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2015 FAA4072 Porch Pitching

2015 FAA4072 Porch Pitching

Whalehead Club
Outer Banks
Historic Corolla NC
2015

The Historic Whalehead Club is a large 21,000-square-foot home located on a remote tract facing the Currituck Sound in North Carolina, United States. The structure was designed by owners Edward Collings Jr. and Marie Louise Label Knight and contracted by Daniel Peckham between 1922 and 1925.

https://www.outerbanks.com/the-whalehead-club.html

The prestigious Whalehead in Historic Corolla has been a dominant attraction to Corolla visitors since it was renovated and opened to the public in 2002. As part of the Historic Corolla Park, the Whalehead in Historic Corolla serves as a northern Outer Banks icon, and a living testament to Corolla and Duck's heyday as a secluded oceanfront retreat for the country's wealthy hunters and conservationists.

There are little discrepancies today between the opulent 1920s privately owned manor and the current popular Corolla attraction, and modern visitors will be able to enjoy the ornate details, the expansive 21,000' square foot premises, and the immaculately designed art-nouveau retreat that a wealthy Rhode Island couple once called their home away from home. Enjoy an exploration into Corolla's literally ruin history with a visit to the Whalehead in Historic Corolla, and see one of the country's best eras of architecture come to life in exquisite, full detail.

History of the Whalehead in Historic Corolla
As popular as the Outer Banks are today, specifically the northern regions of Corolla and Duck, it's hard to believe that less than a century ago, the area was all but deserted, and populated with just a small handful or residents and employees of the lifesaving station and the Currituck Beach lighthouse.
That remoteness was changed, albeit gradually, with the discovery of the area by a handful or wealthy and adventurous vacationers who were on the trail for exceptional wildfowl and small game hunting. The northern regions of the Outer Banks proved exceptional hunting grounds for geese, ducks, and a number of other migratory waterfowl, and the information was spread around the wealthy 1920s circles leading to a minor but gradual popularity of the otherwise deserted area. (In other words, there's a reason why the town of Duck is named "Duck.")