Norfolk's Cannonball Church: Corpse Flowers, Heat Domes, and Fourth of July Fireworks
Good evening, neighbors. This week Brodie and Co are sweating through a Hampton Roads heat dome that is chasing records Norfolk has not touched since 2020, so we are staying hydrated and mostly staying inside. On the news desk, a corpse flower is about to bloom at the Norfolk Botanical Garden sometime between July 4th and 8th, giving off its famous rotting-flesh smell, and that leads us straight into the cadaver bar over at the Zoom Room in Hilltop. There is also a swim advisory across nine Ocean View beaches in Norfolk, and MacArthur Center has finally closed its doors after 27 years.
For Strange and Odd of Tidewater, we head downtown to St. Paul's Episcopal Church, where a British cannonball has been lodged in the brick wall since Lord Dunmore shelled Norfolk on New Year's Day in 1776. We also dig up the cheeky story behind the name Pleasure House Road. Then we run down where to catch Fourth of July fireworks, from Town Point Park to the Oceanfront, plus a James Beard dinner coming to Virginia Beach this fall.
Question of the week: What is your favorite memory of MacArthur Center before it is gone for good? If you are in Coastal Virginia, this is your weekly mix of local news, odd history, and neighborly conversation. Catch you next Tuesday.
This week on Tidewater Talk, we covered a little bit of everything happening around Coastal Virginia, starting with the brutal heat settling over Hampton Roads and what to expect in the days ahead. I also shared a few timely local updates, including the swim advisory affecting several Ocean View beaches in Norfolk, the closing of MacArthur Center, and a rare chance to see the famous corpse flower blooming at the Norfolk Botanical Garden between July 4 and July 8. On the lighter side, we talked about some unusual local finds too, from the wild "cadaver bar" dog treats at Zoom Room in Virginia Beach to exotic meats around town and a first visit to a Vietnamese spot near Hilltop that turned out to be a hit.
We also dug into some fun local history and things to do around the 757. One standout story was the Revolutionary War cannonball still embedded in the wall of Saint Paul’s Episcopal Church in downtown Norfolk, along with the backstory behind Pleasure House Road. For Tidewater tips, I highlighted the Pop Up City cardboard-building event at Town Center, Fourth of July celebrations and fireworks happening across the region, and a major culinary event coming later this year as Virginia Beach prepares to host its first official James Beard Foundation dinner. Altogether, it’s a packed summer week with history, oddities, food, and plenty of reasons to get out and explore—just maybe after the heat lets up a bit.
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