Top Things to do Around Chesapeake City
Historic Chesapeake City is on the National and Maryland Historic Registries.
This beautiful town features lovely restored homes, inns and B&Bs. You will find great shops, restaurants, the C&D Canal Museum, bike trails and outdoor summer concerts.
Though Chesapeake City is historic, the inns, restaurants and shops offer all of the modern comforts and pleasures a visitor could ask for. Three well-known waterfront restaurants are consistent winners in Delaware and Maryland newspaper readers’ polls; shops are all located in historic buildings, adding to that special ambience of small-town American charm.
Chesapeake City features homes and gardens from the 1800s, many on the National Historic Register, and can be enjoyed via a self-guided or guide-directed walking tour. Visit the C&D Canal Museum, which provides a detailed history of the canal that built Chesapeake City. The museum has interactive displays and items of interest for all age groups.
Bike or walk the Ben Cardin Recreational Trail, which courses along the banks of the Canal eastward, where it crosses into Delaware and extends 15.5 more miles all the way to the Delaware River. Kayak in scenic Back Creek, which is a slow, meandering paddle through scenic countryside. Bald eagles, ospreys, heron and even otters are regular inhabitants of the area's wetlands.
The canal is part of the intracoastal waterway. Ocean-going cargo ships, tall ships, barges, sailboats, mega-yachts and other recreational boats enjoy the direct route from the Chesapeake Bay to the Delaware River, cutting 300 miles off the excursion around the Delmarva peninsula. While you're here, explore the canal by boat. Chesapeake City Water Tours offers sightseeing, sunset, wine-tasting and music cruises. See Turkey Point lighthouse from the headwaters of the Chesapeake Bay, learn the heritage of the region and savor sites you can see only from the water.
15 wineries are within 40 minutes of Chesapeake City, all part of the Chesapeake Wine Trail.
From Woodies to Caddies and everything that is antique in cars, this outdoor event continues to grow - more than 500 cars are on display in and around the historic district.
The Brown Box Theater Project performs a different Shakespeare play under the stars in Chesapeake City's waterfront park annually each fall. A free event.
Take a drive to take in some local history with a visit to Mount Harmon Plantation, the northernmost colonial-era Tidewater Plantation in the Chesapeake region that is accessible to the public.