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1963 JAM045 JERSEY BOARDWALK

1963 JAM045 JERSEY BOARDWALK

Wildwood Crest NJ
1963
by JoAnne

You can almost taste the hot dogs and french fries they sell under the boardwalk down by the sea

QUOTE: Seaside INSPIRATION

family fun ~ our parents John and JoAnne with Uncle John and family friends Cathy and Joey


https://wildwoodsnj.com/

Boardwalk
38 BLOCKS OF FUN AND EXCITEMENT
A Real Slice of Americana

The Wildwoods’ award-winning Boardwalk features 38 blocks packed end to end with shops, waterparks, eateries, entertainment and amusement piers with over 100 rides and attractions. The sights, the sounds and the smells of the Wildwoods Boardwalk are just pure sensory overload! Day or night, whether you’re out for a morning bike ride, taking in the carnival-like atmosphere or simply out for a stroll enjoying the refreshing salt air, there’s always something happening.

Two Miles of Smiles
Since its birth as a mere 150-yard stretch of boards in the 1890s, the Wildwoods Boardwalk has always been the center of activity. Throughout the years, the Boardwalk has gone through many transformations, growing and evolving with the mood of the country and, in over one hundred years of history. The boardwalk moved closer to the ocean twice due to the changing shoreline. Today, the Wildwoods Boardwalk is one of the country’s last great seaside promenades.


FAMILY FUN SINCE 1895
The Delaware Indians, specifically the Lenni Lenape, were among the earliest settlers of the region we now know as the Wildwoods and it was they that inhabited the Five Mile Beach area on August 28, 1609 when Henry Hudson sailed the Half Moon into Delaware Bay. Robert Juet, a member of the crew, recorded the beauty of the site. Realizing that this was an inlet and not the Northwest Passage to China Hudson and the Dutch East India Company sought he sailed north and left no settlers. The area was unexplored until 1664 when Charles II conveyed the land to the Duke of York. There appear to be a number of land claimants until 1717 when the West Jersey Society passed the title to four investors who used it primarily as farmland. Scandinavian fishermen, the first white settlers, moved onto the land after the Civil War and named the area Angelsea.

The 1950s and 1960s were truly a Golden Era for America and for generations of families who took to the highways in tail-fin cars to share vacations at the shore. And, for those folks whose summer vacations were spent along the sun-splashed beaches of the Southern Jersey Shore, the Wildwoods By-the-Sea were the epicenter of the East Coast’s post-World War II cultural explosion. The splashy resort was midwife to the birth of rock ‘n’ roll music and host to most of the top entertainers of the day. At the same time, it was the proving ground for a funky new architectural form that added an exotic aura to the legions of motels that sprang up along Five-Mile Island. Like the music of the time, the architecture has become known nationally as the Doo Wop style– and the Wildwoods are considered the Doo Wop Capital of the World.