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City of
Cape
May
CAPE MAY HISTORY
17th Century The
earliest inhabitants of the peninsula we call Cape May were the
Kechemeche Indians of the Lenni-Lenape tribe who mainly hunted these
grounds. Following sighting by Sir Henry Hudson in 1609, and exploration
by Cornelius Jacobsen Mey in 1621, the first residents purchased land
from the Indians in the 1630s and developed a prosperous fishing and
whaling industry. English colonists from Connecticut and Massachusetts,
by the late 17th century, had further developed whaling and introduced
farming to this area now known as Cape Island.
18th Century It was more than 200
years ago, in 1766, that Cape Island’s development as a place where many
resort for their health and pleasure began. The visitors came first from
Philadelphia, by horse-drawn wagons, stagecoaches, sloops and schooners.
They were housed in very rustic public houses, taverns, and resident
homes. At the turn of the century, advertisement in the Philadelphia
papers described the beautiful situation of Cape May, the sea-bathing,
and the fish, oysters and crabs to eat and enjoy!
Early 19th Century
By 1816, the first wood-burning, side-wheel steamboats came from
Philadelphia via New Castle, DE where passengers from Baltimore and
points south joined them for the trip to the Cape. In this same year,
the first Congress Hall Hotel was built by Thomas H. Hughes. It was a
barn-like building called, at first, the Large House and accommodating
100 guests. The original lighthouse began operation in 1823.
By 1834, there were six boarding houses and
Cape Island began to attract the elite of New York, Baltimore,
Washington and Philadelphia. Hotel size increased in ensuing years - the
New Atlantic, built in 1842, could accommodate 300 guests. Music
pavilions and ballrooms blossomed. A two week stay by Henry Clay, in
1847, reinforced Cape Island’s position as the major seaside retreat in
the country, and so began its reign as the Queen of the Seaside Resorts.
Mid 19th Century Confidence in Cape
Island’s future spurred every larger groups of investors, including the
group who began building the largest hotel in the world, the Mt. Vernon
Hotel, on the west end of the oceanfront in 1852. Intended to serve 3500
patrons, it was consumed by fire in 1856, while it was accommodating
2100 guests, but still unfinished.
The 1850s included grand renovations of
Congress Hall, visits from Presidents Franklin Pierce and Benjamin
Harrison, another hotel fire, the Mansion House in 1857, and the
construction of a new lighthouse in 1859, that still exists today. The
Civil War and Cape Island’s pledge of support for the Union in December
1860, caused the southern patrons to disappear overnight. It was the
completion of the railroad from Philadelphia to Cape Island, in 1863,
that signaled the next development of the resort island - the Cottage
Era - the parceling of land into lots for Philadelphia families to build
their own summer homes.
Late 19th Century
The year 1869 was momentous for the opening of the new Stockton Hotel,
and the fire that reduced to ashes two blocks of the oldest section of
the resort including the renowned United States Hotel. Despite the fire,
the early 70s depression, and Atlantic City’s rise to prominence, Cape
May chugged along because of heavy promotion and investment by the
railroad companies. It was during the 70s also, that the Chalfonte Hotel
and the Emlen Physick Estate were built.
The most devastating fire of all, in 1878,
destroyed 35 acres of the city from Congress Hall over to Ocean Street.
Cape May decided to rebuild itself as a smaller scaled-down version of
its pre-fire era - homes and businesses were built in Queen Anne, Gothic
and American bracketed styles. The decision not to compete with modern
popular resorts preserved the town’s character so many find attractive
today.
The century came to a close with Cape May
struggling to compete with Newport, RI and Atlantic City, NJ, sometimes
promoting itself as the wholesome alternative.
Early 20th Century The early 1900s
were marked by the start-up and eventual collapse of several grand
ventures that were expected to bring growth and prosperity again to this
once-famed resort. The first was the development of 3600 acres of east
Cape May with the Newport-like Hotel Cape May as the centerpiece, and
the creation of a harbor by coal, steel and oil millionaires from
Pittsburgh, known as the Cape May Real Estate Co. The hotel opened in
1908, but closed six months later when Corporation President Peter
Shields resigned and the venture collapsed. The second owner filed
bankruptcy a few years later.
During World War I, the hotel was used as a
hospital and the eastern one-third of this tract of land was acquired by
the Navy for a base. This base was taken over by the Coast Guard, in
1925. The hotel reopened in 1920, was sold and operated as the Admiral
Hotel in 1931, until the city bought it at Sheriff’s sale nine years
later for $900.
The next land boom was fueled by plans for a
ferry across the Delaware Bay. Unfortunately, the WWI concrete ship,
purchased to form part of a dock, sunk in a violent storm in 1926,
crushing the hopes for another economic recovery. The remains of the
ship are visible today, at Sunset Beach.
Happenings of note in the 40s include:
continued growth of the Coast Guard base with more dredging; the
re-commissioning of the air station by the Navy and the use of the Hotel
Cape May as a Naval Annex; the construction of the Cape May Canal,
1942/43; and the Great Atlantic Hurricane of 1944 that demolished the
boardwalk and brought an end to the borough of South Cape May. At the
end of the war, the Navy relinquished the base to the Coast Guard who
established their Training Center in Cape May in 1948.
Mid 20th Century Cape May changed
little in the early part of the century. The opening of the Garden State
Parkway, in 1954, remedied the city’s former isolation as automobile
travel increased dramatically. In 1959, the city’s celebration of the
30th Anniversary of Henry Hudson’s journey generated in some minds the
idea that the city might serve itself well to emphasize its historical
background. Preservation visionaries, headed by Dr. Irving Tenenbaum,
worked hard to promote their cause, their earliest success being the
replacement of current street lighting with gaslights.
In the 60s, two powerful forces blew into Cape
May that helped shape the city’s future. The first was the March
Nor’easter (Ash Wednesday Storm), March 7, 1962, that destroyed the
boardwalk, beachfront, Convention Hall and severely damaged many
properties. The second was the Reverend Carl McIntire, fundamentalist
minister, who also changed the city’s landscape by purchasing many
Victorian era properties and moving some of them in order to save them
from destruction. The Admiral Hotel (formerly Hotel Cape May) was
renamed the Christian Admiral and became the Bible Conference Center for
Rev. McIntire’s Reformation Movement.
In 1963, encouraged by Dr. Tenenbaum and Bill
Murtagh, head of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, the city
applied for and received a 3.5 million dollar grant - the first Urban
Renewal Grant given to a small city specifically for preservation. With
the construction of the seawall/promenade to replace the boardwalk and
the opening of the ferry service to Delaware in 1964, Cape May was
poised and ready to shine once more.
Late 20th Century
Urban renewal meant different things to a city government interested in
ratables, and the citizens favoring preservation. The ratables group saw
an opportunity to tear down the old and build modern motels with
air-conditioning and parking lots. They were winning for awhile - until
the cataloging of the historic buildings, as required by the Urban
Renewal Grant, was accomplished by a Historic American Buildings Survey
Team headed by Carolyn Pitts. In 1970, Pitts and Cape May Cottagers
Association member, Edwin C. Bramble managed to get the entire town
listed on the federal government’s National Register of Historic Places.
In the same year, the Mid-Atlantic Center for the Arts (MAC) was formed
to help save the Emlen Physick Mansion on Washington Street, slated for
demolition.
Efforts by the city to undo the historic
designation, and refuse Federal and State grants for restoration of the
Physick Estate failed. Their effort rallied preservationists who gained
control of the government in the next election choosing MAC’s leader,
Bruce Minnix as Mayor.
The End of the 20th Century
Reclaiming the Past for a New Beginning
Cape May’s renaissance began at last, fueled
by the energy and enthusiasm of preservationists with income-generating
business ideas needed to make restoration affordable. Entrepreneurs,
leaving behind previous professions and jobs, restored many of the
Victorian homes to their original beauty and splendor for use as Bed and
Breakfast inns, guest houses, restaurants and shops. The Mid-Atlantic
Center for the Arts was given a trolley and began tours of Cape May
bringing its history to life and providing income for the restoration of
the Physick Estate and eventually the lighthouse. Louisa’s Restaurant,
opening in the early 80s was one of the first alternative eating
establishments.
The success of these early ventures gave
impetus to others to invest. Other factors contributing to Cape May’s
return to a popular seaside resort destination included: the creation of
the pedestrian Washington Street Mall in 1971; ongoing beach restoration
projects beginning in the 80s; the extension of the season into fall,
spring, and Christmas with the offering of many cultural, historical,
music, arts, nature and water-related activities and events.
-History courtesy of the City of Cape
May.Contributors: Bruce Minnix, Tom Carroll, and information gathered
from "Summer City by the Sea". Emil R. Salvini, and "Gems of NJ" by
Gordon Bishop
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