Friday, July 29, 2011

Mrs. Doris Staley RIP 816 Wesley



STALEY, DORIS LEAR (DAL) 90 - of Ocean City, went home to be with her Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, on July 11, 2011. Doris was an area resident most of her life. She was a graduate of Ocean City High School. She was a Shore Memorial Hospital volunteer, and active volunteer with the American Red Cross for 50 years, a member of St. Peter's United Methodist Church, a Friend of the Ocean City Library and an active Bridge player for 60 years. She loved to swim laps at the pool and go for long walks as long as she was able.

She was a faithful season ticket-holder to the Ocean City Pops every summer. She also enjoyed attending opera and theatre in New York and Philadelphia. Mrs. Staley was a retired antiques dealer. She had antique shops in the Cherry Hill Mall and Haddonfield, NJ.

She loved to write poetry ever since she was a child. One of her favorite poems was reminiscent of sleeping at the Alden Park Manor Hotel at Fourth Street and the beach, a hotel her father, Robert Lear, built during the Great Depression: "The Ocean is a special thing. It has a happy song to sing, of sun and sand and castles tall, and waves that break and make them small. At night when I lie down to sleep, there is no lullaby quite so sweet as the sound of the sea."

Survived by her daughter, Karen Staley of Atlanta, GA; sons Robert Stone and wife Phyllis, of Ocean City and John D. Staley, Jr. of Charlotte, NC; and sister, Louise Lear-Hastreiter of Atlanta, GA; and niece, Roberta Hastreiter-Heady of Atlanta, GA. Services are private. Arrangements made by the George H. Wimberg Funeral Home of Linwood.

Published in The Press of Atlantic City on July 27, 2011

Bill Kelly Notes:

Mrs. Staley was a good friend of my mother and a good neighbor. Her large rooming house at 816 Wesley was directly across the street from our home at 819 Wesley.

When we first moved to Ocean City in the mid-1960s, Bob and Jay (John) Staley were the first two guys who stopped by to say hello. They had some friends I also got to know wellm including their cousin Lynn Delcorio, who lived in the hugh apartment building at 4th St. and the Boardwalk. Lynn was a scuba diver who once came back with a monster lobster that I wrote a story about for the SandPaper. Lynn moved to Florida where I visited him with Rich McNally on our way to Key West, and he suggested we dive off the reef at Key Largo, which was an awesome experience.


Mrs. Staley's daughter Karen was also a good friend. When we formed CHIP - Citizens for Historic Preservation to try to save the old historic homes from demolition, Karen opposed us at first, but then later on was inspired to research the history of her home. She learned it was once owned by a family that included a Civil War soldier who died at Gettysburgh and became fascinated by the history.

While Jay and later Karen ran the apartments and rooming house, Bob helped his mom with collecting antiques for her Haddonfield and Cherry Hill Mall antiques stores.

Bob had attended Columbia University and played drums. He is now married to Phyllis Turner, a former hostess at the Tuckahoe Inn whose father made many of the floats for the Miss America Parade in his shop off the alley between West and Simpson Avenues.

Billy Mueller, who looked like General Custer with long blond hair and mustache, was a guitarist with Backroads, the local country blues band who played often at Brownies in Bargaintown, and also included Tom and Nancy and Jack Patch. Billy collected Les Paul guitars, and married Barbara Tucker, whose brother Kurt worked with me at Mack & Mancos on the Boardwalk. Kurt enlisted in the Navy and became a nuclear sub Captain.

I'll always be in debt to Billy Mueller for introducing me to Chris Columbo and the Kentucky Avenue music scene in the mid-1970s, as well as blues harpist James Cotton and Hubert Sumlin, guitarist for Howlin' Wolf.

Mrs. Staley was a real pistol. She played bridge with my mother once a week in the back room of the Chatterbox, which is just around the corner, or down the alley from 816.

I remember Mrs. Staley and my mother picking me up at the Philly airport when I returned from one of my frequent jaunts, and Mrs. Staley was driving. She was kind of dizzy so I had to take over the wheel, but she was a good friend and neighbor.

God Bless her and the whole Staley family.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Simms Restaurant 8th Street Boardwalk







At one time there were dozens of family style restaurants in Ocean City, including the 21st. Street Restaurant (& Asbury Ave.), Watsons at 9th St. across from the Post Office, and among many others, Simms on the Boardwalk.

Simms served a set menu, but it was always very good and inexpensive. Then sometime in the late 70s early 80s, Roger bought it and made it a pinball arcade. I think that is when I took this photo, which seems to show the old Simms Restaurant signs but arcade games inside.

Roger, whose last name I can pronounce but can't spell, Jakobowaski - originally came from Camden, apparently investing his father's inheridance, starting off small, buying the traditional and longtime favorite Taylor Porkroll store, that had a unique mahogany paneling and counter.

It wasn't long before Roger owned a large part of the boardwalk and also the Jimminy Crickets bar and lounge on MacArthur Blvd. in Somers Point.

I don't know what happened to Roger in OC, but from what I understand he is now operating a bottled stream water company out of Upstate New York.

Last Remnants of the Sindia



Parts of the Sindia wreck were visible at the 17th Street Beach for many years, at least into the early 1980s, as this post card from that era attests. There was also little grill on the beach at 17th st. that you could access from the beach or boardwalk, before it got condoed out.

819 Wesley in Winter


Seaspray Beach Path

 
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Path to Seaspray Beach in the Northend of Ocean City is no longer there. Local residents took it over, fenced it in as part of their yard and cut off public access to the beach.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Marc Jordan





Marc Jordan graduated with me from Camden Catholic HS in 1969, attended NYU, and despite being a 60s radical, enlisted in the USMC ROTC, after which he became a lawyer in NYC and now in DC. A good friend who often visited Ocean City, we went to Woodstock together and I enjoyed visiting him in NYC.

Molly and Aunt Ethel on the 819 Wesley Porch

With Trooper and Katie the Cat

Bob Spiller at 819 Dining Room




Bob Spiller at 819 Dining Room.
See Mom and Dad Kelly in the mirror.

Captain Chris Montagne and Pirate friend




Captain Chris Montagne and Pirate friend off Ocean City, NJ (circa 1970s).

Chris was a legendary fisherman, owned Chris' Restaurant next to Hogates at the end of the 9th Street Causeway for decades, ran fishing boats from there as well as his PT Boats, which he used to take tourists for boat rides.

(Photo Credit - Leo Kelly)

Ernie Ernist Filming at Seaspray Beach




NFL Film photographer Ernie Ernist working at Seaspray Beach OCNJ (Circa 1976)

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Mack & Manco Pizza Ocean City Boardwalk

Ocean City beach at dusk

Ocean City Boardwalk



The Flanders Hotel, Ocean City, NJ



Local architect Vivian Smith designed the Flanders, as well as many other standout buildings, like the Ocean City Music Pier, City Hall and the old Ocean City High School.

Ocean City Music Pier















Another classic Ocean City building by architect Vivian Smith, who also designed the Flanders, Ocean City City Hall, the original Ocean City High School and the Ventnor Municipal Building.

Also scroll down to see the Entrance Arch to the old Ocean City High School that was left as a testimony to Smith's art.

Friday, July 15, 2011

Scott & Duncan MacRae at Yesterdays Columbia S.C.





Darrell Barnes, Scotty and Duncan MacRae at Yesterdays, Columbia, South Carolina





Duncan and Scott MacRae, from Lancaster, Pa., worked at Mack & Manco's on the Boardwalk in Ocean City (NJ), where I first met them. Duncan had worked there in the early 60s before I came along, and was a USMC helicopter pilot in Vietnam. After he got out of the service he got his old job back making pizzas, and his younger brother Scotty came in to work as a waiter.

One rainy Sunday afternoon when there was nobody on the boardwalk Duncan made three pizzas, and when we got done the 12-4pm shift he said "Let's go!" We got in his little sports car (a Corvette I think), and he drove us over the causeway to Bay Shores, where he parked right next to the front door. He instructed me to give the doorman one of the pizzas and that got us in the door. The next pizza went to the bartender at the first bar, Buddy Tweill, and the third pie went to the band, Malcolm and Hereafter (or was it the Bonnivilles?). Malcom were also from Lancaster, and a few of the band members were from West Virgina area.

I was only 17 and the drinking age was 21 but it didn't seem to matter to anyone. Buddy served me a long neck bottle of bud. It had to be around summer of 1967-68.

A few years later Joe Trechek and his wife Barbera Corneglia hired Scotty as a bartender at the Anchorage Tavern in Somers Point, while Duncan worked as a cook in the kitchen at the Crab Trap.

Then around 1976 Scott and Duncan and their friend Darrell moved to Columbia, S.C. to open their own place, Yesterdays, with a nostalgic down home Americana motif.

The next winter Brian O'Keeny and myself stopped by Columbia to visit them on the return leg of our first of our three cross-country expeditions, and found them expanding Yesterdays from a small corner joint to a larger place. The following year they had taken over the whole block. Although a hard core Scotsman, Duncan started the first Columbia St. Patrick's Day Parade, which ended at their bar at Five Points.

Hootie & the Blowfish were a local band who often hung out at Yesterdays, and Prince of Tides author Pat Conroy visits a special booth reserved for writers, and his younger brother worked there as a bartender.

Once when I visited my Ocean City neighbor Gay Talese he mentioned that his wife Nan, an editor and publisher, had wonderful writer, Pat Conroy, who included Yesterdays as a setting in his book. When the protagonist of Tides is called in to play for an injured starter in a Gamecocks football game, he scores a few touchdowns to win the game, and to celebrate, has dinner with his parents and girlfriend at Yesterdays. While the book is fiction, Yesterdays is not.

Yesterdays, Columbia, South Carolina http://www.yesterdayssc.com/history.php

A colorful past. A tasty future.

Experience Yesterdays’ hospitality and it will come as no surprise that the restaurant was born of friendship.

In 1976, 20-somethings Duncan MacRae, Scottie MacRae and Darrell Barnes set out to create a restaurant concept that was unmistakably their own. Rather than settling for the usual Italian, French or Chinese faire so popular at that time, the trio decided to open a made-from-scratch American restaurant, featuring regional classics from around the country.

Significant in the restaurant’s design is an onsite prep kitchen, in contrast to the microwave-crazed chains with whom they would be competing. “From the beginning, we’ve done everything from scratch, starting with what is fresh and in season,” said Darrell. “It’s always been that way.”

Each day begins with a selection of farmer’s market vegetables, to which the freshest chicken, beef and seafood are added. The menu has grown significantly since the early days and now offers a wide variety of international dishes and southern favorites. However, many patrons routinely order from the daily specials menu which features a changing selection based on seasonal availability.

Also of interest is Yesterdays location. The three of them made a trip to Columbia, South Carolina in 1976 and drove by the unusual flatiron building that housed Lombardi’s restaurant. They thought the building would make a great location for their new venture, located close to both the University of South Carolina and many state government offices. After seeing an ad in the paper the next day for a restaurant for sale, Duncan called the number and the person answered “Lombardi’s.”

The area surrounding the restaurant, called Five Points, was struggling, but the partners believed in the location and their concept. They bought the building, moved to Columbia and Yesterdays was born. Today, the restaurant remains in the unusual “flatiron” shaped building and serves as the hub of Five Points, now a landmark of shopping, dining and entertainment.

“It’s hard to believe it’s been 30 years,” said Duncan. “We’ve grown up right along with this restaurant—as have many of our regulars and employees.”

Then he laughed, “If we’d known we’d last this long, we’d a partied less!”

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Vivian Smith's Old Ocean City High School Arch



When they demolished the old Ocean City high school, they left the entrance arch, which stands as a tribute to the legacy of the young and neglected artist and architect Vivian Smith, whose other buildings include Ocean City Music Pier, Ocean City Hall, the Flanders Hotel and the Ventnor Municipal Building, each with their own unique attributes.