East Beach History
East
State Beach,
located in Charlestown, Rhode Island takes up three miles of prime
beach shoreline.
It is the easterly extension of Quonochontaug Neck.
East Beach
is one of the least developed of the
Rhode Island state beaches, with limited
parking and a half dozen changing rooms.
Nonetheless it is one of
Rhode Island’s spectacular seaside
treasures.
A narrow barrier beach, accessible from Route 1 via
East Beach Road, it fronts and separates
Ninigret Pond from the ocean.
Ninigret Pond is Road
Island’s largest salt water ponds.
The salt water ponds are lagoons along
Rhode Island’s Atlantic coast from
Westerly
to Narragansett. They
provide safe haven for shell fish and other marine life; their
grassy and reedy fringe are a refuge for birds and small animals.
Their water is regularly flushed by the ocean waters that ebb
and flow through natural breachways that have now been stabilized by
public works engineering.
Large stone blocks hold back the sand that
would otherwise clog their passages.
In the case of Ninigret Pond this service is provided by the
Charlestown Breachway.
The easterly side of the Charlestown Breachway is also a
state park with RV camping facilities.
It is not accessible from East Beach,
but by Charlestown
Beach Road.
The northern edge of Ninigret Pond hosts the Ninigret
National Wildlife Refuge with a visitor center and also
Ninigret
Park.
During World War II, this area was developed as the
Charlestown Naval Air Station, an auxiliary field of the Quonset
Point Naval Air Station in North Kingstown.
Here former U.S. President, George H.W. Bush trained as a
Navy night fighter pilot.
The Ninigret name stems from the Native American sachem or
chief of the eastern branch of the Niantic Indians, a sub-set of the
Narragansetts. Remains
of a trading post and fort are part of the park owned by the Town of
Charlestown.
It is believed the fort was built by either the Dutch or
Portuguese traders on the northern edge of the pond.
The history of the beach along the southern edge is part of
the story of the Quonochontaug summer colonies first developed in
the 1880s.
Although Quonochontaug Neck was settled as early as the 17th
century, it wasn’t until two centuries later that it gained any
significant habitations, and then only in its central and western
portions.
East
Beach was relatively
untouched, perhaps due to its narrow nature between the ocean and
the pond. The
State of Rhode Island began setting up this natural
reserve in a major way with land acquisitions totalling more than
250 acres in 2006.