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ABOUT OUR ISLAND
City of North Wildwood
North Wildwood, located at the northern end of the Wildwoods'
Five Mile Island, was founded in the 1890's as the tiny fishing
village of Anglesea.
North Wildwood boasts that their free white sandy beach is
"New Jersey's best sport beach" as confirmed by Travel Holiday
Magazine. In 1994 North Wildwood introduced the state's first
beach tram service. Beachgoers can glide along the sand by
tram from the street to the shore line. The Hereford Inlet
Lighthouse and Marine Police Station located in the city provide
visitors with a historical retrospective of the resort. Both
sites are destinations on the New Jersey Coastal Heritage
Trail.
The night life in North Wildwood is especially diverse. The
summer air is filled with oldies music at the dockside...rock
and roll at the clubs...ethnic sing-a-longs...the choices
are endless at the northern end of the Island. North Wildwood
also hosts a number of special events
throughout the summer season for your fun and enjoyment.
City of Wildwood
Wildwood, located in the middle of the Wildwoods' Five Mile
Island, is known for its beach and boardwalk. The 2.5 mile
world-famous boardwalk offers breathtaking amusement rides,
specialty shops, eateries, theaters and water parks. The Boardwalk
offers something for everyone. The very young and young at
heart can enjoy the double decker classic carousel. For the
more adventuresome, ride the East Coast's tallest Ferris wheel
to get a spectacular view of the five mile island, or for
the dare devil in the family try "The Great Nor'Easter" the
suspended looping coaster 1 of only 4 in the world.
The Holly Beach Station Mall boasts many restaurants offering
local delicacies, shops, nightclubs with a variety of live
entertainment, coffee houses and street festivals. The George
F. Boyer Museum provides a tour through time and recounts
the local history . The inland waterways provide a variety
of watersports, deep sea fishing, boating, whale watching
and all types of excursions. Wildwood also hosts a number
of special events throughout the
summer season for your fun and enjoyment.
Borough Wildwood Crest
Wildwood Crest is located at the southern end of The Wildwoods
Five Mile Island. Here you will find the lazy, hazy days of
summers of old. Rest and relaxation are the featured attractions
in this easy going and picturesque part of the island. Ocean
front accommodations, modern motels, hotels and condominiums
abound in Wildwood Crest where the sunrises gently awaken
you to warm, sunny, fun filled days. The simple pleasure of
life blend with the beach environment to provide a seashore
vacation that will awaken all senses with the sound of seagulls...the
roll and splash of the waves...the smell of the salt air.
You can stroll along the sandy beaches and collect a variety
of shells and enjoy the pristine waters.
Sunset Lake, located on the west side of the island, is the
"playground" for watersports including, jet skiing, water
skiing, and boating. If fishing is your passion then visit
Crest Harbor, here you will find party boats which offer half-day
and full-day excursions into the Atlantic. Every evening families
gather at Sunset Lake, to watch the most spectacular sunset
views on the island.
Entertainment is regularly scheduled at Crest Pier and the
Gazebo throughout the summer months and includes outdoor music
and dancing. Wildwood Crest also hosts a number of special
events throughout the summer season for your fun and enjoyment.
To maintain the family atmosphere, there are no liqueur stores
or bars in Wildwood Crest. So, if you are interested in the
casual, calm, quaint and cool pleasures of life, visit the
southern end of the island --Wildwood Crest.
History
A Brief History of the Wildwoods
Courtesy of The Wildwood Historical Society George F.
Boyer Historical Museum Robert J. Scully, Museum Curator
"A very good land to fall in with - and a pleasant land
to see." These words, written more than 350 years ago,
are the first recorded description of the island of Five Mile
Beach, upon which Wildwood and her sister communities now
stand.
They were set down by Robert Juet, who sailed with the English
navigator, Henry Hudson, on a voyage of exploration for the
Dutch East India Company in 1609. Seeking a new route to China,
Hudson entered what is now Delaware Bay on August 28th, but
confronted by shoals and convinced the stream really wasn't
the sought-after northwest passage, he swung his ship, the
"Half Moon," about, rounded the point at Cape May, and headed
northward in the Atlantic.
No further written record of Five Mile Beach appeared until
the land grant from Charles II to James, Duke of York, in
1664; then through various deeds until August 21, 1717, when
the West Jersey Society conveyed "all its title and interest
in Five Mile Beach to Aaron Leaming, Humphrey Hughes, David
Wells and Jonathan Swain.
But, long before Juet cast eyes upon it, Indians -- a branch
of the Algonquins called the Lenni Lenapes or Delawares --
frequented Five Mile Beach. They cut two trails through the
dense forest. One, a continuation of the mainland King Nummy
Trail, entered the north end of the island and stretched southward
just west of the present New Jersey Avenue. In the middle
of the island, it met another trail that entered where the
Rio Grande Bridge later was built.
With the eventual departure of the Indians, and long before
the white settlers came to the island, off-shore farmers used
the land to graze their horses and cattle, ferrying the animals
from the mainland on flatboats. As the herds grew in size,
many of the animals strayed away into the forest and became
wild, roaming the island at will and posing a problem that
continued to vex property owners as late as 1905.
About 1870 a few fishermen became the first white settlers,
erecting shacks at the north end of the island and naming
their settlement Anglesea. In 1874 the government built a
lighthouse at Hereford Inlet.
The first settlers followed Indian trails across the meadows
and then reached the island by boat. In 1884, the West Jersey
Railroad ran a line from near Cape May Court House to Anglesea.
About the same time, a crude log bridge was built at what
is now Rio Grande Avenue. It was destroyed by fire. In 1885
another was built, being replaced in 1902 by a bridge to carry
autos.
The story of modern Wildwood and her sister communities began
in 1880, the result of a man's concern for his wife's health.
Sarah Andrews became ill in Vineland and the doctor advised
her husband, Aaron, to take her to Townsend's Inlet to recuperate.
There they became friends of the Joseph Taylor family of Philadelphia.
Both families returned the following year, determined to acquire
seashore homes. John Burke, a real estate salesman from Vineland,
brought them to a tract of land in the center of Five Mile
Beach.
Impressed, the trio joined with Nelson Robert, Latimer Baker,
and Robert Young to form the Holly Beach City Improvement
Co., and in 1885 Holly Beach Borough was incorporated.
Philip Pontius Baker had accompanied his brother, Latimer,
to Five Mile Beach in 1881 and he, too, was impressed. As
Holly Beach developed, Philip and Latimer, together with a
third brother, J. Thompson Baker, organized the Wildwood Beach
Improvement Co., to develop the Wales-Physick Tract, just
north of Holly Beach. Their dream led to incorporation of
the Borough of Wildwood in 1895. Seventeen years later, in
1912, Holly Beach and Wildwood consolidated as the City of
Wildwood.
In 1905, after Wildwood began to grow, Philip Baker purchased
the land south of Holly Beach and named it Wildwood Crest.
The community was incorporated as a borough in 1910. West
Wildwood, the "baby" of the four sister communities, was incorporated
as a borough in 1920.
Today, hundreds of thousands of visitors each year echo Juet's
words,"A good land to fall in with." (Based
on George F. Boyer's Book, "Wildwood - Middle of the Island.")
History of the Wildwoods Boardwalk
The Wildwoods Boardwalk, celebrating its 100th birthday,
remains a living, thriving, pulsating celebration of the American
imagination. There, history stands side-by-side with 21st
century innovation, and the American dream is lived out every
summer evening along its more than 70,000 wooden planks.
Bright lights and neon dazzle the eye as they did in the
1920s. A wooden roller coaster stands next to its steel counterpart,
while just down the boardwalk teens corkscrew through virtual
reality. Favorite boardwalk foods -- pizza, ice cream, funnel
cakes, cotton candy, fudge and fries -- still rule, but now
they're joined by trendy bottled water, tortilla wraps, and
Mahi Mahi.
The idea of a boardwalk originated when a railroad conductor,
Alexander Boardman, got tired of cleaning beach sand from
his trains. He suggested constructing a wooden walkway for
seaside strolls. Atlantic City dedicated the first boardwalk
in 1870. Thirty years later the City of Wildwood laid its
first boardwalk directly on the sand along Atlantic Avenue,
from Oak Avenue to Maple Avenue, just 150 yards long. Each
fall it was taken up and stored for the winter.
In 1903 Wildwood's leaders decided to provide a wide, elevated
walkway closer to the ocean. It connected with Ocean Pier,
the first amusement pier to be opened, at Poplar Avenue. During
the first decade of the 20th century, the boardwalk spread
across the shoreline, from Second Avenue in North Wildwood
to Cresse Avenue in Wildwood. Another boardwalk from Cresse
to Aster Road in Wildwood Crest washed away in 1909 and was
replaced by Seaview Avenue.
In 1920 Wildwood City Commissioner Oliver Bright, determined
to move the boardwalk even closer to the ocean despite public
opposition, organized hundreds of workers to tear up the existing
boards in his district in one night. The new walk was ready
for the summer, but Bright was bounced from office.
For decades, rolling chairs dotted the walk. For 25 cents
per hour, pushers would propel the chairs, usually occupied
by ladies and gentlemen wearing their best coats, shawls and
furs. The chairs disappeared in 1946, making way for tram
cars to take foot-wear passengers from one end of the boardwalk
to the other.
Early in the century, the boardwalk was the place to see
and be seen. Back then, strollers paraded in their finest
clothing and accessories. Today a more casual style prevails.
And whereas people "walking the boards" were at first content
with simply strolling by the ocean and meeting their neighbors,
today's boardwalk visitor seeks thrills and excitement.
Over the years, amusement centers sprang up all along the
boards, such as Fun Chase Pier, the Starlight Ballroom, and
Blaker's Pavillion at Cedar Avenue. Baby Boomers recall times
spent at Casino, Marine, and Fun Piers, and Sportland Pier
and Pool.
Perhaps the most fondly remembered ride was the indoor carousel
at Cedar Avenue. This grand old merry-go-round with its proud
ponies and lively music was a favorite of children and adults
alike. The carousel and the popular, but decaying, Jack Rabbit
roller coaster were removed in the 1970s to make way for Nickel's
Midway Pier.
Hunt's Pier, built on the site of Fun Chase Pier, was a favorite
of the 1960s and early '70s, with the Flyer roller coaster,
Golden Nugget Mine Ride, and Pirate Ship haunted house. Hunt's
closed in the 1980s, re-opening briefly as Dinosaur Beach
Theme Park.
Will and Bill Morey began their amusement empire in 1969
with the construction of a giant slide at 26th Avenue, called
the Wipe Out. The Wipe Out still stands, and it was soon joined
by a heart-stopping haunted house, the Kong airplane ride,
and the Jumbo Jet steel coaster. In 1976, the Morey's bought
the failing Marine Pier at Schellenger Avenue, developing
it into Mariner's Landing. Later, they added hugely popular
water parks at the end of each pier. The Morey's also acquired
Fun Pier, popular in the 1960s, renamed it Wild Wheels, and
added the wood and steel Great White coaster, and the DooWopper
a family style coaster with a '50s twist.
The Wildwoods Boardwalk remains our island's preferred place
for quiet strolls, morning bicycling, calorie consuming, games
of skill, and thrills galore. Perhaps the last of America's
great boardwalks, it survives as an authentic American shared
experience. It changes with the times, but remains a timeless
attraction for all ages. Research by Robert J. Scully,
Curator, George F. Boyer Historical Museum. More information
is available in "Wildwood By The Sea: The History of an American
Resort" by David W. Francis, Diane DeMali Francis and Robert
J. Scully, published 1998 by Amusement Park Books, Fairview
Park, Ohio. Available from the George F. Boyer Historical
Museum, 3907 Pacific Avenue, Wildwood, NJ 08260. (609) 523-0277. |