Thursday, April 30, 2009

Margate Centennial & The Barbary Coast Bars

Margate’s Barbary Coast Bars – Revisited. A tour through time. – By Bill Kelly

From The Downbeach Current,April 30, 2009. Vol. 13, NO.7
http://www.shorenewstoday.com/db/
Page 29 Check out all the stories on Margate history.

Today Margate is mainly sushi bars and condos, but at one time, it was the place to go to have a great time. They called it the “Barbary Coast” because of the image of drunken debauchery, but for many locals and tourists, it was.

The strip went along the bay front to Washington Avenue and then to beach.

If you came from the south, from the Somers Point – Ocean City causeway, the first bar you came to was Kelly Voght’s rickety old nightclub that stretched out over the bay, an old wooden clapboard building reminiscent of Bayshores. Then there was the Longport Inn, an eating and drinking establishment where many of the power brokers met. Both have been leveled and are now condos.

Heading north along the bay you then came to Strotbeck’s, a private club, now Steve & Cookies, and faithfully maintained, where the food is good and the music is smooth jazz. A block in from the bay was Moylans, a small corner, seasonal, neighborhood bar, with a low ceiling, and dark, with no windows and a good juke box.

Back on the bay, heading north on Amherst Avenue is Jerry Blavat’s Memories (formerly the Elbo Room), which is still going strong with the Geater with the Heater, the Boss with the Hot Sauce spinning the discs for dancers and the radio audience.

Next along the line was the Harbor Inn, where at one time, not long ago, they had ten beers for a dollar. On the next corner was Merrel’s, where Lew London, the East Coast Aces, Bobby Campanell and the original Shakes played before it became Gilhooley’s, a brass and glass joint.

Next door is the venerable Maynards, the last of the old time Barbary Coast Saloons, where the late, Al Triano orchestrated the party, and where you can get cheep draft beer, a hot sandwich off the grill, a bowl of peanuts, and leave the shells on the floor.

On the corner, where there is now a sushi bar, there used to be Kelly’s corner bar, with a pool table and juke box, and attached to Gables, one of the premier rock and roll bars on the East Coast. Once said to be a bowling alley, the huge nightclub had multiple bars, dance floor and a stage where the Exceptions were the house band who opened for major acts like John Kay and Steppenwolf.

Around the corner across the street, there was Omar’s, a neighborhood bar that was once called the Nickelodeon, a bust out joint which featured live bands, before it too became a fancy restaurant and then, condos.

There is also the Barn pizza hut, a popular pit stop for generations, and another popular late night pizza place down Washington Ave., before you got to Maloney’s, one of the most popular local pubs until it was raised and condoed out a few years ago.

Just past Maloney’s, on the corner, was the White House, also known as Reds as it was Red Klots’ sports bar. Klots owns the Washington Generals (Nationals) professional basketball team, who faithfully maintain an unblemished record of having lost every one of their games to the Harlem Globetrotters. When Klot’s son Glenn was old enough, he turned Reds into a disco, and then a New Wave bar, the Ivory, with radical bands like the Ramones and the Hooters, who played there in the 80s.

Then it became a disco again, and was a favorite hangout of seasonal neighbor, “Skinny” Joey Merlino, the nominal head of the old Philadelphia mob. Then it was leveled into a parking lot before it was condoed.

Across the street on the beach is the Green House, where the octogenarian Flintstones band used to play in the low ceiling beach bar. They really were old coots playing in a band that really had a good time. Now it’s Ventura’s Green House, and features fine Italian food, a good pizza and sandwich grill and a popular deck just off of Thong Beach.

A block down from the Green House was the Beach Bar, where you could walk in off the beach in your bare feet and get a cold one, which was developed into a high rise in the early 80s.

Where ever you went at the Barbary Coast, at the end of the night, after shooting pool, drinking and dancing to the live bands, everyone eventually ended up at Lenny’s Hot Dog Stand, which when the sun came up, was in the shadow of Lucy the Elephant.

By three or four in the morning there was a line at Lenny’s where people stood around mingling, talking, eating hot dogs, and getting ready to take a nap on the beach, or reluctantly go home.

Things were like that for decades, but eventually, the party had to end. A number of things led to the end of that era, including the lowering of the drinking age to eighteen, the increase in DWI arrests and accidents, and sensational news reports of a young women found dead on a boat from a drug overdose, another women being raped on the beach by a professional athlete and finally, in August 2007, the murder of Paul Ritch, a British tourist on a holiday, who was knifed in the heart behind one of the bayside bars.

The increase in the value of the real estate market and the development of condos forced the college and group rental crowd to find another neighborhood, and the seedy bars were transformed into classy, brass and glass restaurants.

And today, as they sit around sipping champagne in their waterfront condos and at the sushi bars, it seems that the people who have never been to Margate’s Barbary Coast in its heyday, just don’t know what a good time is.



MARGATE – after staying pretty much the same for ten thousand years, went from sandy, shifting hills barrier island to contemporary resort town in less than a hundred years,

To the Lenni Lenape Indians it was known as Absecon Island, a desolate wind swept sand bar with an ever changing landscape they never thought anyone would or could live on.

To the first European explorers the bay area was called Eren Haven – Great Egg bay because of the prevalence of bird eggs, and the first settlers used the barrier islands as a cattle pen.

Thomas Budd paid ten times as much per acre for the mainland parcels of land than he did for the barrier islands, but the value of the waterfront would change with the times, and the advent of modern society.

Few people even knew about Sandy Hills until the trains came in to Atlantic City, at the north end of Absecon Island, bringing thousands of tourists daily from Philadelphia, and so they began to call it South Atlantic City. They also came by steam ferry from Ocean City and Somers Point to Longport so it was, for the most part, a place that tourists passed through to get somewhere else.

That is until 1881, when 25 year old engineer James V. Lafferty began his quest to build Lucy the Elephant as a real estate promotion. In 1882 the US Patent Office granted Lafferty a patent for “the exclusive right to make, use or sell animal-shaped buildings for seventeen years.” Lucy was the first of three such elephants, the others being the Elephantine Colossus, built at Coney Island New York and the Light of Asia in South Cape May, N.J. Colossus burned down, the Light of Asia was eventually torn down, and Lucy was sold, with Lafferty’s other property, to John and Sophie Gertzen, who operated it as a tourist attraction, hotel and tavern.

On August 1, 1885 an Egg Harbor Township referendum was held to consider incorporating South Atlantic City as a borough an action taken by New Jersey state legislature on September 7, 1885, though it wasn’t until April 23, 1897 that South Atlantic City reincorporated as a city.

On April 20, 1909 the city was reincorporated with the name Margate City. The name Margate was probably taken from the resort town of Margate in England. As England’s oldest seaside resort Margate, Kent, has a history that dates back 700 years. As a bathing beach resort, Margate in England can attribute its popularity to a visionary entrepreneur, real estate developer and inventor. Like Lafferty at the Jersey Shore, Margate in England had Benjamin Beale, who patented a bathing machine.

Bathing, at home or in the sea, was not considered a social occasion between the sexes until the Victorian age, encouraged at first by “bathing machines,” like the one invented by Beale. With modesty being a primary factor, bathers entered a little wooden hut covered with canvas that was pulled into the sea. As bathing among the sexes became more socially acceptable, the bathing machines disappeared, and Margate became one of England’s most popular seaside resorts.

Margate, New Jersey is also one of America’s most popular bathing beaches, though one with less modesty, as the beach by Lucy is today known as “thong beach,” which shows you how far things have gone in less than a hundred years.

The century long history of Margate itself is probably best exemplified by the ever changing story of Lucy, which has served as a restaurant, tavern and hotel, was once the center of the town’s social activity, and is still a tourist attraction and landmark.

William Howard Taft was President in 1909, an otherwise inauspicious year when Robert Perry reached the North Pole, Joan of Arc was declared a saint, Shibe Park (later Connie Mack Stadium) opened, the NAACP was formed and Jack Johnson was heavyweight champion of the world.

The demographics were changing however, primarily by the automobile and airplane. The Wright brothers sold their plane to the military and they made the first commercial use of the airplane in 1909, while Alice Ramsey, a Hackensack, N.J. housewife, became the first women to drive a car across the country from New York to San Francisco.

In 1909 steam ferries ran passengers on a regularly scheduled line from Ocean City and Somers Point to Longport – the ever receding south end of the south end of Absecon Island, and from Longport, people had to pass through South Atlantic City to get to Atlantic City. And for the most part, people traveled by train and trolley.

That all changed on July 1, 1926 when the Benjamin Franklin Bridge opened and day trippers began to arrive by car.

As Atlantic City grew, so did Margate, and like other nearby towns, it became a suburb community, and known as an affluent one, attracting not only successful Atlantic City businessmen, but rich industrialists from Philadelphia and Baltimore who built mansions on the highest ground, which were at first seasonal homes but became year ‘round residences.

Besides the beach side taverns and restaurants like Lucy and the Green House, fine restaurants and private clubs like Stotbecks provided first class service to the seasonal visitors and Atlantic City’s business and power brokers.

Unlike Atlantic City, Ocean City and Wildwood, Margate did not offer many hotel rooms for transients, or even lease apartments on a weekly or monthly basis, and became popular, for the most part, with seasonal home owners.


There was also the proliferation of the waterfront bars (See: the Bars of Margate’s Barbary Coast) along the bay, where many of the ramshackle houses became group rentals for college kids before being developed into exclusive condos.

By 1960 Lucy was run down, dilapidated, and slated to be demolished, which was put off until 1969 when the Save Lucy Committee, formed by the Margate Civic Association, moved Lucy to the beachfront land owned by the city and by 1973, had raised enough money to restore it.

And today, Lucy stands tall as a symbol, the logo of a sea side city that was looking to promote itself as a nice place to live, and now pretty much likes the way things as they are.

[Bill Kelly can be reached at billykelly3@yahoo.com ]

41 comments:

Rocco said...

I thought that the 10 for 1 joint was called the Beacon Inn, not Harbor Inn. I used to play bumper pool there in the 70's.

Thanks for filling in the gaps in my aging brain for the other Margate spots.

William Kelly said...

You know Rocco, I think you are right. The Beacon Inn, with a lighthouse as a logo. Across the street from the bay, and across the side street - just south of Merrells, later Gilhoolys, where Bob Campanell and the Shakes were the house band. Yea, Beacon Inn, not Harbor Inn. Thanks, Bill Kelly

Maria said...

I remember the Beacon Inn well. When the bands changed at Merrell's we would go there and have 10 for $1 beers!
Then head back over when Full House took back the stage.
For 3 years we rented apartments at 25 North Washington.
So sad it i all gone.

Maria said...

Does anyone remember the drink at Moylan's called the Big Mother?

Would love to know how to make one. Pretty sure it had vodka gin lemon juice grenadine and beer. And a super Mother had a shot of Tequila!

Geez, we drank them like water. Not these days.

hamptonroad said...

I worked at Gables and Kellys (5 PBRs for a dollar) in the early 80's..the bands that opened for Steppenwolf was "Energized" and "Big Eyes." The motorcycle gang the "The Pagans" paid us a vist that night to see Steppenwolf play so they could relive the 60's i guess. The Barbary Coast is exactly what it all was, with preppy college kids thrown in. (And yes Gables had been a bowling alley in the 50s my parents told me..met the first few times there and at Tony Marts (RIP) in Sommers Point where they saw Bill Hailey and the Comments. Sincerely - Stephen A. O'Connor

Unknown said...

I had a shore house on Adams Ave. the summer of '79. Worked at Gables for a few days when they were extra busy. That summer, the two bands were "Energized", with at lead singer named Dirk, I think, and a punk band called "Uproar". A glorious summer!!

Unknown said...

i was on adams avenue in 1979 , also ... 113 north . before the nickelodeon name , it was "the olde tavern" ... with moxie and savage playing there in 1973 .

Unknown said...

There was a bar in Longport, on the bayside, that was built over the bay (on pilings) that was different then any of the Margate bars. I remember it being more laid back and having backgammon for people to play there. Does anyone remember this and more important, what was the name of the place?

Unknown said...

Loved margate 80-82.vendome back bay.

Unknown said...

Loved margate 80-82.vendome back bay.

Unknown said...

Energized lead singer was named Dirk. I remember it like it was...well 38 years ago. They played some funny as hell bastardizations of tv theme songs. The Brady Bunch was raunchy and hysterical. Also did a killer Rock Lobster. Great times.

Dale W said...

Thanks for this history! Apparently my grandfather, Sammy Cohen, owned the White House and also gables with his brother. Maybe this was before it was called Red's? If anyone has any information or knew him, I would love to hear more. Dale.wannen@gmail.com

Glynn Kalara said...

Thanks for the mention! Just wanted to make one correction though. The Ramones never played at IVORY / REDS but R.E.M. did.

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Unknown said...

Bill Hailey and the Comets, btw. Philly regular of Maloneys summer of '68, 7 beers for $1, $500 fine for drinking under 21. Big hurt in those days, but worth the risk.


Steve McCloskey

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Unknown said...

Does anyone remember Supa Heat? We traveled to Margate every year in the 70's to see them.

Unknown said...

The Dead Milkman played at the Ivory!!

Glynn Kalara said...

Actually, the Dead Milkmen played at REDS in the late 80's when Henry Rollins held a Hardcore Sunday afternoon show there in summer 1988 or 1989 not sure exactly which year.

Unknown said...

I believe the bar in Longport on the bay was called the Edgewater.

Great blog. I enjoyed the memories.

I got a fake ID at the age of 16 from an ad in Popular Mechanics. It got me into the rocking side of Gables. That room was legendary with the live acts. The exit doors on Washington Ave would wake my parents up 5 blocks away, when the doors opened, that's how loud it was in there.

Unknown said...

The Beacon inn was 10 for 1 Monday thru Thursday then 7 for 1 on the weekend

Unknown said...

A Correction: The decline of the Barbary Coast was firstly due, not to “lowering of the drinking age to 18”...but to the raising of it From 18, first to 19 and then to 21!

I can still hear and see John Kay & Steppenwolf on stage 6 ft in front of me performing ‘Magic Carpet Ride’...I remember the stage had been extended to cover the bar usually in front of it when House band ‘Energized’ w/lead singer Dirk, drummer Tano played...
‘Hooters’ played Gables too if memory serves, not sure about ‘Ivory’.

Those were some of the most memorable days of my life and still find myself thinking of them often in the summertimes, glad for the good fortune to have been born in time to come of age in the late 70’s & early 80’s and be grandfathered to drink at 19...and before pictures were added to our DL’s!

Thanks for the trip and the history lesson!

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Mr. Miami said...

I remember the White House Bar in Longport. On the last day of the season, they’d open the doors and let all the motorcycles run on the dance floor between the dancers. Never got burned. Was with Donna Jones from Cinnaminson, NJ, lol!

Glynn Kalara said...

It was in Margate not Longport.

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Unknown said...

My time in Margate started in 1970 when I was 20 years old and using my older friend's driver's license to get into the bars. Our time there lasted until 1975 when we "migrated" to Avalon. Maloney's was one of my favorite bars. They had the 5-beers-for-a-dolar thing going on, the jukebox blasting all the time, and a surprising number of attractive women. They also had one of the dirtiest men's rooms you'll ever see but we were usually too drunk to even care.

One story: On a Sunday morning, about 8:00am, I drove past Maloney's and saw this big guy (probably 250 lbs.) sleeping on the sidewalk outside of the bar in cutoff shorts and no shirt. After I got breakfast, I drove past the bar again and there he was still sleeping on the sidewalk. No need for a motel room for this dude. I always wondered what time he eventually got up. Those were the days.

Unknown said...

Everyone forgot
Robert's Place

Unknown said...

Everyone forgot
"The Ocean Pub"
A.k.a."The White House "

Unknown said...

The oceanPub was down the street from the Island house on the corner of Cedar Grove owned by the Eagen family across the street was the white sands hotel. The white house was on washington and Atlantic up the Street from Maloney's. Before they remodeled the Greenhouse that was a locals hangout that had great deviled eggs and specialty was serving Rolling rock beer. A bottle of beer was one dollar in most places and drafts cheaper with the deals people spoke of in Kelly's and the Becon inn. The other end had Jimmy's bar sold to Robert Sutor on Atlantic Avenue and on Ventnor Ave was the Sailfish. Great times great bars .not to mention the zmargate Movies and Al's bowling alley but those are story's for another blog. Take care never forget history like today's culture wants all to do

Unknown said...

I had a paper route around 1977 that had customers across from the Ocean Pub on Atlantic Ave. I was about 13. Every once in a while I would find a beer mug or two in the grass along the road. I would wonder what antics went on the night before. I remember there was casino employee nights on certain week days. I believe that place evolved into Uncle Bill’s Pancake house, before being demolished for new condo’s.

CaptChal said...

Edgewater

Unknown said...

1963---Maloney's, 7RR for a $. It was always packed with the overflow crowd walking to the White house on the corner. Almost every girl was from Philly.

BrendaSue said...

I remember Robert’s place.

Unknown said...

Vodka gin sour mix grenadine top off with a schmitts beer

PTOGO said...

Does anyone remember a biker bar called “Mother’s” somewhere on the bay. I thought it was somewhere near Margate, but maybe I’m wrong. It couldn’t have been too far from OCNJ.

Unknown said...

Mother’s was in Somers Point. It burned down at some point.

http://athepoint.blogspot.com/2011/08/egg-harbor-township-after-hour-joints.html

You could get “mothered” at Moylan’s in Margate

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Unknown said...

The Ramones did play at Gables though, as did Dave Mason.

Unknown said...

Played at the White House in 67 and 68 with the Nikkle Bagge
Knew the Cohen brothers well. Loved their burgers at the front door. Best job I ever jad

Kitty said...

Lead singer of Energized was Derf, which was Fred spelled backward