ocracoke brogue one of a kind

Ocracoke Village from Silver Lake. Photo, BBC, Peter Ptschelinzew/Alamy
Ocracoke Village from Silver Lake. Photo, BBC, Peter Ptschelinzew/Alamy

As the outside world rushes in a distinctive part of island culture is slowly dying out.

Ocracoke Village from Silver Lake. Photo, BBC, Peter Ptschelinzew/Alamy

There is only one place to hear that distinctive way that native Ocracokers speak. But as Brian Carlton writes for the BBC Travel series, that unique combination of words, accents and speech is dying out as the world discovers the Island’s beauty.

“I’d never been called a dingbatter until I went to Ocracoke for the first time. I’ve spent a good part of my life in North Carolina, but I’m still learning how to speak the ‘Hoi Toider’ brogue. The people here just have their own way of speaking: it’s like someone took Elizabethan English, sprinkled in some Irish tones and 1700s Scottish accents, then mixed it all up with pirate slang. But the Hoi Toider dialect is more than a dialect. It’s also a culture, one that’s slowly fading away. With each generation, fewer people play meehonkey, cook the traditional foods or know what it is to be mommucked.

Located 34 miles from the North Carolina mainland, Ocracoke Island is fairly isolated. You can’t drive there as there are no bridges, and most people can’t fly either as there are no commercial flights. If you want to go there, it has to be by boat. In the early 1700s, that meant Ocracoke was a perfect spot for pirates to hide, as no soldiers were going to search 16 miles of remote beaches and forests for wanted men.”

To read the complete BBC Travel series story, click here.