The newly formed Virginia Ferry Corporation initiated a motor vehicle-passenger ferry service between Little Creek and Cape Charles on April 1, 1933 paralleling the existing
Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR) carfloat route (operated by the PRR subsidiary, NYP&N RR Ferry) between Little Creek and Cape Charles. On May 1, 1950, the ferry route was changed from Cape Charles to the newly formed artificial Harbor at
Kiptopeke Beach. The VFC was a 50/50 Wilson Line & Pennsylvania RR venture, a
Virginia public service company. The PRR offered passenger-freight & auto ferriage between the Brooke St Terminal in Norfolk, Virginia - Old Point Comfort in Hampton, Virginia & Cape Charles, Virginia, a run. This operation was terminated by the PRR on February 28, 1953. Amid dissatisfaction with the VFC operations in 1954, by act of the
Virginia General Assembly, the Chesapeake Bay Ferry District (CBFD) and a related oversight commission were created, initially with the hopes of improving the ferry service. However, the governmental agency was soon authorized to sell
toll revenue bonds, acquire the still-operating private Little Creek Ferry and improve existing ferry service. The VFC was sold and its five operating ferries to the Chesapeake Bay Ferry District for $13 million on May 17, 1956. The
Virginia Department of Transportation automobile-ferry service from Old Point Comfort across
Hampton Roads to
Willoughby Spit was replaced on November 1, 1957 by the new
Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel, which followed the
Norfolk-Portsmouth Bridge-Tunnel (1952), and was the second
bridge-tunnel in Virginia. This stimulated interest in the feasibility of a similar crossing at the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay. ==Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel==