Ocean City Residential Historic District
{{short description|Historic district in New Jersey, United States}}
{{Use American English|date=January 2025}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2023}}
{{Infobox NRHP
| name = Ocean City Residential Historic District
| nrhp_type = hd
| image = Ocean City Residential HD.JPG
| caption = Ocean City Residential Historic District in 2010.
| location = Roughly bounded by 3rd and 8th Streets and Central and Ocean Avenues, Ocean City, New Jersey
| coordinates = {{coord|39|16|52|N|74|34|14|W|display=inline,title}}
| locmapin = USA New Jersey Cape May County#New Jersey#USA
| nocat = yes
| architect =
| architecture = Late Victorian, Late 19th And 20th Century Revivals
| added = March 20, 2003
| area = {{convert|44.6|acre}}
| refnum = 03000129{{NRISref|2009a}}
| designated_other1_name = New Jersey Register of Historic Places
| designated_other1_abbr = NJRHP
| designated_other1_link = New Jersey Register of Historic Places
| designated_other1_date = January 15, 2003
| designated_other1_number = 4147{{cite web | title=New Jersey and National Registers of Historic Places - Cape May County | url=http://www.state.nj.us/dep/hpo/1identify/lists/cape_may.pdf | publisher=New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection - Historic Preservation Office | page=6 | date=April 1, 2010 | access-date=June 10, 2010 | url-status=dead | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110628182911/http://www.state.nj.us/dep/hpo/1identify/lists/cape_may.pdf | archive-date=June 28, 2011 }}
| designated_other1_num_position = bottom
| designated_other1_color = #ffc94b
}}
Ocean City Residential Historic District consists of 169 properties, dating back to the 1880s, located in Ocean City, New Jersey. The district was added to the National Register of Historic Places on March 20, 2003.
History
Before Ocean City, New Jersey was founded, several families lived on the barrier island, then known as Peck's Beach. In 1879, a group of eight Methodist ministers founded the New Brighton Association as a land development company. On October 20 of that year, the group founded the Ocean City Association to develop the island as a religious resort, with a grid plan of streets running parallel to, and intersecting, each other. On May 25 of the following year, the Association began selling lots in the northern portion of the island, centered around a campground area between what is now Fifth and Sixth Streets. If buyers failed to adhere to the Association's moral code, than the property would be returned to the Association. In 1880 alone, buyers built 35 houses, along a hotel, two bath houses, and ten private stables.{{cite report|url=https://npgallery.nps.gov/GetAsset/f74e7baa-c2a9-4042-acbb-455c663fdff7|format=PDF|title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form|date=May 6, 2002|publisher=National Park Service|access-date=April 2, 2019}}
A total of 32 houses built in the 1880s are part of the current historic district, including one built by Ocean City Association member Ezra B. Lake. More houses were built in the succeeding decades, aided by improved transportation. By the 1920s, most available lots in the originally settled northern portion of Ocean City were already built. The city's growth halted in 1929 following the stock market crash and subsequent Great Depression.
In the 1980s, developers began tearing down older structures and rebuilding them as duplexes. In 1988, Ocean City added a Historic Preservation Plan Element to its master plan. Three years later, the city designated the Ocean City Residential Historic District from Third to Eighth Streets, and along Wesley, Ocean, and Central Avenues; also included in the District was the Life-Saving Station at 4th and Atlantic.{{cite web|url=https://imageserv11.team-logic.com/mediaLibrary/242/OC_Historic_Preservation_Plan_-_NJDCA-1.pdf|title=Historic Preservation Plan|format=PDF|publisher=City of Ocean City, New Jersey|access-date=April 2, 2019}}
List of homes in the district
class="wikitable sortable" |
Address
! Date ! Style ! Notes |
---|
300 Central Avenue
| ~1950 | Not a contributing property |
301 Central Avenue
| 1880s | |
304 Central Avenue
| 1890s-1900s | |
305 Central Avenue
| 1880s | |
308 Central Avenue
| 1890s-1900s | |
312 Central Avenue
| 1890s | One of the key contributing properties |
315 Central Avenue
| 1890s-1900s | Possibly was moved from another location |
317 Central Avenue
| 1890s-1900s | |
321 Central Avenue
| ~1918-22 | |
324 Central Avenue
| 1880s | |
325 Central Avenue
| 1910s | |
328 Central Avenue
| ~1950s | Not a contributing property |
329 Central Avenue
| 1910s | |
330-332 Central Avenue
| 1920s | |
334 Central Avenue
| 1892 | Dutch Colonial Revival architecture | One of the key contributing properties |
335 Central Avenue
| ~1960 | Not a contributing property |
337 Central Avenue
| 1930s | |
340-342 Central Avenue
| 1920s | |
341 Central Avenue
| 1880s | |
346 Central Avenue
| 1880s | Car garage added in the 1950s |
406 Central Avenue
| 1800s | |
408 Central Avenue
| 1890s-1900s | |
409 Central Avenue
| 1920s | |
411 Central Avenue
| 1880s | One of the original meeting cottages; a key contributing property |
412 Central Avenue
| ~1910s | |
413-415 Central Avenue
| ~1910s | American Craftsman/Colonial Revival | |
416 Central Avenue
| 1890s-1900s | |
417 Central Avenue
| 1910s | |
420 Central Avenue
| 1880s | |
421-423 Central Avenue
| 1890s | |
425-427 Central Avenue
| ~1980s | Not a contributing property |
426 Central Avenue
| 1890s-1900s | |
428 Central Avenue
| 1880s | |
429-431 Central Avenue
| 1890s | |
432 Central Avenue
| ~1970s-1990s | Not a contributing property |
433 Central Avenue
| ~1900s | American Craftsman/Colonial Revival | |
434 Central Avenue
| ~1920s | Modified to Second Empire/American Craftsman; not a contributing property |
435 Central Avenue
| ~1900s | American Craftsman/Colonial Revival | |
438 Central Avenue
| ~1910 | |
600 Central Avenue
| 1917 | |
601 Central Avenue
| ~1990s | Not a contributing property |
604 Central Avenue
| 1890s-1900s | |
608 Central Avenue
| 1890s-1900s | |
611 Central Avenue
| 1890s-1900s | |
613 Central Avenue
| 1890s-1900s | |
617 Central Avenue
| 1890s-1900s | |
618 Central Avenue
| 1890s-1900s | |
622-624 Central Avenue
| 1890s-1900s | |
623 Central Avenue
| 1890s-1900s | |
625 Central Avenue
| 1890s-1900s | |
626 Central Avenue
| 1890s-1900s | |
629 Central Avenue
| 1880s | One of the original meeting cottages; a key contributing property |
631 Central Avenue
| 1880s | |
634-636 Central Avenue
| 1880s | |
635 Central Avenue
| ~1910 | |
638 Central Avenue
| 1880s | |
639 Central Avenue
| 1880s | |
640-642 Central Avenue
| 1880s | |
641 Central Avenue
| ~1910 | |
644 Central Avenue
| 1880s | |
650 Central Avenue
| 1880s | |
701 Central Avenue
| 1880s | One of the key contributing properties |
705 Central Avenue
| 1891 | One of the key contributing properties; |
715-717 Central Avenue
| 1890s-1900s | |
801 Central Avenue
| 1890s-1900s | One of the key contributing properties; the first floor was converted to commercial use |
401 Wesley Avenue
| 1890s-1900s | Known as Northwood Inn B&B |
403-405 Wesley Avenue
| 1880s | |
420 Wesley Avenue
| 1880s | Folk Victorian/Gothic Revival | |
423 Wesley Avenue
| 2001 | Contemporary Queen Anne | Not a contributing property |
424 Wesley Avenue
| ~1900 | Known as Dancing Turtle Inn |
426 Wesley Avenue
| 1800s-1900s | |
428 Wesley Avenue
| 1880s | |
429 Wesley Avenue
| 1880s | |
435 Wesley Avenue
| 1881 | One of the key contributing properties; owned by Ezra B. Lake; now known as Scotch Hall Restaurant |
colspan=4|Reference - National Register of Historic Places Application |
Other properties
The Ocean City Residential Historic District is centered around an open area between 5th and Sixth Streets. In 1881, an auditorium was built between Fifth and Sixth Streets, which became the Ocean City Tabernacle; the building was replaced in 1955 by another building at the same location.
At the intersection of 8th Street and Central Avenue, St. Peter's United Methodist Church was built in 1908 in a Gothic Revival architecture. Originally, it was a two-story building, with a three-story tower, with a two-story addition built in 1956. The church's foundation is made of cast stone and granite, and the building's exterior wall is made of stone, featuring stained glass windows. The roof is cross-gabled, with a raised parapet, pinnacles, and a bell tower. It is a key contributing property to the district.
See also
External links
{{commons category}}
References
{{reflist}}
{{National Register of Historic Places}}
{{NRHP in Cape May County, New Jersey}}
Category:Historic districts on the National Register of Historic Places in New Jersey
Category:Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in New Jersey
Category:Geography of Cape May County, New Jersey
Category:Ocean City, New Jersey
Category:National Register of Historic Places in Cape May County, New Jersey