New edition of McAllister’s ‘Ocracoke’ book adds recent history
By Peter Vankevich
The second edition of Ray McAllister’s “Ocracoke: The Pearl of the Outer Banks” (Beach Glass Press) is out.
First published in 2013, the book has gone through several printings, hardbound and paperback. It serves as an excellent introduction to the island covering Ocracoke’s storied history.
McAllister’s easy writing style makes for lively yarns about the early days of Blackbeard, the Civil War and World War II right off the coast, and the torpedoing of the HMT Bedfordshire, four of whose sailors washed ashore and are now interred in the island’s British Cemetery.
Significant shipwrecks and major storms, the island ponies/horses, evolution of the ferry system and the history of the lighthouse are included.
All of the above is repeated nearly verbatim in the second edition, also published by Beach Glass Press.
McAllister added about 100 pages for this new edition because much has transpired in the last 12 years.
Such as Hurricane Dorian, which struck the island on Sept. 6, 2019.
So devastating to the island, it was compared to the “Storm of 1944” when people huddled in the lighthouse to save themselves from drowning.
Dorian profoundly affected the community, both physically and psychologically, and the new edition covers both.
Islanders no longer say, “if we get another storm like that in 1944,” but “when we get another storm like Dorian.”
The hurricane has changed the landscape of the community, notably seen in many houses being raised.
It also brought out the best in people, detailed in the book.
This new edition takes a closer look at the Ocracoke Light Station that celebrated its 200th anniversary in 2023.
A new chapter covers Springer’s Point. The 122-acre preserve, saved from development by the North Carolina Coastal Land Trust and several governmental and private organizations including the Ocracoke Preservation Society, has a maritime forest with some of the oldest live oaks in eastern North Carolina, along with a salt marsh, grass wetlands and a small beach on the usually calmer waters of Ocracoke Inlet.
An amusing addition is “Famous Visitors,” among whom were Charles Lindbergh, John Dos Passos who was fascinated by the Ocracoke brogue, and Jimmy Buffett.
The final chapter, “The Essence of Ocracoke,” attempts to capture the island’s allure for so many.
The book goes off the island, so to speak, as there is a chapter on Portsmouth Island. The island, located on the south side of Ocracoke Inlet, has strong cultural and historical ties to Ocracoke. McAllister knows this well since for five years he was editor of the Friends of Portsmouth Island’s “Doctor’s Creek Journal.”
Part of this book’s appeal is the many historical photographs, maps and illustrations that are presented throughout the book.
The author, who resides in Richmond, Virginia, is a life-long man of letters.
For nearly 20 years he worked as a reporter and columnist for the Richmond Times-Dispatch.
As a college student he was the sports editor of “The Daily Collegian” at Penn State, winning a national Hearst Journalism Award for reporting on football coach Joe Paterno’s first accepting, then declining an unheard-of million-dollar coaching offer from the professional Boston Patriots.
A visit to Topsail Island led to his first book, “Topsail Island, Mayberry by the Sea” in 2006, followed by two more books on coastal North Carolina: “Hatteras Island: Keeper of the Outer Banks” and “Wrightsville Beach: The Luminous Island.”
The book can be purchased at Books to be Red, the Ocracoke Preservation Society, Village Craftsmen, the Variety Store and several online sites.




























