New ferry christened; passenger ferry celebrated

Published 7:26 pm Friday, June 28, 2019

A new North Carolina Ferry Division river-class vehicular ferry was christened Friday, June 28, with thank-you speeches, applause and a powerful smack.

Hyde County manager Kris Cahoon Noble successfully aimed the special bottle at the M/V Rodanthe to formally christen the vessel.

The river-class Rodanthe is the first new vehicular ferry for the North Carolina system since 2006.

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Starting mid-July, the Rodanthe will ply the waters from Hatteras village to Ocracoke’s ferry terminal across Hatteras Inlet. The vessel is so new plastic covers the first-floor passenger seats. Bathrooms are accessible from inside the first floor passenger lounge.

The ferry, with a hull designed to reduce oversplash, has room for 40 single-space vehicles.

The new ferry replaces the M/V Thomas A. Baum, which will remain in service.

Ferries on the North Carolina system sport the colors of colleges and universities in the state. The Rodanthe wears North Carolina State University red with the Wolfpack’s “Tuffy” logo.

The new ferry also wears the logo of the Outer Banks National Scenic Byway. The ferry routes between Hatteras and Ocracoke and Ocracoke and Cedar Island are an integral part of the nationally-designated byway, one of only 150 in the United States.

North Carolina Board of Transportation member Allen Moran introduced speakers.

ferry

Speaking during the christening of the M/V Rodanthe and the Ocracoke Express Inaugural Season celebration are, from left, Jed Dixon, deputy director of ferry operations; Dave Hallac, superintendent of the National Parks of Eastern North Carolina; Bill Rich, former Hyde County manager; Julie White, deputy secretary for multimodal transportation; and Representative John A. Torbett, N.C. House of Representatives. Elliott Avent, head baseball coach at North Carolina State University, also spoke. Mary Helen Goodloe-Murphy photo

Before his invocation, U.S. Coast Guard Hatteras Island Auxiliary chaplain Billy Rutledge reminded the crowd of the men and women who have painful knees and hurt backs from standing on metal decking and of captains who spend massive hours for licenses and navigation skills, for those in engine rooms and on decks.

Speakers participating in the event are Julie White, deputy secretary for multimodal transportation; Jed Dixon, deputy director of ferry operations; Elliott Avent, head baseball coach at North Carolina State University; Dave Hallac, superintendent of the National Parks of Eastern North Carolina; Bill Rich, former Hyde County manager; and Representative John A. Torbett.

The inaugural season of the Ocracoke Express was also celebrated.

In 38 days of operations, 10,920 passengers have experienced the marvelous ferry and explored Ocracoke in a new way aboard Hyde County trams.

Passenger counts show busy days are Mondays with 16 percent, Tuesdays with 22 percent, Wednesdays with 24 percent and Thursdays with 17 percent. Friday trips have carried eight percent, Saturday nine percent and Sunday five percent of passengers.

Reservations are now available through Sept. 5 on ncferry.org or by calling 1-800-BY FERRY.

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