Tuesday, August 17, 2010

The story behind the author



Many people have emailed me or asked me at signings how I began researching history and eventually writing books.
It is an interesting story.
Years ago I was turning over a small garden in the yard of our first home in Haskell, NJ. The house was on a postage stamp lot so the garden was maybe 15' x 40'
As I removed the sod and turned the soil over I noticed what looked like a piece of copper. Holding it up to the sun I noticed it had some writing on it so I brought it in the house to clean the soil and grass from it. I realized it was very old and something I had never seen before.
In the pre-internet age my next step was the local library. There I discovered that I had unearthed a 1786 NJ copper coin. Apparently as a solution to the abundance of British counterfeit coins- used by most people back in the day - NJ decided to mint their own coins.
As can be seen here one side reads " Nova Caesarea " and the other, E. Pluribus Unum."
The grant from James, Duke of York, to loyalists Carteret ( Governor of the Isle of Jersey ) and Berkeley, it read, " which said tract of land hereafter to be called by the name or names of New Caesarea or New Jersey."

So how did this 1786 coin end up in my 1950s era sub-division? That led to more research and I eventually discovered that the entire neighborhood was built on a farm that had been owned during the Revolutionary War by a farmer sympathetic to Washington and so he permitted the general's troops to camp in his fields.
I then went to work with a trowel, screen and by the end of the summer my tiny garden gave up dozens of Colonial era coins-some NJ and some English-Irish, silver and pewter army uniform buttons, brass shoe buckles and a variety of metal and glass items.
It was my intro to history, research, archaeology and after that I was hooked.
I would often stare at my neighbor's backyards and dream of what treasures rested beneath their above ground pools and well manicured lawns.
Emil Salvini - August 2010

Friday, July 30, 2010

Emil's Italy Trip 2010


























Many of my 18,000 plus Facebook fans have requested that I post pictures of my trip to Rome and the Amalfi Coast.
A few have said " No, this is a site about the Jersey Shore."
I have come up with a compromise.
I am posting them here on my blog and will post a link to the blog on Facebook.

If a fan wishes to see them great, if not they can skip the link.
To those interested I hope you enjoy the mini photo tour.

Cheers,
Emil

Saturday, March 13, 2010

The Railroad Comes to Cape May


As many of you know if I have a more detailed story or wish to post images in higher res I will use my blog and post a link on Facebook.

This is such a story. I received an envelope in the mail yesterday from Germany. It contained an item I have searched for years to add to my collection.. an original stock certificate from the first railroad to connect Cape May, NJ to the outside world.

Germany ? Go figure but I found it on Ebay and it is a genuine certificate. It is often easier to locate Jersey Shore items out of state where they are not valued by collectors as they would be in say a boardwalk flea market.
The actual certificate was issued in 1863 during the Civil War and the investor purchased two shares at $50 a share. This was no small amount in 1863 and the railroad was attempting to raise $300,000.

Here is the story:
Cape May was the first resort established on the Jersey Shore because of its water transportation monopoly. In the era before railroads and reliable roads existed, sailboats and later steamboats, would drop people off at Cape May on the trip from Philadelphia, down the Delaware River, and around the Cape May peninsula and pick them up on the return voyage. It was a perfect arrangement.
Records indicate that before the American Revolution wealthy families were summering in the fledgling resort. Further north the second resort to take advantage of a water monopoly was Long Branch, the Duchess of the North Shore, where massive steamboats would use piers as landing docks to disembark vacationers from Manhattan.

This arrangement worked for generations until a group of savvy investors decided to build a railroad, the latest transportation technology, to connect Philadelphia to the Atlantic Ocean. They looked at a map and decided the shortest route east took them to a desolate area known as Absecon Island. The new resort was a brilliant railroad scheme. They bought up the land between Philadelphia and Absecon Island, and it's value grew exponentially once the resort was completed. On July 1, 1854, a train full of investors, newspapermen and Philadelphia bigwigs arrived in the resort the railroad created; Atlantic City. Cape May was clearly in the cross hairs of Atlantic City developers and through years of political maneuvers were successful in slowing down a railroad connection between Philadelphia and Cape May. America's Playground began to take vacationers and revenue from the older established resorts.

Why take a steamboat to Cape May when you could now travel to the beach and back in one day. Cape May became the destinations for long-term visits and the railroad made Atlantic City the most successful resort on the coast.
The Civil War had taken a toll on Cape May and almost overnight they lost the families that came from points south. Many of these families never returned after the war with words like Shiloh, Fredericksburg, and Antietam, and thoughts of the thousands of men that lost their lives in these bloody battles were etched in the nation's collective memory.

Clearly the railroad represented the future of Cape May.

Charters were renegotiated, political deals were cut and almost a decade after that first train arrived in Atlantic City, local Cape May resident, Amelia Hand wrote in her diary in 1863, " We at last have a railroad from Cape Island to Philadelphia, and August 26th the cars made a trip for the first time..the route was performed in three and a half hours, quite an improvement over our old way of going to Philadelphia which took the most part of one day..."
She cautiously noted that two trains a day, "...bring us as near to a large city as one need wish be..." Perhaps she was clairvoyant.


The railroad she was referring to was the Cape May and Millville Railroad. Town elders like the ever-vigilant newspaper editor of the Cape May Ocean Wave, Joseph Leach, warned the citizens of the city that the long-awaited railroad and its promise of prosperity required a commitment from the island's citizens. He wrote that the city must provide "proper inducements to attract them ( tourists), and render their stay pleasant." He went on to say that Cape Island was fifty-years behind the times.

The citizens and entrepreneurs responded, new hotels were opened and the older establishments were renovated.
Cape May would never surpass Atlantic City as the #1 resort on the New Jersey shore again but in the end the Queen of the Seaside Resorts had the last laugh. Atlantic City ruled until travel modes changed again and the railroads were replaced with automobiles and air travel. Built for the railroad AC was not automobile friendly and as the years went by tourists used the Garden State Parkway to pass it by for destinations north and south.

A renaissance eventually took place in Cape May. While their competitor to the north dealt with urban decay and required legalized gambling to revive it, a new generation of families discovered the charm of the sleepy victorian resort that time and the wrecking ball had spared.

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Previous posts

Please check the archives on the left hand side of the page to view all of my previous blogs.

The Hotel Cape May


In the early twentieth century there was an attempt to turn the undeveloped area of east Cape May into the Newport RI of NJ.
It was an overly ambitious effort and eventually went bust.

The plan involved dredging the harbor so larger ships could travel to Cape May, build mansions ( a few still exist like the Peter Shields Inn ) and the jewel in the crown was the Hotel Cape May.

As early as 1901 the local newspapers began mentioning the project but work did not begin until the Cape May Real Estate Company was formed in 1903 and Peter Shields was the director.

While Cape May development in the past had been driven by Philadelphia investors this time around major money came in from Pittsburgh and the papers quickly referred to the new group as the "Pittsburgh Syndicate."

The promoters envisioned a modern city with connections to the major railroads and a new harbor that would rival the ports of Philadelphia and New York.

The million dollar Cape May Hotel along with the harbor with a water area of 500 acres and a depth of forty feet ( the promoters promised it was deep enough to accommodate the largest ocean steamships ever built) were the 2 centerpieces of the project.
The Hotel Cape May opened to great fanfare in 1908. The celebration included a visit from the governor of New Jersey and an automobile rally from Philadelphia to Cape May.

Unfortunately the new development plans were built on a poor foundation of insufficient funds and six months after the celebration the Hotel Cape May mysteriously closed for repairs. Directors resigned and new people stepped into to jump start the harbor East Cape May project. It was not to be.

The ill-fated Hotel Cape May never fulfilled its promise to restore Cape May to the throne of Queen of the Seaside Resorts.. It remained empty for years.

The hotel was later acquired by the Admiral Hotel Company which attempted to operate it as a hotel.
The effort failed and the city took the hotel - The Admiral -over for back taxes in 1940 and it was sold to a group of developers that intended to convert it into a senior citizens home. During World War two it served temporarily as a military hospital.
Fundamentalist preacher Carl McIntire purchased the hotel and saved it from the wrecker's ball in 1963.
He changed the name to the Christian Admiral but the hotel was doomed from day one.
It was razed in 1996 when a deal was cut between the city that was owed back taxes and the owners of the hotel that also owned Congress Hall. Seaside lots were sold for McMansions and the money was used to restore Congress Hall that was also in need of restoration. It was a good plan since both hotels were key landmarks in Cape May and the sacrifice of one saved the other.
Now you know the story.

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

The Jersey Shore Perpetual Calendar


This calendar was created by me for fans of the Jersey Shore. We used the profile image from our Face Book site " Tales of the New Jersey Shore"

It makes a great gift and since the day of the week, month and date change but never the year it is truly perpetual and never goes out of date.
Take a look at the image. An ingenious series of hidden wheels permit you to turn the dial on the sides of the calendar and change the date.

Buyers are looking for a convenient, secure way to purchase the calendar so I created this PayPal button. Just select it and PayPal will guide you through the process
The calendar is $20 plus $5 UPS shipping and handling. ( please no Box #'s as UPS will not deliver )
It is created and produced by hand in New Jersey and there is a 100% return guarantee. If you are not satisfied just return the calendar and you will be refunded your $20 minus the shipping and handling.
There is a limited supply no do not miss out.








Saturday, September 19, 2009

A Beautiful Cape May day - 1918


This is one of my favorite photos of Cape May, NJ .

There is so much history in this one image. An early horse-less carriage on a street, Beach Drive, that is today impossible to find a parking space.

On the far right are the massive columns of the old Lafayette Hotel-now replaced with a newer hotel.
Center right is Denizot's Ocean View Cottage ( built 1879) and operated at the time as the Arnold Cafe. The proprietors of the cafe altered the old cottage and replaced the bathhouses with an open beer garden.
The electric railroad on the left ran from Cape May Point to Sewell's Point along the boardwalk and on the beach, and was eventually extended to Schellinger's Landing in 1913. The boardwalk arches were illuminated with electric lights and extended the entire length of the old wooden boardwalk until the early 1920s.
The boardwalk was destroyed by the Great Atlantic Hurricane of 1944, rebuilt and destroyed again by the Great Atlantic Storm of 1962. It was then replaced with a macadam seawall still referred to by the locals as the "boardwalk."
Emil Salvini