| $525,000 |
| City: Virginia Beach, VA |
| Zip Code: 23452 |
| Approx. Sq. Feet: 3185 |
| Lot Size: 0.775 |
| Area: Royal Grant |
| Year Built: 1977 |
| Stories: 2 |
| Bedrooms: 5 | Baths: 3 |
| Living: 1 |
Dining: 1 |
| Kitchen: Open & Freshly Painted |
| Garage: Attached 2 Car |
| School District: Kingston ES, Lynnhaven MS, !st Colonial HS |
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| MLS Link: click here
| | Metric Convertor |
3839 Thaxton Lane
Royal Grant
www.RoyalGrantNow.com
Finally you’re back in town after the family vacation trip. Driving north on Little Neck Road, you pass Kings Grant Presbyterian Church & St. Nick’s Catholic Church and with the fire station and the Little Neck Swim & Racquet Club up ahead, you turn left at the light onto Kings Grant Road. You begin to relax as your pulse rate slows a bit…you’re almost there. You drive past Kingston Elementary School and then Kings Grant Park before turning right on Winthrope. Up ahead is Thaxton Lane where you turn left.
Coming through the front door you take pride in your décor in your living room to the left and in the dining room to the right where your table is set for the weekend’s gala dinner party. The sunlight streaming through the front windows accentuates not only the English antiques but also your crystal and silver on the table.
Walking straight ahead you enter your family room which has a broad array of windows overlooking the large, private, wooded back yard. The brick fireplace is to your left ready to be lit and enjoyed later. You step into your office behind the family room for a quick check of email and voicemail.
You then make a beeline into the kitchen for a glass of chilled chardonnay from your refrigerator. The gleaming countertops reflect the subtle lighting. Ceramic tile floors compliment the kitchen décor. Nearby is the eat-in breakfast area looking into the back yard. You reflect on the comfortable lifestyle and the floor plan flexibility your new home offers.
You walk back to the foyer and up the stairs and look into the four 2nd floor bedrooms, which are spaciously sized, before heading into your master suite.
Back downstairs, you zip into the 5th bedroom - the room over the garage – which has easy access to the kitchen & the nearby full bath. In your kitchen, you refill your glass, go back into the family room, light the fire, and reflect, “All is well in my new home on Thaxton Lane. Royal Living in Royal Grant!”
Additional Information
LITTLE NECK. It’s a weird name to start with. But let’s look at LITTLE NECK’s history first….
Thousands of years ago, back in 13000BC – 8000BC, Paleo-Indians dwelled in our area. No one knows where they went. Then the Algonquin tribes were here from about 8000BC to 500AD; these too were lost to history. But in the early 17th century, John Smith and the Jamestown settlers wrote about the Chesopeians, members of the lost Algonquians. The tip of Little Neck was referred to as a trading point, where the Indians and setters traded. Thus Trading Point Lane got its name.
An early Jamestowner wrote about the banks of what’s now the Lynnhaven River “that God never fashioned a better place for man’s habitat”. Was he ever right!
As more folks came to the colonies, land grants were given, farms were developed, fishing and oystering began in earnest. Common names then were the Keelings, Woodhouses, Strattons, Wilkinsons. A trip to Norfolk then could be an all day affair!
Then in the 1920s, automobiles and paved roads opened Little Neck to summer visitors from Norfolk. Summer cottages were developed. In the 30s there were oyster houses catering to tourists: off W. Little Neck Rd, on Keeling Cove, at the end of Hurds Rd, and at Poplar Cove. There were potato farms where Sea Breeze is now. Oysters, jonquils, and chickens were harvested near Dix Inlet. Redwood may have housed a dairy farm. Secretive stills were nestled away in the woods. Kids romped through what is now Middle Plantation hunting.
Post World War II, development picked up in earnest with the beginning of Kings Grant. Hundreds and hundreds of affordable homes inched north from Virginia Beach Boulevard. Tree lined Little Neck Road spawned developments like Sea Breeze Farm, Redwood Farm, Middle Plantation, and Bishopsgate well into the late 80s and early 90s. Little Neck was pretty much built out at that point, with only a few small areas suitable for building. LITTLE NECK had become a magnet attracting professionals, medical care specialists, executives, managers, and military officers and civil servants.
LITTLE NECK today is one of the most popular and sought after neighborhoods in Virginia Beach, and by default in South Hampton Roads. It is a haven from the commercialization that has consumed so much of the rest of the area. Aside from the 7-11, a Little Necker has to drive 3-4 miles to shop. There is no through traffic since we are the LITTLE NECK PENINSULA; this is a destination, not a stop along the way.
A very family oriented community; we are home to six churches representing most of the main line denominations. There are public parks scattered throughout with tennis courts, swings, and so on for all ages. The Little Neck Swim & Racquet Club is a year round tennis facility and a seasonal mecca for swimmers and sunners of all ages. A bike bath & sidewalk combination can take one from the Boulevard all the way to the end of Little Neck Road, nearly 5 miles. Bikers, runners, and walkers are seen constantly. Station 20 – home of our first responders – houses our local firefighters and EMTs right on Little Neck Road.
We are blessed with two top notch elementary schools, Kings Grant which serves southern Little Neck kids, and nationally recognized Kingston which serves the rest. Students matriculate up through Lynnhaven Middle and First Colonial High, both highly ranked members of Virginia Beach’s excellent school system.
While our LITTLE NECK peninsula is quiet, tranquil, non-commercial, family oriented, and safe, we are only minutes from Town Center, the Interstate, the Norfolk airport, the oceanfront, Home Depot, Harris Teeter, and Lynnhaven Mall. A quick retreat back to LITTLE NECK is always welcome after a foray into the busy side of Virginia Beach.
If it’s an urban life style you need, then head to Norfolk or Town Center. If it’s a busy road bounded by strip malls and gas stations, head to Great Neck. If it’s the ocean, beach, tourist traffic, and expensive homes, head to the north end gold coast. If it’s new homes, small lots, few trees, and 9 foot ceilings, head to southern Virginia Beach or Chesapeake.
But if it’s family values, security, serenity, peace, quiet, good neighbors, great quality of life, excellent public schools, and a perfect lifestyle, then LITTLE NECK is fundamentally your best choice….and it could be your only choice.
Become one today. A LITTLE NECKER!
Our thanks to Pete Costenbader for his historical research!
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