Ocean City Maryland - A Brief History of OCMD With Pictures

89

By Dolores Monet

A Beautiful Beach

Ocean City Maryland is a 10 mile stretch of sandy beach set between the Atlantic Ocean and the Sinepuxent Bay. There is not much left of the quaint old town, blasted by storms, fire, and the onslaught of development, but the waves beat on, relentless and eternal, the heartbeat of the world.

Before the storm of 1933 created the Ocean City Inlet, Ocean City Maryland and Assateague Island were joined - one long barrier island used by the Algonquin Indians for fishing and later by coastal farmers for grazing.

On July 5, 1875, the Atlantic Hotel opened. Followed by more hotels, guest cottages, amusement parks, dance halls, and a 2 1/2 mile Boardwalk, Ocean City was on its way to becoming Maryland's ultimate tourist destination for sun, sand, and surf.

Some of the older buildings still stand downtown and owners have begun to display historic markers as the town takes on a new interest in its history.

The Atlantic Hotel circa 1910

See all 12 photos
Source: from an old post card

Early Tourists in Ocean City Maryland

The first European to set foot on Assateague Island was Giovanni de Verrazano who sailed into Chincoteague Bay in 1524 under the French flag. He found cedars and pine forests and much wetland and also travelled to Pokomoke swamp. There is some controversy over Verrazano's presence on Assateague Island at that time. A bridge connecting northern Assateague Island with the mainland is named after Verazano.

The first written record of Assateague Island was by the English voyager, Colonel Henry Norwood who,after a storm in 1650, landed on the barrier island in search of food and fresh water. A group of travelers was marooned there on the island but helped by local Indians.

In the early 1700's, Captain William Whittingotn was granted 1,000 acres of land by Lord Baltimore, 15 miles south of present day Ocean City. He subdivided parcels of land for public grazing, but little fresh water and poor soil conditions made Assateague unattractive for settlement.

Isaac Coffin was the first man to understand the appeal of tourism and built beach cottages for paying guests in 1869.

In 1868, the Wicomico and Pokomoke Railroad took travelers from Salisbury, Maryland to Berlin, Maryland. When the railroad extended to the Sinepuxent Bay, people were able to take a ferry over to Ocean City. Tourists made the long journey from Baltimore, across the Chesapeake Bay to Claiborne on a ferry, then took the train to the beach.

At the time, Ocean city was a small fishing village where fishermen took pound boats off the beach and into the ocean for fishing. But land speculation went hand in hand with the railroad expansion. Soon, building lots and streets were laid out, with the original plat for the town dated August 31, 1875.

The 1880 USA census shows that 48 people lived in the town including 27 adults and 21 children.

The Ocean City Life Saving Station was created in 1878 and dedicated to responding to shipwrecks and the plight of people in danger in the Atlantic Ocean. On January 10, 1883, the schooner Sallie W. Kaye struck an offshore sandbar during a terrible snow storm. Members of the life saving station rescued 6 sailors from the devastated ship.

Ocean City - The Old Plimhimmon Hotel

Source: MD State Government

What's Left of the Old Plimhimmon - See the Cap?

Ocean City Maryland -Saint Mary's Star of the Sea Catholic Church built in 1878

Source: photo by Dolores Monet

Ocean City Maryland Tourism Picks Up in the Late 1800's

Guest cottages for fishermen began to open in the late 1800's, including Isaac Coffin's guest cottages and Scott's Ocean House at Green River Beach in 1869.

In 1975, a descendant claimed that Isaac Coffin also built a hotel on the mainland and that (in 1975) the ruins were visible in a field near Frontier Town (a western theme park).

On July 4, 1875, the Atlantic Hotel opened for business. The Atlantic Hotel was a handsome Victorian 4 story, wooden hotel that encompassed a full block. It's wide columned porches wrapped around the front and the sides to welcome the fresh ocean breezes for the pleasure of the guests of the 400 room hotel.(The Atlantic Hotel, rebuilt after a fire, is visible today, hidden behind Boardwalk honkey tonk.

Most of the rooming houses and hotels were owned and run by women - fishermen's wives, and widows. Rosalie Tilghman Shreve was one such a success story. She grew up at her family's plantation, called Plimhimmon, near Oxford, Maryland. After the Civil War, the farm fell into bankruptcy and her father's business failed. Rosalie married young and found herself a widow with two young children at the tender age of 19. After running a rooming house in Baltimore, she opened a boarding house in Ocean City. In 1894, she bought up 2 ocean front lots and constructed a 48 room hotel she called the Plimhimmon. While the hotel has undergone many changes including fire damage and a name change (the Plim Plaza), the hotel's unique cap is still visible today at the Boardwalk between 1st and 2nd Streets.

Visits to the beach were different in those days. People dressed for dinner, often in formal attire. Hotels offered ballroom dancing with live orchestras. Tourists rode along the boardwalk in 3 wheeled wicker carriages for fifty cents.

In 1892, The Sinepuxent Beach Company of Baltimore purchased the Atlantic Hotel as well as 1600 acres of nearby land, hoping to create farms to supply the hotel with fresh local foods. The real estate group also bought ocean and bay front property, selling the lots for $25.00 each, demanding a $5.00 down payment.

1897 saw the construction of an elevated Boardwalk above the narrow beach. People sat beneath the boardwalk to keep out of the sun. Swimming ropes allowed the bravest visitors to venture out into the surf.

By 1907, the pier held a long white frame building filled with popular amusements of the day including a bowling alley, billiard tables, a roller rink, dance hall, and a silent movie theater.

Ocean City Maryland - A Stork on the Old Hershell - Spellman Carousel at Trimper's Rides

Source: photo by Dolores Monet

Ocean City, Maryland - Giraffe on the Old Carousel

Ocean City, Maryland - Marty's Playland - The Old Gypsy Will Tell Your Fortune

Source: photo by Dolores Monet

Trimper's Rides - Vintage Amusement Park

In 1892, Daniel Trimper and his wife, both German immigrants opened the Windsor Resort, modeled after England's Windsor Castle and an amusement park called Luna Park (like the famous amusement park at Coney Island). Part of that old hotel can be seen today hidden away behind the present Haunted House.

The resort featured a movie theater, vaudeville acts, and a merry-go-round powered by strong workmen.

In 1912, Trimper purchased a Hershell - Spillman carousel. Build in 1902, the beautiful carousel featured a hand carved menagerie and is, today, the oldest continuously running carousel in the USA. You can ride this historic carousel for only $2.00 when you visit Trimper's Rides near the south end of the Boardwalk. The indoor section of Trimpers contains vintage kiddie rides like the kiddie Ferris Wheel and tiny carousel built in the 1920's.


Marty's Playland - Arcade Games With a Splash of History


Just north of Trimpers, at the Boardwalk and Worchester Street, is Marty's Playland, an arcade dating from the 1930's. Though the place is filled with modern games, there are still quite a few vestiges of the past including an antique skeeball game, and the miniature cranes at Diggerville reportedly 100 years old.


It's fun to visit Marty's and play the old games. At the right is a picture of a fortune telling gypsy woman, encased in a glass and wooden booth. She's been telling fortunes for over a half a century.

The Hershell Spillman Carousel in Ocean City, Maryland

Ocean City Maryland - The Big Storms

Much of old Ocean City has been lost. Set out on a barrier island, the town is a magnet for trouble. The old wooden structures made fire a constant threat. In December of 1925, fire broke out. Frozen fire hydrants hampered the efforts of firefighters and the ensuing blaze destroyed 3 square blocks of old downtown Ocean City. The Atlantic Hotel was burned, but rebuilt.

Storms are a worry as well. Few people lived in Ocean City at the time of the terrible Storm of 1821 which was recalled 50 years later in a magazine. An inky black sky threatened all day and into the night, with the wind moaning and howling. When the locals awoke the next morning, they were shocked to see the Atlantic Ocean in retreat. A dull roar brought in a terribleĀ  storm that tore up pine trees, and tossed houses off their foundations. What could only be a tidal wave stuck Assateague and moved on to Chincoteague south of Ocean City in Virginia.

It's An Ill Wind That Doesn't Blow Some Good

On August 22, 1933, a severe storm with heavy rains and strong winds hit the busy resort. 200 guests were stranded at the newly rebuilt Atlantic Hotel.

The ocean flooded the town, pouring over the roads and into the Sinepuxent Bay. After the storm surge, when the ocean retreated, water drained from the Bay and created an inlet at the south end of town. Water, rushing out back to sea and the severe storm destroyed the railroad bridge, several fishing camps and swallowed several entire blocks of old Ocean City.

Then Mayor William McCabe saw an opportunity to increase the local fishing industry and attract boaters. He campaigned to make the inlet permanent and induced the Federal and State governments to cough up $780,000.00 to stabilize the new waterway with a concrete sea wall. The new inlet opened up both commercial and recreational fishing and made Ocean City the White Marlin Capital of the World.

Sand, moved by the ocean's southward drift, soon filled in Ocean City's beach north of the inlet's jetty. Ocean City's beach became huge as the beach of Assateague, on the other side of the inlet migrated west, deprived of the sand deposits


Ash Wednesday Storm of 1962

March 6 - 8 of 1962 brought another terrible storm to Ocean City. The nor'easter (winds from the north west) combined with the high tides common at new moon and the Spring Equinox caused serious damage. 25 foot waves smashed beach houses and businesses alike.

The waves breaking on Ocean Highway were taller than a man and tides were 5' above normal high tide. Ocean front buildings had their fronts torn off, the furniture and debris fell into the sea. Huge waves tore off great sections of the Boardwalk which smashed into buildings like battering rams. 50 businesses, including shops and apartment houses were totally destroyed, as were 15 homes. Some disappeared completely. 250 other buildings were seriously damaged. Sand piled 5 - 6 ' into the street, burying cars.

It was a devastating storm. But the lowered property values brought inĀ  real estate speculators and encouraged the town to enact new building codes. The result was the building boom of the 1970's.

Times Change in Ocean City Maryland

In the late 1930's and 1940's, Ocean City drew young music lovers who flocked to the Pier Ballroom to dance to the tunes of the Big Bands that were so popular at the time. Bands like the Glen Miler Band, Jimmy Dorsey, and Benny Goodman appeared there.

The 1950's saw a decline in the big band scene. Beach culture began to change. A new franchise attempted to build amusements and concession stands along the Boardwalk but were turned down, at first, by the city council. Later, the town conceded and allowed the stands that still dot the lower end of the Boardwalk, offering carnival style games and creating the honky tonk tone of that area that still exists today.

The Chesapeake Bay Bridge which linked the Eastern and Western Shore of the Chesapeake Bay at Route 50 made it easier for people from Baltimore and the Washington DC area to travel to the beach. Opened in 1952, the Bay bridge ushered in a new time of building. This time motels and wood frame, 4 unit apartment houses with kitchens and up to 3 bedrooms.

In 1979, a cold snap caused the ocean to freeze. Huge hunks of ice heaved in the surf, smashing the 140 foot pier. The pier was rebuilt but on a much smaller scale.

The building boom of the 1970's created new high rise buildings, mostly at the north end of Ocean City. The ugly monstrosities cast the beach in shadow in the afternoons and gave that end of the beach an almost urban look. Buildings sat nearly empty as the economy fell into trouble, but filled slowly during the following recovery. Ocean City was on its way to becoming a town of condominiums and townhouses.

The early part of the 21st century was a time of over doing everything, when businesses all seemed to vie for the money of the wealthy. Condominiums were built to attract the rich and luxury became the theme.The old wood frame buildings fell under the wrecking ball, giving way for larger (and safer) structures.

The turn of the last century saw Ocean City suffer several nor'easters and severe beach erosion. The loss of beach threatened tourism as well as the stability of ocean front buildings. A beach replenishment program and the reestablishment of the formerly destroyed dune line protected the town from further incursions of the sea. The new dune line created a beautiful division between the town and the beach and protected the buildings from storm damage due to high tides and storm surges.

Ocean City plugs along, shaking off storms, enduring building booms and busts, leveling history, and choking with traffic. The pine woods are long gone, and the little town is a distant memory. But, no matter what they do, they can't change the view. The waves rush the beach, the sun rises over the Atlantic, and sets over the Sineputent, ever changing yet never changing.

Old Ocean City - A Beautiful Row of Old Beach Cottages

OCMD History - Group with Old Plimhimmon in Background

Source: MD St. Gov.

OCMD - Couple on theBeach circa 1900

Source: MD State Historical Society

Interior of Old Plimhimmon

Source: MD. St. Gov.

Ocean City Maryland - Beautiful Old Ocean City Style

Source: photo by Dolore Monet

Comments

dashingclaire profile image

dashingclaire Level 2 Commenter 19 months ago

My kids still talk about our trip to Ocean City. At the time I didn't realize what a impact the place made. Thanks for showing the history.

juneaukid profile image

juneaukid Level 2 Commenter 19 months ago

Thanks for sharing this with us, Dolores. I've never been to Ocean City. But since I grew up in Newjersey, I did get to Atlantic City back in the 40's and 50's before it was a gambling town.

Dolores Monet profile image

Dolores Monet Hub Author 19 months ago

dashing - I spent a lot of time in Ocean City before it got so built up and really miss the quieter town it was back then. Thanks!

Hi Richard! I think a lot of those mid Atlantic beaches had some similarities and many have fought the over development with all the high rises and super condos. Last time I went to Atlantic City it was a curious mix of big and new and old and broke down. Thank you.

carolina muscle profile image

carolina muscle Level 1 Commenter 19 months ago

I love Ocean City.. great post!!

Eiddwen profile image

Eiddwen 19 months ago

I have never been there and at this moment in time I don't know if I ever will visit Ocean City but this didn't stop me from enjoying your brilliantly set out and informative hub.

Thank you so much for sharing, I thoroughly enjoyed this visit.

Take care Dolores.

TrainingMan profile image

TrainingMan 19 months ago

Delores,

Great Hub! After reading this, I want to visit Ocean City.

Thanks,

Vince

prasetio30 profile image

prasetio30 Level 8 Commenter 19 months ago

Wow....I can't say anything. This is beautiful hub about travel and place. I love all the pictures you gave to us. Ocean city in Maryland is one of the best place in US. I'll put this on my travel list. Vote and vote again. Thank you very much. ~prasetio

TheMMAZone profile image

TheMMAZone 19 months ago

wow that hotel was awesome. Where can I find some more images of the inside? I love that style of architecture.

Dolores Monet profile image

Dolores Monet Hub Author 19 months ago

Carolina - I love OC too. The beach is excellent, better than ever and the dune line not only protects the town but adds a natural feel to the shore. Thanks!

Eiddwen - one of my favorite things to do on HP is to read about places that I've never been. Glad you enjoyed the hub!

Training Man - I want to visit Ocean City in a way back machine and see what it looked like before I started going there. The old wood frame buildings are so pretty. Thanks!

Prasetio - thank you so much! I like to look for the old stuff hidden away behind the big new buildings!

MMAZone - believe me, it wasn't easy. I found only 2 pictures of the interior of the Plimhimmon. But there are several books available about Ocean City. If you check the link above from the Life Saving Station, it's full of cool pictures and stories. Thank you!

akirchner profile image

akirchner Level 4 Commenter 19 months ago

Oh what glorious pictures! I love the carousel but I especially love the last shot!! I think we have a church in Bend that looks almost exactly like St. Mary's too - it is one of my favorite places to snap shots of!

Dolores Monet profile image

Dolores Monet Hub Author 19 months ago

Audrey - my sister was married at St. Mary's Star of the Sea. There used to be an elderly priest there, Monsignor Stout, while he said Mass, his Chesapeake Bay retriever sat quietly in one of the isles near the front of the church. Thanks for dropping in!

Rose West profile image

Rose West Level 3 Commenter 19 months ago

We used to go to Ocean City when I was a kid... good times :) I didn't realize what a historical place it was. Thanks for all the great info and pictures!

KoffeeKlatch Gals profile image

KoffeeKlatch Gals Level 6 Commenter 19 months ago

Great hub. The pictures are terrific. I have never been to Ocean City but like juneaukid, I was lucky enough to go to Atlantic City before it became so commercialized and turned into a gambling city.

Dolores Monet profile image

Dolores Monet Hub Author 19 months ago

Rose - did you? Cool! Every place has some history! Ocean City is always changing. I imagine it's a lot different than when you were a kid. It's changed a lot in the last 10 years! Thanks!

KoffeeKlatch Gals - thank you! I wish I had taken more pictures when I was young and there were still a lot of the old hotels in Ocean City. The thing about Atlantic City is that the casinos cleaned up part of the town a bit, I think.

stephhicks68 profile image

stephhicks68 Level 7 Commenter 19 months ago

Simply gorgeous!! I have not been to Maryland, but I really love the Northeastern parts of the country. Your hub and photographs make me really want to go someday soon. Big thumbs up!

loriamoore 19 months ago

Looks like fun. I don't like Florida, so this gives an alternative for a beach vacation.

2patricias profile image

2patricias Level 5 Commenter 19 months ago

This is a brilliant hub - you've really put in the research, and we love the photos.

This is of particular interest to us as we live in a town on the English Channel that has been subject to some very severe storms over the years. In 1987 the town had a new beach installed - a real feat of engineering.

Dolores Monet profile image

Dolores Monet Hub Author 19 months ago

steph - thank you! It's a shame that the old wood frame hotels are mostly gone. But they were fire traps and wood just doesn't stand up to salt water and storms.

Loria - thanks! I love the waves at Ocean City and the beach is great!

2patricias - a lot of people in the area complained about the money spent on beach restoration but having that great beach brings in a lot of tourist $$ and a lot of taxes, so it was worth it financially as well as because I love the beach! Thanks!

James A Watkins profile image

James A Watkins Level 8 Commenter 19 months ago

I very much enjoyed this journey. The photographs are excellent. I have not been to Ocean City, though I have heard the name countless times. I never considered how dangerous it might be. Interesting. Thank you!

Dolores Monet profile image

Dolores Monet Hub Author 19 months ago

Hi,James! Glad that you liked it! Sure, it's dangerous as the ocean is dangerous, so teaching us to respect nature in all its glory and fury.

liswilliams profile image

liswilliams Level 1 Commenter 18 months ago

thanks for the virtual tour, hope to get there someday!

Dolores Monet profile image

Dolores Monet Hub Author 18 months ago

lis - I love to armchair travel here at HP and have enjoyed your trip hubs as well. Thanks!

tonymac04 profile image

tonymac04 18 months ago

Looks stunning! Thanks for the great write-up and the wonderful pix! I really enjoyed reading the history too.

Love and peace

Tony

Dolores Monet profile image

Dolores Monet Hub Author 18 months ago

Hi, tony! I was just down the ocean a few days ago and, wandering around, took several pictures of some old buildings still in use. Ocean City is starting to enjoy it's history and they are posting historical signs. Some of these older places are tucked away downtown and a delight to find. Thank you! Love and peace to you as well!

katrinasui profile image

katrinasui Level 3 Commenter 17 months ago

Looks like a wonderful place. The pictures you have used in this hub are very beautiful.

Dolores Monet profile image

Dolores Monet Hub Author 17 months ago

katrinasui - thank you! I had several more pictures to add but my computer crashed and I lost the pix. I did not back up! Shame on me!

kittythedreamer profile image

kittythedreamer Level 7 Commenter 13 months ago

voted up and awesome, dolores! i went to ocean city as a kid and also for my senior week out of high school. always loved the boardwalk...most people don't realize how big it actually is. thanks for putting up the history of maryland's atlantic treasure. :)

Dolores Monet profile image

Dolores Monet Hub Author 13 months ago

Kitty - I just went down to Ocean City last weekend. They are putting up some historical markers on some of the older buildings. Good to see some attention paid to the lovely older hotels and houses. Thank you very much.

Camping with Kids profile image

Camping with Kids 11 months ago

Great job laying out the history and development of OC. I go there a lot. Even met my wife there at the Sheraton Lounge. (LOL) She worked for the Trimpers as a teen-ager, and I had numerous summer jobs in OC too. It was the "in" place to work for graduating seniors.

Even with the gradual loss of "Old" OC to new development, you can still count on the Boardwalk, Thrashers fries, and Dollies caramel popcorn.

Gus

colonel 9 months ago

what a wonderful site and history of a truely wonderful location. Thank you Dolores for this great look back at the heritage of Ocean City, MD. My family has a bayside home up on the western shore of Assawoman Bay and I always enjoy going down to the old town part of the city to see and read some of the history.

Regards

Steve

Dolores Monet profile image

Dolores Monet Hub Author 9 months ago

Camping - Hi, Gus - I love Ocean City too and have gone there for many years, seeing a lot of changes. I was so glad to see that they are putting up historical plaques on some of the older buildings.

colonel - thank you very much! Love that Assawoman Bay, such a beautiful place to watch the sun go down. You are so lucky to have a place there and I am sure that your family treasures it.

Randy 6 months ago

Hey Delores,

Just found this on the net looking up old pix from when I lived in OC. We also lived year 'round, as you know. We both go back a looong way down there. Your bro-in-law.

Dolores Monet profile image

Dolores Monet Hub Author 6 months ago

Hi, Rand - oh that' so cool that you just stumbled into it! I just love how they have finally decided to put up some historical markers and have begun to treasure the beautiful old buildings. Good to see you!

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