Cape May, New Jersey: Difference between revisions

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'''Cape May''' is a city located at the southern tip of New Jersey, situated on the Cape May Peninsula where the Delaware Bay meets the Atlantic Ocean. Recognized as the oldest seaside resort in the United States, Cape May has maintained its Victorian architectural heritage while serving as a popular destination for tourists and a year-round residential community.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Thomas |first1=George E. |last2=Doebley |first2=Carl |title=Cape May: Queen of the Seaside Resorts |year=1976 |publisher=Art Alliance Press |location=Philadelphia}}</ref> The city is part of Cape May County and covers a total area of approximately 4.82 square miles, of which 2.28 square miles is land and 2.54 square miles is water. According to the 2020 U.S. Census, Cape May's year-round population is 2,790 residents, though this number increases substantially during the summer tourist season when the city serves tens of thousands of visitors.<ref>{{cite web |title=Cape May city, New Jersey — Census Profile |url=https://data.census.gov/profile/Cape_May_city,_New_Jersey?g=160XX00US3410600 |work=United States Census Bureau |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref> Cape May is renowned for its well-preserved 19th-century buildings, natural beaches, internationally recognized birdwatching, and maritime history, making it a significant cultural and economic center in southern New Jersey. In 2026, Cape May was named the best coastal small town in America by a widely read travel publication, reflecting continued national recognition of its distinctive character.<ref>{{cite web |title=This Candy-Colored New Jersey Town Has Just Been Named Best Coastal Small Town in America |url=https://secretnyc.co/cape-may-nj-best-coastal-small-town-in-america-2026/ |work=Secret NYC |date=2026 |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
'''Cape May''' sits at the southern tip of New Jersey, right where the Cape May Peninsula meets the Delaware Bay and Atlantic Ocean. It's known as America's oldest seaside resort, and the city's managed to hold onto its Victorian architectural character while staying a draw for tourists and year-round residents alike.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Thomas |first1=George E. |last2=Doebley |first2=Carl |title=Cape May: Queen of the Seaside Resorts |year=1976 |publisher=Art Alliance Press |location=Philadelphia}}</ref> The city covers about 4.82 square miles total, with 2.28 square miles of land and 2.54 square miles of water. The 2020 census counted 2,790 year-round residents, though that number swells dramatically during summer when tens of thousands of visitors arrive.<ref>{{cite web |title=Cape May city, New Jersey — Census Profile |url=https://data.census.gov/profile/Cape_May_city,_New_Jersey?g=160XX00US3410600 |work=United States Census Bureau |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>
 
What sets Cape May apart? Well-preserved 19th-century buildings. Natural beaches. International recognition for birdwatching. A significant maritime heritage. These things make it an important cultural and economic hub in southern New Jersey. In 2026, a widely read travel publication named Cape May the best coastal small town in America, a nod to its continued national profile.<ref>{{cite web |title=This Candy-Colored New Jersey Town Has Just Been Named Best Coastal Small Town in America |url=https://secretnyc.co/cape-may-nj-best-coastal-small-town-in-america-2026/ |work=Secret NYC |date=2026 |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>


== History ==
== History ==


Cape May's history extends back centuries before its establishment as a seaside resort. The region was originally inhabited by the Lenape people, who utilized the area's natural resources including fish and shellfish from the bay and ocean. European settlement began in the late 17th century, with the area named after Cornelius Jacobsen Mey, a Dutch navigator and explorer who sailed along the New Jersey coast for the Dutch West India Company in the early 17th century.<ref>{{cite book |last=Kraft |first=Herbert C. |title=The Lenape: Archaeology, History, and Ethnography |year=1986 |publisher=New Jersey Historical Society |location=Newark, NJ}}</ref> During the colonial period and early American years, Cape May developed primarily as a fishing and whaling community, with residents taking advantage of the rich marine environment surrounding the peninsula. The town was officially incorporated as a city in 1848, though human settlement and economic activity had characterized the area for over a century prior.
Long before Cape May became a seaside resort, people lived here. The Lenape inhabited the area, making use of fish and shellfish from the bay and ocean. European settlers arrived in the late 1600s, naming the place after Cornelius Jacobsen Mey, a Dutch navigator and explorer who'd sailed the New Jersey coast for the Dutch West India Company in the early 1600s.<ref>{{cite book |last=Kraft |first=Herbert C. |title=The Lenape: Archaeology, History, and Ethnography |year=1986 |publisher=New Jersey Historical Society |location=Newark, NJ}}</ref> During the colonial period and early American years, Cape May was mainly a fishing and whaling community, its residents taking advantage of the rich marine environment. The town became a city in 1848, though people had been settling and working here for over a century before that.


The transformation of Cape May into America's first seaside resort began in the early 19th century, accelerated by the arrival of steamship service and railroad connections. As early as 1801, the first public notice advertising Cape May as a summer resort appeared in a Philadelphia newspaper, marking the beginning of an organized tourism economy that would define the city for the next two centuries.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Thomas |first1=George E. |last2=Doebley |first2=Carl |title=Cape May: Queen of the Seaside Resorts |year=1976 |publisher=Art Alliance Press |location=Philadelphia}}</ref> In the 1850s and 1860s, wealthy Philadelphia families discovered Cape May as an accessible destination for summer leisure, leading to the construction of grand Victorian mansions and hotels. The city experienced rapid growth during the 1870s and 1880s, when approximately 600 Victorian structures were built, many of which survive today. A major fire on November 9, 1878, destroyed a significant portion of the commercial district along Washington Street and the oceanfront, burning over 35 acres and leaving hundreds homeless. Rather than diminishing the city's character, the disaster prompted an extraordinary rebuilding effort that produced the concentration of Victorian Italianate and Second Empire architecture that today defines the historic district.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Great Fire of 1878 |url=https://www.capemaymac.org/history/the-great-fire-of-1878/ |work=Mid-Atlantic Center for the Arts & Humanities |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>
Everything changed in the early 1800s. Steamship service arrived. So did railroads. As far back as 1801, a Philadelphia newspaper ran the first public notice promoting Cape May as a summer resort, launching a tourism economy that'd define the city for the next 200 years.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Thomas |first1=George E. |last2=Doebley |first2=Carl |title=Cape May: Queen of the Seaside Resorts |year=1976 |publisher=Art Alliance Press |location=Philadelphia}}</ref> By the 1850s and 1860s, wealthy Philadelphia families discovered Cape May as an easy destination for summer leisure. Grand Victorian mansions and hotels went up. The real boom happened in the 1870s and 1880s, when builders constructed roughly 600 Victorian structures. Many of those buildings are still standing.


Cape May's prominence as a resort destination was such that it attracted no fewer than five sitting United States presidents during the 19th century, including Franklin Pierce, James Buchanan, Ulysses S. Grant, Chester A. Arthur, and Benjamin Harrison, who used a cottage near the ocean as a summer White House during his administration in the early 1890s.<ref>{{cite web |title=Cape May's Presidential History |url=https://www.capemaymac.org/history/presidential-history/ |work=Mid-Atlantic Center for the Arts & Humanities |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref> Despite this earlier prestige, the city's prominence as a resort destination gradually declined in the early 20th century as newer Jersey Shore communities and more distant vacation destinations became accessible by automobile. During World War II, Cape May was home to the United States Navy's largest air base on the East Coast, and concrete fire control towers — used to direct coastal artillery — were constructed along the beaches, several of which remain visible today as historical landmarks.<ref>{{cite web |title=WWII History in Cape May |url=https://www.capemaymac.org/history/world-war-ii/ |work=Mid-Atlantic Center for the Arts & Humanities |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref> The city began a concerted preservation movement in the mid-20th century, culminating in 1976 when the entire city was designated a National Historic Landmark District by the United States Department of the Interior — one of only a small number of entire cities to receive this distinction in the nation.<ref>{{cite web |title=Cape May Historic District |url=https://www.nps.gov/nr/travel/national_register_of_historic_places/cape_may_historic_district.html |work=National Park Service |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>
Then came the fire. November 9, 1878. It destroyed huge swaths of the commercial district along Washington Street and the oceanfront, burning over 35 acres and leaving hundreds homeless. Instead of wrecking the city's character, the disaster sparked an extraordinary rebuilding effort that created the very concentration of Victorian Italianate and Second Empire architecture that defines the historic district today.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Great Fire of 1878 |url=https://www.capemaymac.org/history/the-great-fire-of-1878/ |work=Mid-Atlantic Center for the Arts & Humanities |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>
 
During the 1800s, five sitting U.S. presidents visited Cape May: Franklin Pierce, James Buchanan, Ulysses S. Grant, Chester A. Arthur, and Benjamin Harrison, who even used a cottage near the ocean as a summer White House during his early 1890s administration.<ref>{{cite web |title=Cape May's Presidential History |url=https://www.capemaymac.org/history/presidential-history/ |work=Mid-Atlantic Center for the Arts & Humanities |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref> But that prestige faded. In the early 20th century, newer Jersey Shore communities and more distant vacation spots became accessible by car. Cape May lost its luster.
 
World War II changed things again. The U.S. Navy built its largest East Coast air base here. Concrete fire control towers went up along the beaches to direct coastal artillery. Several towers still stand today as historical landmarks.<ref>{{cite web |title=WWII History in Cape May |url=https://www.capemaymac.org/history/world-war-ii/ |work=Mid-Atlantic Center for the Arts & Humanities |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref> Mid-20th century brought a preservation movement. In 1976, the entire city became a National Historic Landmark District, a distinction shared by only a handful of entire cities in the nation.<ref>{{cite web |title=Cape May Historic District |url=https://www.nps.gov/nr/travel/national_register_of_historic_places/cape_may_historic_district.html |work=National Park Service |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>


== Geography ==
== Geography ==


Cape May occupies the southernmost portion of the Cape May Peninsula, extending into the waters where the Delaware Bay meets the Atlantic Ocean. The city's geography is defined by its waterfront location, with access to both bay and ocean waters on multiple sides. The Atlantic Ocean forms the eastern and southern borders of Cape May, while the Delaware Bay lies to the west and northwest. This geographic position has historically made the city important for maritime activities and continues to influence its recreational opportunities, tourism economy, and vulnerability to coastal weather events. The landscape is relatively flat, typical of New Jersey's coastal plain, with an average elevation of approximately seven feet above sea level. Low-lying areas of the city are susceptible to flooding during major storms, and the city has undertaken ongoing coastal resilience planning in response to projected sea level rise.<ref>{{cite web |title=Cape May Coastal Resilience Planning |url=https://www.nj.gov/dep/shoreprotection/capemay.html |work=New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>
Cape May occupies the southernmost tip of the Cape May Peninsula, jutting into the waters where Delaware Bay meets the Atlantic Ocean. Its waterfront position gives it access to both bay and ocean. The Atlantic forms the eastern and southern borders. Delaware Bay lies to the west and northwest. This geography has always mattered for maritime activities, and it still does, shaping recreation, tourism, and exposure to coastal storms. The terrain is relatively flat, typical of New Jersey's coastal plain, averaging about seven feet above sea level. During major storms, low-lying areas flood, and the city's been working on coastal resilience planning to deal with rising sea levels.<ref>{{cite web |title=Cape May Coastal Resilience Planning |url=https://www.nj.gov/dep/shoreprotection/capemay.html |work=New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>


The city experiences the characteristic climate of the southern New Jersey Shore, moderated by its maritime surroundings. Summers are warm and humid, with average high temperatures in July reaching the mid-80s Fahrenheit, while winters are comparatively mild relative to inland New Jersey, with average January temperatures hovering near 40 degrees Fahrenheit. The surrounding water provides a thermal buffer that keeps Cape May several degrees warmer in winter and slightly cooler in summer than communities farther inland. Nor'easters, however, can bring significant storm surge, heavy rain, and wind damage during fall and winter months, a hazard that has shaped the city's history and continues to influence infrastructure planning.
The climate here reflects the southern Jersey Shore. Summers bring warmth and humidity, with July highs in the mid-80s Fahrenheit. Winters are comparatively mild compared to inland New Jersey, with January temperatures around 40 degrees. The surrounding water acts as a thermal buffer, keeping Cape May several degrees warmer in winter and slightly cooler in summer than communities farther inland. But nor'easters can bring serious trouble: storm surge, heavy rain, destructive winds in fall and winter. That hazard's shaped the city's past and continues to influence planning.


The natural features of Cape May include several beaches and extensive wetland areas that support diverse ecosystems. The city's beaches attract both residents and visitors throughout much of the year, though the summer season from late June through Labor Day represents the primary tourism period. Cape May Point, located approximately two miles southwest of the city center at the very tip of the peninsula, contains Cape May Point State Park, which features beaches, walking trails, a freshwater pond, and the Cape May Lighthouse. The Delaware Bay shoreline provides habitat for horseshoe crabs during their annual spawning season each spring, an ecological event of national significance that draws tens of thousands of shorebirds — particularly red knots — that depend on the horseshoe crab eggs as a critical fuel source during their northward migration.<ref>{{cite web |title=Horseshoe Crab Spawning and Shorebirds of Delaware Bay |url=https://www.nj.gov/dep/fgw/horseshoecrab.htm |work=New Jersey Division of Fish and Wildlife |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref> Several preservation areas and natural reserves in the immediate vicinity protect important habitats, including areas of maritime forest and salt marsh that characterize the Cape May ecosystem.
Cape May's natural features include beaches and extensive wetlands supporting diverse ecosystems. The beaches draw people year-round, though summer from late June through Labor Day is peak season. About two miles southwest at the very tip sits Cape May Point, home to Cape May Point State Park with beaches, walking trails, a freshwater pond, and the Cape May Lighthouse. Each spring, the Delaware Bay shoreline becomes something extraordinary. Horseshoe crabs spawn there, and tens of thousands of shorebirds arrive to eat the eggs. Red knots especially depend on this food source to fuel their northward migration from South American wintering grounds to Arctic breeding sites.<ref>{{cite web |title=Horseshoe Crab Spawning and Shorebirds of Delaware Bay |url=https://www.nj.gov/dep/fgw/horseshoecrab.htm |work=New Jersey Division of Fish and Wildlife |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref> Several preservation areas and natural reserves nearby protect important habitats: maritime forest and salt marsh that define the Cape May ecosystem.


== Victorian Architecture and Historic District ==
== Victorian Architecture and Historic District ==


Cape May's most defining characteristic is its extraordinary concentration of intact Victorian architecture, recognized in 1976 when the federal government designated the entire city a National Historic Landmark District.<ref>{{cite web |title=Cape May Historic District |url=https://www.nps.gov/nr/travel/national_register_of_historic_places/cape_may_historic_district.html |work=National Park Service |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref> This designation places Cape May among a select group of entire municipalities in the United States accorded the nation's highest level of historic recognition, distinguishing it from the far more common designation of individual buildings or neighborhoods. The district contains more than 600 Victorian-era structures, representing an array of architectural styles including Carpenter Gothic, Italianate, Queen Anne, Second Empire, and Stick Style, many ornamented with the decorative woodwork known as gingerbread that has come to define Cape May's visual identity.<ref>{{cite web |title=Cape May Architecture |url=https://www.capemaymac.org/history/architecture/ |work=Mid-Atlantic Center for the Arts & Humanities |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>
What makes Cape May special? Its Victorian architecture. The entire city's packed with it. In 1976, the federal government designated the whole place a National Historic Landmark District.<ref>{{cite web |title=Cape May Historic District |url=https://www.nps.gov/nr/travel/national_register_of_historic_places/cape_may_historic_district.html |work=National Park Service |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref> That puts Cape May in rare company. Only a handful of entire American cities have that honor. The district contains over 600 Victorian-era structures: Carpenter Gothic, Italianate, Queen Anne, Second Empire, Stick Style, many decorated with the ornamental woodwork called gingerbread that's become Cape May's visual signature.<ref>{{cite web |title=Cape May Architecture |url=https://www.capemaymac.org/history/architecture/ |work=Mid-Atlantic Center for the Arts & Humanities |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>


The concentration of this architecture is largely a consequence of two historical accidents: the rebuilding effort following the 1878 fire, which occurred at the height of the Victorian era's most ornate stylistic period, and the city's subsequent economic stagnation in the early 20th century, which meant that few older structures were demolished to make way for modern development. While other seaside resorts modernized and redeveloped throughout the 20th century, Cape May's Victorian fabric survived largely intact. The Mid-Atlantic Center for the Arts & Humanities (MAC), founded in 1970, has been the principal institutional force behind the preservation, interpretation, and promotion of Cape May's architectural heritage, operating the Emlen Physick Estate as a museum and offering walking and trolley tours of the historic district throughout the year.<ref>{{cite web |title=About MAC |url=https://www.capemaymac.org/about/ |work=Mid-Atlantic Center for the Arts & Humanities |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>
Why so much? Two historical accidents, really. First, the 1878 fire happened at the peak of Victorian ornamentation, so rebuilding produced exceptionally ornate structures. Second, Cape May stagnated economically in the early 20th century, so developers never demolished those older buildings for modern replacements. Other seaside resorts modernized and redeveloped throughout the 1900s. Not Cape May. Its Victorian fabric survived intact. The Mid-Atlantic Center for the Arts & Humanities (MAC), founded in 1970, became the driving force behind preserving and promoting Cape May's architectural heritage. They operate the Emlen Physick Estate as a museum and run walking and trolley tours year-round.<ref>{{cite web |title=About MAC |url=https://www.capemaymac.org/about/ |work=Mid-Atlantic Center for the Arts & Humanities |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>


The Emlen Physick Estate, completed in 1879 and designed by the prominent Philadelphia architect Frank Furness, is the only Victorian house museum in Cape May open for public tours. The 18-room Stick Style mansion showcases period furnishings and architectural details representative of upper-middle-class 19th-century domestic life, and serves as the headquarters for MAC's educational programs and events. The Cape May Lighthouse, completed in 1859 and standing 157 feet tall at Cape May Point, is the third lighthouse to occupy the site and remains an active navigational aid maintained by the United States Coast Guard. Ownership for interpretive purposes is held by the Cape May MAC, which operates the lighthouse for public tours and maintains the adjacent lighthouse keeper's dwelling as a museum.<ref>{{cite web |title=Cape May Lighthouse |url=https://www.capemaymac.org/attractions/cape-may-lighthouse/ |work=Mid-Atlantic Center for the Arts & Humanities |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>
The Emlen Physick Estate was finished in 1879 and designed by Frank Furness, a prominent Philadelphia architect. It's the only Victorian house museum in Cape May open to the public. The 18-room Stick Style mansion displays period furnishings and architectural details reflecting upper-middle-class 19th-century life, and it serves as headquarters for MAC's educational programs and events. The Cape May Lighthouse, completed in 1859 and standing 157 feet tall at Cape May Point, is the third lighthouse on that site and remains an active navigational aid maintained by the U.S. Coast Guard. MAC owns it for interpretive purposes and operates it for public tours, maintaining the adjacent keeper's dwelling as a museum too.<ref>{{cite web |title=Cape May Lighthouse |url=https://www.capemaymac.org/attractions/cape-may-lighthouse/ |work=Mid-Atlantic Center for the Arts & Humanities |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>


== Birding and Natural Environment ==
== Birding and Natural Environment ==


Cape May occupies one of the most strategically significant positions in North American bird migration. Situated at the convergence of the Atlantic Ocean and Delaware Bay at the tip of a southward-jutting peninsula, the city acts as a natural funnel for hundreds of species of songbirds, raptors, shorebirds, and waterfowl during both spring and fall migration seasons. Birds moving along the Atlantic coast are funneled to the peninsula's tip and, rather than crossing the open water of Delaware Bay, often concentrate in large numbers before making the crossing or turning back inland, creating spectacular congregations of migrating birds visible to observers on the ground.<ref>{{cite web |title=Cape May Bird Observatory |url=https://www.birdcapemay.org/about/ |work=New Jersey Audubon / Cape May Bird Observatory |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>
Cape May sits in one of North America's most strategically important spots for bird migration. It's at the convergence of the Atlantic Ocean and Delaware Bay, at the tip of a peninsula jutting southward. Hundreds of species of songbirds, raptors, shorebirds, and waterfowl funnel through here during spring and fall migrations. As birds move along the Atlantic coast, they get funneled to the peninsula's tip and then hesitate before crossing the open water of Delaware Bay, creating massive concentrations visible to observers on the ground.<ref>{{cite web |title=Cape May Bird Observatory |url=https://www.birdcapemay.org/about/ |work=New Jersey Audubon / Cape May Bird Observatory |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>


The Cape May Bird Observatory (CMBO), a program of New Jersey Audubon, operates two centers in the Cape May area and has conducted systematic counts and research at the site since 1976. The Hawk Watch Platform at Cape May Point State Park records tens of thousands of migrating raptors annually during the fall season, including sharp-shinned hawks, Cooper's hawks, American kestrels, merlins, and peregrine falcons. The World Series of Birding, a competitive birding event held annually across New Jersey in May and organized by New Jersey Audubon, draws participants who frequently begin their counts in the Cape May area, taking advantage of the spring migration concentration.<ref>{{cite web |title=World Series of Birding |url=https://www.birdcapemay.org/world-series-of-birding/ |work=New Jersey Audubon |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref> The Delaware Bay shoreline in and around Cape May is recognized internationally as one of the most critical shorebird staging areas in the Western Hemisphere, where migratory red knots and other shorebirds depend on the eggs of spawning horseshoe crabs as a fuel source to complete their journey from South American wintering grounds to Arctic breeding sites. This ecological relationship has been the subject of extensive conservation research and has placed Cape May on the itineraries of birdwatchers traveling from Europe, Asia, and across North America.<ref>{{cite web |title=Shorebirds and Horseshoe Crabs |url=https://www.birdcapemay.org/shorebirds/ |work=New Jersey Audubon / Cape May Bird Observatory |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>
The Cape May Bird Observatory (CMBO), run by New Jersey Audubon, operates two centers in the area and has conducted systematic counts since 1976. At Cape May Point State Park, the Hawk Watch Platform records tens of thousands of migrating raptors each fall: sharp-shinned hawks, Cooper's hawks, American kestrels, merlins, peregrine falcons. The World Series of Birding, a competitive birding event held annually across New Jersey in May and organized by New Jersey Audubon, draws participants who frequently start their counts in the Cape May area, taking advantage of spring migration concentrations.<ref>{{cite web |title=World Series of Birding |url=https://www.birdcapemay.org/world-series-of-birding/ |work=New Jersey Audubon |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>
 
Internationally, the Delaware Bay shoreline around Cape May is recognized as one of the Western Hemisphere's most critical shorebird staging areas. Red knots and other migratory shorebirds depend on horseshoe crab eggs as fuel to complete journeys from South American wintering grounds to Arctic breeding sites. This ecological relationship has drawn extensive conservation research and puts Cape May on the itineraries of birdwatchers from Europe, Asia, and across North America.<ref>{{cite web |title=Shorebirds and Horseshoe Crabs |url=https://www.birdcapemay.org/shorebirds/ |work=New Jersey Audubon / Cape May Bird Observatory |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>


== Demographics ==
== Demographics ==


According to the 2020 United States Census, Cape May had a total population of 2,790 persons residing in the city year-round.<ref>{{cite web |title=Cape May city, New Jersey — 2020 Decennial Census |url=https://data.census.gov/profile/Cape_May_city,_New_Jersey?g=160XX00US3410600 |work=United States Census
The 2020 United States Census found 2,790 persons living in Cape May year-round.<ref>{{cite web |title=Cape May city, New Jersey — 2020 Decennial Census |url=https://data.census.gov/profile/Cape_May_city,_New_Jersey?g=160XX00US3410600 |work=United States Census Bureau |access-date=2024-11-15}}</ref>
 
== References ==
<references />

Latest revision as of 11:34, 12 May 2026

Template:Infobox settlement

Cape May sits at the southern tip of New Jersey, right where the Cape May Peninsula meets the Delaware Bay and Atlantic Ocean. It's known as America's oldest seaside resort, and the city's managed to hold onto its Victorian architectural character while staying a draw for tourists and year-round residents alike.[1] The city covers about 4.82 square miles total, with 2.28 square miles of land and 2.54 square miles of water. The 2020 census counted 2,790 year-round residents, though that number swells dramatically during summer when tens of thousands of visitors arrive.[2]

What sets Cape May apart? Well-preserved 19th-century buildings. Natural beaches. International recognition for birdwatching. A significant maritime heritage. These things make it an important cultural and economic hub in southern New Jersey. In 2026, a widely read travel publication named Cape May the best coastal small town in America, a nod to its continued national profile.[3]

History

Long before Cape May became a seaside resort, people lived here. The Lenape inhabited the area, making use of fish and shellfish from the bay and ocean. European settlers arrived in the late 1600s, naming the place after Cornelius Jacobsen Mey, a Dutch navigator and explorer who'd sailed the New Jersey coast for the Dutch West India Company in the early 1600s.[4] During the colonial period and early American years, Cape May was mainly a fishing and whaling community, its residents taking advantage of the rich marine environment. The town became a city in 1848, though people had been settling and working here for over a century before that.

Everything changed in the early 1800s. Steamship service arrived. So did railroads. As far back as 1801, a Philadelphia newspaper ran the first public notice promoting Cape May as a summer resort, launching a tourism economy that'd define the city for the next 200 years.[5] By the 1850s and 1860s, wealthy Philadelphia families discovered Cape May as an easy destination for summer leisure. Grand Victorian mansions and hotels went up. The real boom happened in the 1870s and 1880s, when builders constructed roughly 600 Victorian structures. Many of those buildings are still standing.

Then came the fire. November 9, 1878. It destroyed huge swaths of the commercial district along Washington Street and the oceanfront, burning over 35 acres and leaving hundreds homeless. Instead of wrecking the city's character, the disaster sparked an extraordinary rebuilding effort that created the very concentration of Victorian Italianate and Second Empire architecture that defines the historic district today.[6]

During the 1800s, five sitting U.S. presidents visited Cape May: Franklin Pierce, James Buchanan, Ulysses S. Grant, Chester A. Arthur, and Benjamin Harrison, who even used a cottage near the ocean as a summer White House during his early 1890s administration.[7] But that prestige faded. In the early 20th century, newer Jersey Shore communities and more distant vacation spots became accessible by car. Cape May lost its luster.

World War II changed things again. The U.S. Navy built its largest East Coast air base here. Concrete fire control towers went up along the beaches to direct coastal artillery. Several towers still stand today as historical landmarks.[8] Mid-20th century brought a preservation movement. In 1976, the entire city became a National Historic Landmark District, a distinction shared by only a handful of entire cities in the nation.[9]

Geography

Cape May occupies the southernmost tip of the Cape May Peninsula, jutting into the waters where Delaware Bay meets the Atlantic Ocean. Its waterfront position gives it access to both bay and ocean. The Atlantic forms the eastern and southern borders. Delaware Bay lies to the west and northwest. This geography has always mattered for maritime activities, and it still does, shaping recreation, tourism, and exposure to coastal storms. The terrain is relatively flat, typical of New Jersey's coastal plain, averaging about seven feet above sea level. During major storms, low-lying areas flood, and the city's been working on coastal resilience planning to deal with rising sea levels.[10]

The climate here reflects the southern Jersey Shore. Summers bring warmth and humidity, with July highs in the mid-80s Fahrenheit. Winters are comparatively mild compared to inland New Jersey, with January temperatures around 40 degrees. The surrounding water acts as a thermal buffer, keeping Cape May several degrees warmer in winter and slightly cooler in summer than communities farther inland. But nor'easters can bring serious trouble: storm surge, heavy rain, destructive winds in fall and winter. That hazard's shaped the city's past and continues to influence planning.

Cape May's natural features include beaches and extensive wetlands supporting diverse ecosystems. The beaches draw people year-round, though summer from late June through Labor Day is peak season. About two miles southwest at the very tip sits Cape May Point, home to Cape May Point State Park with beaches, walking trails, a freshwater pond, and the Cape May Lighthouse. Each spring, the Delaware Bay shoreline becomes something extraordinary. Horseshoe crabs spawn there, and tens of thousands of shorebirds arrive to eat the eggs. Red knots especially depend on this food source to fuel their northward migration from South American wintering grounds to Arctic breeding sites.[11] Several preservation areas and natural reserves nearby protect important habitats: maritime forest and salt marsh that define the Cape May ecosystem.

Victorian Architecture and Historic District

What makes Cape May special? Its Victorian architecture. The entire city's packed with it. In 1976, the federal government designated the whole place a National Historic Landmark District.[12] That puts Cape May in rare company. Only a handful of entire American cities have that honor. The district contains over 600 Victorian-era structures: Carpenter Gothic, Italianate, Queen Anne, Second Empire, Stick Style, many decorated with the ornamental woodwork called gingerbread that's become Cape May's visual signature.[13]

Why so much? Two historical accidents, really. First, the 1878 fire happened at the peak of Victorian ornamentation, so rebuilding produced exceptionally ornate structures. Second, Cape May stagnated economically in the early 20th century, so developers never demolished those older buildings for modern replacements. Other seaside resorts modernized and redeveloped throughout the 1900s. Not Cape May. Its Victorian fabric survived intact. The Mid-Atlantic Center for the Arts & Humanities (MAC), founded in 1970, became the driving force behind preserving and promoting Cape May's architectural heritage. They operate the Emlen Physick Estate as a museum and run walking and trolley tours year-round.[14]

The Emlen Physick Estate was finished in 1879 and designed by Frank Furness, a prominent Philadelphia architect. It's the only Victorian house museum in Cape May open to the public. The 18-room Stick Style mansion displays period furnishings and architectural details reflecting upper-middle-class 19th-century life, and it serves as headquarters for MAC's educational programs and events. The Cape May Lighthouse, completed in 1859 and standing 157 feet tall at Cape May Point, is the third lighthouse on that site and remains an active navigational aid maintained by the U.S. Coast Guard. MAC owns it for interpretive purposes and operates it for public tours, maintaining the adjacent keeper's dwelling as a museum too.[15]

Birding and Natural Environment

Cape May sits in one of North America's most strategically important spots for bird migration. It's at the convergence of the Atlantic Ocean and Delaware Bay, at the tip of a peninsula jutting southward. Hundreds of species of songbirds, raptors, shorebirds, and waterfowl funnel through here during spring and fall migrations. As birds move along the Atlantic coast, they get funneled to the peninsula's tip and then hesitate before crossing the open water of Delaware Bay, creating massive concentrations visible to observers on the ground.[16]

The Cape May Bird Observatory (CMBO), run by New Jersey Audubon, operates two centers in the area and has conducted systematic counts since 1976. At Cape May Point State Park, the Hawk Watch Platform records tens of thousands of migrating raptors each fall: sharp-shinned hawks, Cooper's hawks, American kestrels, merlins, peregrine falcons. The World Series of Birding, a competitive birding event held annually across New Jersey in May and organized by New Jersey Audubon, draws participants who frequently start their counts in the Cape May area, taking advantage of spring migration concentrations.[17]

Internationally, the Delaware Bay shoreline around Cape May is recognized as one of the Western Hemisphere's most critical shorebird staging areas. Red knots and other migratory shorebirds depend on horseshoe crab eggs as fuel to complete journeys from South American wintering grounds to Arctic breeding sites. This ecological relationship has drawn extensive conservation research and puts Cape May on the itineraries of birdwatchers from Europe, Asia, and across North America.[18]

Demographics

The 2020 United States Census found 2,790 persons living in Cape May year-round.[19]

References