May 3: The forecast for several days of wind and
waves spurred us to depart Chesapeake City at 6:20 AM for a 62 mile run to Cape
May, NJ before the wind could pile up the waves and to take advantage of wind
and tide travelling in the same direction at our stern. Consequently, we picked up an additional two
knots of speed and had a quite pleasant journey until the wind began to howl in
the last hour of a five-hour run AND we had to cross in a beam sea into the
Cape May Canal. Kapt. Karl remarked, “it
isn’t even 11:00 AM and I feel beat up already”. As luck would have it, we came pushing over
the breakwater just in time for the Cape May-Lewes Ferry leaving the dock and
taking up most of the channel. The Ferry
Captain radioed that we should snug up close to him so as not to go aground on
the shoal. All ended well with another
afternoon at leisure in South Jersey Marina, a well-appointed facility with
great staff. We were told that captains
who left Cape May this morning hoping to run the entire NJ Coast only made it
as far as Atlantic City 45 miles away. If
you have to be “stuck” somewhere, Cape May trumps Atlantic City any day, unless
you are Donna’s Uncle Nick.
May 4: In 1620 Dutch Captain Cornelius Jacobsen Mey
came upon the peninsula while exploring the Delaware River. Captain Mey named
the area Cape Mey after himself; the spelling became Cape MAY City in 1869.
Native
American tribes summered here, but a permanent community didn't form in the
area until 1685. In 1688, Quakers formed the first government and others came
to join the new whaling industry. Notorious pirate Captain William Kidd is
known to have stopped in Cape May, during his pirating/privateering days.
In 1761 Cape
May officially became the first seashore resort in America and was considered
among the top vacation resorts in the country.
Amazingly,
Cape May has never experienced major hurricane damage; however in 1878, fire
wiped out thirty blocks of the town. No
time was wasted in rebuilding in the modern style of the day...later known as
Victorian.
The home of Emlen
Physick Jr., completed in 1879, open today as a museum. A bachelor, Emlen was descended from a famous
and wealthy Philadelphia family. Fun fact: His grandfather, Dr. Philip
Syng Physick, was considered the father of American surgery and invented
numerous surgical procedures and medical instruments still in use today.
Presidents
Lincoln, Grant, Buchanan, Hayes, and Benjamin Harrison all vacationed in Cape May as
well as many of you; and now the crew of Santorini is enjoying a layover while
waiting for calm seas to continue the journey north.
Glad you beat the weather and are enjoying your time in Cape May! I hear you may be getting a visit from Karen & Mom somewhere along the NJ coast!
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