," says
Mary Davenport Fosque, who lives in Onancock. She and her husband, Lee Fosque, moved to
Onancock and bought their home, Happy Hill, after his retirement from DuPont.
The Fosques were not technically newcomers, however. Lee Fosque was born and raised
there. Their son and his family live in the old family home. And Mary Fosque had been
vacationing on the Eastern Shore since she was 16. "Here, they say, scratch one
person and you find a cousin," she says.
She views the influx of retirees with mixed emotions. "We're 10 or 15 years behind
other retirement areas. They're far ahead and we're glad for it." But, she
adds: "The people coming are a nice bunch. They contribute a lot."
* * *
An unexpected amenity in this locality might be an encounter with a celebrity. The most
famous homeowner in the Peninsula area was probably the late John Lennon, who owned two
estates in Mathews but was assassinated before he ever had a chance to visit them. Both
former Gov. Linwood Holton and television newscaster Roger Mudd, however, own homes in
Lancaster County.
Holton's introduction to river living came in 1957 when a friend, industrialist John W.
Hancock Jr., would entertain friends at his place in Deltaville, a hamlet best known for
fishing, boating and camaraderie. When the Holtons bought a boat, berthed in Deltaville,
the whole family started visiting the area occasionally. But after Linwood and Virginia
"Jinks" Holton bought a house in Weems in 1988, the family treks there occurred
"without exception" every weekend in the spring and fall.
For the first nine years, he says, it was basically "the grandchildren's
house," where the youngsters could fish, catch crabs and join enthusiastically in the
oyster-raising program developed by the Virginia Institute of Marine Science. Today,
Holton says, "Two thousand moms and pops are raising 2 million oysters in the
Northern Neck."
On July 3, the Holtons, formerly of McLean, "officially became Weems
residents," he says.
Roger and E. J. Mudd, whose principal residence is also in McLean, bought their new
second home, Pop's Castle near White Stone, about two years ago. No strangers to Lancaster
County, the Mudds had owned a house near The Tides Lodge for 10 years and had often stayed
at The Tides Inn. They also vacationed at Rehoboth Beach, Del., with their four children,
but worried that the resort area was getting "over the top," Mudd says.
They had admired Pop's Castle. When it came on the market for the first time in 25
years, they were tempted but afraid that "it was too much everything," including
several acres to tend. After heated bidding, they won the backup bid. The top bidder
missed a deadline, and the Mudds found they had captured their frame castle, with five
bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen, music room, library and a spacious porch
overlooking the Rappahannock. They celebrated their victory at a party on July 24, 1998.
The Mudds have made no plans to move permanently to Pop's Castle, but they visit
frequently. "It's a different way of life. ... The story in Washington is who's up
and who's down. You don't get that in the Northern Neck," says Mudd. The pace of life
varies, too, he says. "You learn patience. All the marvelous things don't happen
overnight."
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