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Date: Mon, 19 Dec 2011 20:35:12 +0000 (UTC)
From: flame88@comcast.net
To: Tom Meyer <tgmeyer@comcast.net>
Message-ID: <1278882148.1331497.1324326912640.JavaMail.root@sz0116a.westchester.pa.mail.comcast.net>
In-Reply-To: <SNT103-W51AA7F96DA695CC387325186A70@phx.gbl>
Subject: Fwd: Good old Jersey
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----- Forwarded Message -----
From: "dorothy Hackett" <dotty540@msn.com>=20
To: "Eileen Whelan" <flame88@comcast.net>, jirocarden@verizon.net, "JOSEPH =
BARRESI" <jbarresi@pacbell.net>, "Larry Hengeveld" <rampike99@hotmail.com>,=
 "Leonard Bartell" <kingjoebar@yahoo.com>, "Steve Whiteford" <scw_41@yahoo.=
com>, "Tish Greer" <tishgreer@comcast.net>=20
Sent: Monday, December 19, 2011 7:19:22 AM=20
Subject: FW: Good old Jersey=20



=C2=A0=20








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Some history of the New Jersey shore. I had trouble reading some of the des=
criptions so I edited the type styles and font size to hopefully make them =
more readable.=20









On the Tales of the Jersey Shore episode on Asbury and boardwalks I noted a=
n unusual residence and address- Number One Atlantic Ocean.=20

Not much time to discuss in a 4-5 minute video so when I came across this p=
hoto I thought I would post. Captain John Lake Young-=20

( no one knows what he was Captain of ) was an Atlantic City rags to riches=
 story. He started out operating a carousel and ended up owning=20

several major piers in Atlantic City.=20

Nothing succeeded like excess at the time and the Captain topped off his Yo=
ung's Million Dollar Pier with an Italianate Mansion at the end=20

of the pier.=20

Imported marble, statues, furniture from all over the globe and illuminated=
 at night by thousands of miniature lights outlining the mansion=20

provided by his fishing buddy Thomas Edison. He entertained celebs from ent=
ertainers to presidents.=20


=C2=A0=20





Next week we shoot the 4th episode of NJTV's Tales of the Jersey Shore in t=
his building. It is the Monmouth Beach Life-Saving Station.=20

At one time there were 41 active stations along the NJ coast - more than an=
ywhere in the country.=20

This is one of the few surviving stations and we will tell the story of U.S=
.Life-Saving Service ( created in our Garden State) - the father=20

of the U.S. Coast Guard=20


=C2=A0=20





The 1987 Long Branch Fire and sad end to an era; Max's, the boardwalk and t=
he amusement pier that created so many memories. Do you know it was conside=
red suspicious by many? Gifted Sara ( Long Branch's Madame Marie) was asked=
 a few days later by a reporter if the amusement pier would be rebuilt as t=
he politicians were claiming. Her mouth curled into a sly smile and she sai=
d " I see condominiums"=20




=C2=A0=20


=C2=A0=20






A Long Branch institution. Here is the original Max's built in 1928 as a 25=
 seat hot-dog stand. Lost in the 1987 boardwalk and amusement pier fire. Th=
e new one is at 28 Matilda Terrace still in Long Branch and still a local f=
avorite. Today people disagree on who has the best dog- Max's or The Windmi=
ll on Ocean Ave also in the Branch.=20








This is what the Atlantic City beach and boardwalk looked like during the d=
ays of Enoch "Nucky" Johnson.=20

( changed to Thompson for the show ) Steeplechase Pier was an amazing place=
. George Tilyou built Steeplechase Park in Coney Island and then expanded t=
o the Jersey Shore. Working out an idea for a Tales of the Jersey Shore epi=
sode about these piers.=20








Besides showing a young Springsteen you can see so much history...that is t=
he Palace Amusements he made famous in the background.=20

There was a hand-carved carousel in the building and that Ferris Wheel went=
 right through the roof. It is now a parking lot.=20

=C2=A0=20


=C2=A0=20





This years October storm was not the first time NJ got caught by an early o=
r late season storm. This rare photo shows Asbury Park along the New Jersey=
 Shore during the Great Blizzard of 1888. Known as the "white hurricane" it=
 was one of the most horrific blizzards in recorded history and while it wa=
s almost mid March it dumped 40-50 inches of snow in the NJ/NY area. No sno=
w plows back then with 50 foot drifts and people were housebound for over a=
 week.=20

=C2=A0=20
=C2=A0=20
=C2=A0=20








Ocean Grove, NJ=20









Atlantic City in a different pre-casino era. 1957 before the great hotels f=
ell to the wrecker's ball.=20








Atlantic City fish haul- those of you that watch "Boardwalk Empire" might h=
ave seen a detailed set that looks like this. Young's Million Dollar Pier h=
ad a daily fish haul for years that attracted tourists like a magnet. The n=
ets would be pulled in through trap doors on the pier and the bounty of the=
 sea visible for all to enjoy. A joke among the locals was that some of the=
 "catch" of the day were not even native to that part of the Atlantic Ocean=
. No one can say John Lake Young did not know how to reel them in.=20

=C2=A0=20


=C2=A0=20





Watching "Boardwalk Empire" made me think of the old attractions on the boa=
rdwalk when Atlantic City was America's Playground. The Diving Horse and ri=
der (women) dove 45 feet from a platform into a tank of water and was the m=
ost popular attraction for decades. Before any animal lovers get on my case=
 I love animals. There was an ongoing battle with the SPCA but the operator=
s claimed no horse was ever injured, they were treated like royalty and mos=
t lived to old age.The act was booked in 1929 for one week only but was so =
popular it continued into the late 1970s when the Steel Pier closed.=20











This is a KKK parade that lasted hours in Long Branch in the 1920's setting=
 the resort back a generation.=20

=C2=A0=20


=C2=A0=20





Here is an interesting image. At the turn of the century there was an elect=
ric railroad that ran along the beach in Cape May.=20

There were places where it ran along the boardwalk and you could travel fro=
m Cape May Point and the steamboat landing to Sewell's=20

Point at the eastern end of Cape May. Eventually it was claimed by Mother N=
ature and shut down. As we can see by this photo near the=20

end of its life erosion and numerous storms hastened its closure.=20



=C2=A0=20





Cape May- The Great Atlantic Hurricane of 1944=20








This is Asbury Park in 1944.=20









This is ocean city, after storm=C2=A0in 1944.=20








1915 photo of the McCreary Cottage ( The famous Cape May - Abbey B&B today)=
 This one is the oldest known images of the McCreary cottage believed to be=
 taken not too long after it was built. Notice the wood siding is vertical =
when it was first built..later changed to horizontal in the 1915 photograph=
.=20

=C2=A0=20

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<B>From: </B>"dorothy Hackett" &lt;dotty540@msn.com&gt;<BR><B>To: </B>"Eileen Whelan" &lt;flame88@comcast.net&gt;, jirocarden@verizon.net, "JOSEPH BARRESI" &lt;jbarresi@pacbell.net&gt;, "Larry Hengeveld" &lt;rampike99@hotmail.com&gt;, "Leonard Bartell" &lt;kingjoebar@yahoo.com&gt;, "Steve Whiteford" &lt;scw_41@yahoo.com&gt;, "Tish Greer" &lt;tishgreer@comcast.net&gt;<BR><B>Sent: </B>Monday, December 19, 2011 7:19:22 AM<BR><B>Subject: </B>FW: Good old Jersey<BR><BR>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal><SPAN style="FONT-FAMILY: 'sans-serif'; COLOR: rgb(31,73,125); FONT-SIZE: 11pt">Some history of the New Jersey shore. I had trouble reading some of the descriptions so I edited the type styles and font size to hopefully make them more readable. </SPAN></DIV></DIV></DIV>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>On the Tales of the Jersey Shore episode on Asbury and boardwalks I noted an unusual residence and address- Number One Atlantic Ocean. </DIV></DIV></DIV>
<DIV>
<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>Not much time to discuss in a 4-5 minute video so when I came across this photo I thought I would post. Captain John Lake Young- </DIV></DIV></DIV>
<DIV>
<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>( no one knows what he was Captain of ) was an Atlantic City rags to riches story. He started out operating a carousel and ended up owning</DIV></DIV></DIV>
<DIV>
<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>several major piers in Atlantic City. </DIV></DIV></DIV>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>Nothing succeeded like excess at the time and the Captain topped off his Young's Million Dollar Pier with an Italianate Mansion at the end </DIV></DIV>
<DIV>
<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>of the pier. </DIV></DIV>
<DIV>
<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>Imported marble, statues, furniture from all over the globe and illuminated at night by thousands of miniature lights outlining the mansion </DIV></DIV>
<DIV>
<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>provided by his fishing buddy Thomas Edison. He entertained celebs from entertainers to presidents.<SPAN style="COLOR: rgb(31,73,125)"> </SPAN></DIV></DIV>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>Next week we shoot the 4th episode of NJTV's Tales of the Jersey Shore in this building. It is the Monmouth Beach Life-Saving Station. </DIV></DIV></DIV>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>At one time there were 41 active stations along the NJ coast - more than anywhere in the country. </DIV></DIV></DIV>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>This is one of the few surviving stations and we will tell the story of U.S.Life-Saving Service ( created in our Garden State) - the father </DIV></DIV></DIV>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>of the U.S. Coast<SPAN style="COLOR: rgb(31,73,125)"> </SPAN>Guard</DIV></DIV></DIV>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>The 1987 Long Branch Fire and sad end to an era; Max's, the boardwalk and the amusement pier that created so many memories. Do you know it was considered suspicious by many? Gifted Sara ( Long Branch's Madame Marie) was asked a few days later by a reporter if the amusement pier would be rebuilt as the politicians were claiming. Her mouth curled into a sly smile and she said " I see condominiums"</DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>A Long Branch institution. Here is the original Max's built in 1928 as a 25 seat hot-dog stand. Lost in the 1987 boardwalk and amusement pier fire. The new one is at 28 Matilda Terrace still in Long Branch and still a local favorite. Today people disagree on who has the best dog- Max's or The Windmill on Ocean Ave also in the Branch.</DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>This is what the Atlantic City beach and boardwalk looked like during the days of Enoch "Nucky" Johnson. </DIV></DIV></DIV>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>( changed to Thompson for the show ) Steeplechase Pier was an amazing place. George Tilyou built Steeplechase Park in Coney Island and then expanded to the Jersey Shore. Working out an idea for a Tales of the Jersey Shore episode about these piers.</DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>Besides showing a young Springsteen you can see so much history...that is the Palace Amusements he made famous in the background. </DIV></DIV></DIV>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>There was a hand-carved carousel in the building and that Ferris Wheel went right through the roof. It is now a parking lot.<SPAN style="COLOR: rgb(31,73,125)"> </SPAN></DIV></DIV></DIV>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>This years October storm was not the first time NJ got caught by an early or late season storm. This rare photo shows Asbury Park along the New Jersey Shore during the Great Blizzard of 1888. Known as the "white hurricane" it was one of the most horrific blizzards in recorded history and while it was almost mid March it dumped 40-50 inches of snow in the NJ/NY area. No snow plows back then with 50 foot drifts and people were housebound for over a week.<SPAN style="COLOR: rgb(31,73,125)"> </SPAN></DIV></DIV></DIV>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>Ocean Grove, NJ</DIV></DIV></DIV>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>Atlantic City in a different pre-casino era. 1957 before the great hotels fell to the wrecker's ball.</DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>Atlantic City fish haul- those of you that watch "Boardwalk Empire" might have seen a detailed set that looks like this. Young's Million Dollar Pier had a daily fish haul for years that attracted tourists like a magnet. The nets would be pulled in through trap doors on the pier and the bounty of the sea visible for all to enjoy. A joke among the locals was that some of the "catch" of the day were not even native to that part of the Atlantic Ocean. No one can say John Lake Young did not know how to reel them in.<SPAN style="COLOR: rgb(31,73,125)"> </SPAN></DIV></DIV></DIV>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>Watching "Boardwalk Empire" made me think of the old attractions on the boardwalk when Atlantic City was America's Playground. The Diving Horse and rider (women) dove 45 feet from a platform into a tank of water and was the most popular attraction for decades. Before any animal lovers get on my case I love animals. There was an ongoing battle with the SPCA but the operators claimed no horse was ever injured, they were treated like royalty and most lived to old age.The act was booked in 1929 for one week only but was so popular it continued into the late 1970s when the Steel Pier closed.<SPAN style="COLOR: rgb(31,73,125)"> </SPAN></DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>This is a KKK parade that lasted hours in Long Branch in the 1920's setting the resort back a generation.<SPAN style="COLOR: rgb(31,73,125)"> </SPAN></DIV></DIV></DIV>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>Here is an interesting image. At the turn of the century there was an electric railroad that ran along the beach in Cape May. </DIV></DIV></DIV>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>There were places where it ran along the boardwalk and you could travel from Cape May Point and the steamboat landing to Sewell's </DIV></DIV></DIV>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>Point at the eastern end of Cape May. Eventually it was claimed by Mother Nature and shut down. As we can see by this photo near the </DIV></DIV></DIV>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>end of its life erosion and numerous storms hastened its closure.<SPAN style="COLOR: rgb(31,73,125)"> </SPAN></DIV></DIV></DIV>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>Cape May- The Great Atlantic Hurricane of 1944</DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>This is Asbury Park in 1944.</DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>This is ocean city, after storm&nbsp;in 1944.<SPAN style="COLOR: rgb(31,73,125)"> </SPAN></DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
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<DIV class=ecxyiv1463170470ecxMsoNormal>1915 photo of the McCreary Cottage ( The famous Cape May - Abbey B&amp;B today) This one is the oldest known images of the McCreary cottage believed to be taken not too long after it was built. Notice the wood siding is vertical when it was first built..later changed to horizontal in the 1915 photograph.<SPAN style="COLOR: rgb(31,73,125)"> </SPAN></DIV></DIV></DIV>
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