Review
"A lovely book."--Michael Olesker
Review
"Together, photographs and journal give us a unique glimpse into the summer experience of Ocean City's earliest vacationers. Yet, to an extent, this volume also represents the collective summer experiences of generations of Ocean City vacationers. The mode of travel to the seashore has changed, the town has grown, and shooting of shorebirds from the beaches is a distant memory; but vacationers still come to bathe in the surf, boat, fish, dine in favorite restaurants, and amuse themselves on the boardwalk in the evenings."--from the Preface
Book Description
"Vacationers of today," writes C. John Sullivan, "can only dream of what this seaside resort was like for those who visited in the early 1900s." With Old Ocean City, Sullivan brings back those long-ago summers through the words and photographs of the Walker family of Washington, D.C. Avid photographers as well as sports enthusiasts, the Walkers preserved their Ocean City summers in hundreds of snapshots. And the Walkers' son, Robert, kept a detailed record of those days in a small leather-bound journal, titled My Vacation, in which he wrote almost daily from 1912 to 1916.When the Walkers journeyed to Ocean City, Maryland, it was to enjoy summers filled with target practice on the beach, hunting the abundant waterfowl, fishing, boating, picnicking, and bathing in the ocean. In 1908, William and Nannie Letitia Walker purchased a lot from the Sinepuxent Beach Company of Baltimore and built a small hunting lodge that, by 1910, had become a sturdy cottage. The Walkers named their summer home, which still stands at the corner of Baltimore Avenue and Seventh Street, "Romarletta," for their children Robert, Margaret, and Letitia.In Old Ocean City, Sullivan mixes his own commentary and explanatory captions with excerpts from Robert Walker's journal and more than one hundred family photographs (discovered in 1994, Sullivan notes, in a sweltering attic in Berlin, Maryland). Views of handsome beach architecture and grass-covered dunes suggest an Ocean City almost unimaginable today. Rare photographs and accounts of shorebird hunting (banned in 1918 to protect sandpipers, plover, herons, and other species) are an arresting contrast to more familiar scenes of boating, fishing, and beachcombing. We see the Walker children growing up -- and Ocean City growing up around them. The result is a surprising look at a place "far different than our memories would recall." Sullivan includes a time line of Ocean City history and Walker family visits, starting with the formation of the Atlantic Hotel Company in 1868 (the company's stockholders chose the name Ocean City at their 1875 meeting in Salisbury) and ending with the Walkers' sale of their beloved cottage in 1950.
About the Author
C. John Sullivan is the Supervisor of Assessments for Harford County, Maryland, and the author of numerous books and articles about the Chesapeake region. A widely recognized expert on decoys, he has served as a consultant to the Maryland Historical Society, the Ward Museum of Waterfowl Art, and the Havre de Grace Decoy Museum.
Old Ocean City: The Journal and Photographs of Robert Craighead Walker, 1904-1916 FROM THE PUBLISHER
"Vacationers of today," writes C. John Sullivan, "can only dream of what this seaside resort was like for those who visited in the early 1900s." With Old Ocean City, Sullivan brings back those long-ago summers through the words and photographs of the Walker family of Washington, D.C. Avid photographers as well as sports enthusiasts, the Walkers preserved their Ocean City summers in hundreds of snapshots. And the Walkers' son, Robert, kept a detailed record of those days in a small leather-bound journal, titled My Vacation, in which he wrote almost daily from 1912 to 1916." "When the Walkers journeyed to Ocean City, Maryland, it was to enjoy summers filled with target practice on the beach, hunting the abundant waterfowl, fishing, boating, picnicking, and bathing in the ocean. In 1908, William and Nannie Letitia Walker purchased a lot from the Sinepuxent Beach Company of Baltimore and built a small hunting lodge that, by 1910, had become a sturdy cottage. The Walkers named their summer home, which still stands at the corner of Baltimore Avenue and Seventh Street, "Romarletta," for their children Robert, Margaret, and Letitia." "In Old Ocean City, Sullivan mixes his own commentary and explanatory captions with excerpts from Robert Walker's journal and more than one hundred family photographs (discovered in 1994, Sullivan notes, in a sweltering attic in Berlin, Maryland). Views of handsome beach architecture and grass-covered dunes suggest an Ocean City almost unimaginable today. Rare photographs and accounts of shorebird hunting (banned in 1918 to protect sandpipers, plover, herons, and other species) are an arresting contrast to more familiar scenes of boating, fishing, and beachcombing. We see the Walker children growing up - and Ocean City growing up around them. The result is a surprising look at a place "far different than our memories would recall," Sullivan includes a time line of Ocean City history and Walker family visits, starting with the formation of
SYNOPSIS
The story of what Ocean City was like for visitors in the early 1900stold through the words and photographs of the Walker family of Washington, D.C.
About the Author:
C. John Sullivan is the Supervisor of Assessments for Harford County, Maryland, and the author of numerous books and articles about the Chesapeake region. A widely recognized expert on decoys, he has served as a consultant to the Maryland Historical Society, the Ward Museum of Waterfowl Art, and the Havre de Grace Decoy Museum.