Hatteras Village
Hatteras Village preserves a proud fishing heritage while welcoming newcomers to a coastal village alive with sportfishing lore, seasonal celebrations and events and a lasting sense of place.

Hatteras Village
Hatteras Village is located on Hatteras Island, one in a chain of islands on the North Carolina coast comprising the famous Outer Banks. Since arriving here in the 1700s, the people of Hatteras have depended on the natural environment for their livelihood. Hatteras developed slowly over time, with no plat, no lots neatly laid out, and no grid plan. Today, the roads weave and wander through the town, with lanes following what once were paths to people’s houses. The village developed as a result of its natural harbor and its location on Hatteras Island. By the early 1780s, there was a small settlement at Hatteras village located in protected wooded tracts on the sound side of the island.
Today the Village still maintains much of the charm of her past while providing the comforts of the present as a world class cultural and vacation destination. Evolving from a small commercial fishing village to a major Gulf Stream sportfishing attraction, Hatteras continues to rely on its fertile fishing grounds to support its economy. Surrounded by this gift of nature, Hatteras Village today is a world famous tourist attraction with a unique history and culture. Her pristine beaches and waterways provide the perfect backdrop for any vacationer’s dream.
Two Important Trails Transect the Village
The Outer Banks Scenic Byway
Centered around a rich village culture, the Outer Banks Scenic Byway is a must for any traveler looking to escape to a time of front porch talks and simple maritime living. On the byway at Hatteras Island, a “beach vacation” landscape with outstanding recreation, there are seven villages surrounded by national seashore of which this village is one. Historic settlement patterns are visible in ancient live oaks, harbors, old houses, family cemeteries, simple churches, family stores, fish houses, and 19th-century life-saving stations.
The Civil War Trail
The Civil War Trail which is part of a national network that commemorates that tragic time in our Nation’s history. Hatteras Island and Hatteras Village played a large part in the history.
“the…tranquil life of Hatteras Village was shattered…”
On August 28, 1861, the residents of Hatteras Village awakened to the sight of a large Federal fleet anchored off their coast. At about 10 a.m. the peaceful and tranquil life of Hatteras Village was shattered by the sound of the large naval guns of a Union fleet firing on two Confederate forts which were under construction at Hatteras Inlet. Forts Hatteras and Clark were relatively small earthwork forts, constructed by slave labor and made of brush, sand, lumber and peat. John Rollinson, a local resident of Hatteras Island at the time, wrote in his journal that the Confederate soldiers first arrived at Hatteras on May 9, 1861, one month after the Civil War began. Several months later it fell to Union forces.













