The Gordy Hall Motel Apartments were located on the bayside at 45th Street and Beach Highway from 1949 to the early 1970s. They took their name from owners Harold and Betty Gordy and Robert and Peg Hall and were known for their relaxed atmosphere and hospitality.The center building had been the old Brass Rail bar… Read more »
Category: Vanishing Ocean City
Vanishing Ocean City
Vanishing Ocean City With Bunk Mann – December 15, 2017
During World War II, Ocean City’s nightclub scene was centered on 9th Street. Within a short block, Jackson’s Casino, the Blue Dahlia and the Beach Club provided music, dancing and a lively bar scene. Slot machines were everywhere and there was hardly a hotel, bar or restaurant that didn’t have several.Ocean City was still a… Read more »
Vanishing Ocean City With Bunk Mann – December 8, 2017
Ernie’s Donuts was an Ocean City destination for over 25 years. From 1956 through 1981, people made the trek to North Division Street for his glazed, cinnamon and jelly-filled delicacies. Located just off the Boardwalk next to Showell’s Theater, there was no bigger treat than fresh donuts made from scratch by Ernie. You could get… Read more »
Vanishing Ocean City With Bunk Mann – December 1, 2017
The Warren Cottage was located on the corner of 5th Street and the Boardwalk. Owned and managed by Berlin native Mary Purnell Warren, it had 12 rooms with a kitchen annex in the rear.Damaged in the March Storm of 1962, the property was sold and plans made to transport it to a new location in… Read more »
Vanishing Ocean City With Bunk Mann – November 24, 2017
Jack and Paul Townsend of Selbyville, Del. are given credit for bringing big game fishing to Ocean City. They had fished for marlin off the coast of Florida and speculated that the marlin would follow the warm waters of the gulf stream north to the Delmarva coastline. They took VIPs, such as Lou Gehrig of… Read more »
Vanishing Ocean City With Bunk Mann – November 17, 2017
The George Washington Hotel was one of the few old wooden hotels not lost to fire along the Boardwalk. A series of blazes in the 1960s and early 1970s had destroyed the Plimhimmon, Hamilton, Colonial, Rideau and Roosevelt hotels. The George Washington was demolished in January 1990 because it no longer met building codes and… Read more »
Vanishing Ocean City With Bunk Mann – November 10, 2017
Surfing became popular in Ocean City after Bill Wise and George Pittman opened the town’s first surf shop – the Eastern Surfer – in 1964.The surfing crowd was not welcomed by the city fathers in the beginning and surfing was not allowed in the city limits between 10 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. (the city limits… Read more »
Vanishing Ocean City With Bunk Mann – November 3, 2017
The China Seas Motel was located on the oceanfront at 51st Street. Designed to resemble a Chinese “junk” (a commercial fishing boat seen on the rivers of China), the unique building attracted much attention on Coastal Highway.The motel had been built in 1963 after lower land values following the March Storm of 1962 spurred development… Read more »
Vanishing Ocean City With Bunk Mann – October 27, 2017
The Paddock was one of Ocean City’s most popular nightclubs for 60 years. Built by Gabby Mancini, Sr. on the corner of 18th Street and Philadelphia Avenue in 1953, it featured live entertainment. The Saturday afternoon jam sessions were legendary and drew crowds to what in that era was considered “way up the beach.”The original building… Read more »
Vanishing Ocean City With Bunk Mann – October 20, 2017
Ocean City’s original Pier building was completed in 1907 on the Boardwalk at Wicomico Street. In addition to shops and a dancing pavilion, it also featured a theatre and several refreshment stands. It was also the entrance to the Ocean City Fishing Pier.The building was raised 10 feet above the beach and built on wooden… Read more »