It is enlightening to put Alice and her life at Shore
House in the context of the world of the socially prominent and well connected
across the sound. The contrast is striking.
From the 1890s through the 1930s, Morehead City was a mecca for the social and political elite of the central coastal states. The resort hotels on the Morehead City sound front during that era had a reputation for fine accommodations and a lively cultural and party atmosphere. The lower summer temperatures and cooling breezes of the coast, when compared to the conditions elsewhere in the states, were a powerful attraction.
But, it was the expanding
network of railroads that made travel to Morehead City a convenient and
pleasant experience. In fact, the establishment of Morehead City was a result of
the railroad’s arrival in 1858.
Governor John Motley Morehead
spearheaded the construction of railroads in North Carolina during his
administration in the 1840s. Railroads were connecting most metropolitan and
not-so metropolitan parts of the state with a main east-west line. In 1858, The
Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad terminated in Morehead City at the
Atlantic Hotel, located between 1st and 4th streets on
the waterfront.
While the Atlantic was the
largest and most desirable resort hotel on the Bogue Sound shore, there were
others catering to the fashionable clientele attracted to the Morehead City
area. The Jefferson, New Bern House, The Cherry Hotel, and The Villa Hotel, all
offered accommodations for guests wishing to get away from the heat of summer
and unhealthy city environs. Some in the
medical profession recommended the region for its restorative properties,
considered it malaria-free and a place to go to avoid the fevers.
Where the wealthy, connected
and fashionable go, the politicians are not far behind. The Atlantic & North Carolina railroad by
the 1880s was connected to all the seats of power and government in North
Carolina: Raleigh, Durham, Winston-Salem, Goldsboro and Charlotte. From the 1880s through the mid 1920s Morehead
City was the summer capital of North Carolina.
1900 Railroad Map, DC collection UNC |
The Atlantic at its peak
could accommodate up to 500 guests. The
main building was constructed in 1880 at a cost of $35,000, a substantial sum
for the time. It was reported to be one of the first hotels in the state to
have running water.
The Atlantic Hotel Collection, The History Place, Morehead City, NC |
In addition to the main hotel,
it had a wing for nannies, nurses and other help who accompanied the elite
clientele. It also had accommodations for men traveling alone; a row of one-room
cottages provided them with privacy.
A physician on staff was
standard for upscale resorts of the era, but the Atlantic also had a dentist as
well. It also had a barbershop, a beauty salon and a telephone and telegraph
room.
For recreational activities,
in addition to bathing, sailing and fishing, the hotel also maintained a stable
of horses and a pack of hounds for fox hunts. There was a room for card playing and smoking cigars as well as a
men-only beverage room.
Separate dining facilities
were available for young children and their caretakers, allowing adults to
enjoy themselves, undisturbed in the main dining room. The hotel had a ballroom that was used many
times during the season. An orchestra
engaged for the summer provided music in the evenings, at luncheon and during
high tea.
Throughout the summer, there
were formal balls and theatrical performances to entertain guests. The social
calendar was filled with cotillions, a Governor’s Reception, coming-out parties
to introduce young ladies to society, costume parties and a Regimental Ball. It
seemed just about any excuse was justification for a gala.
In 1906, the State
Legislature selected Camp Glenn in Carteret County as the eastern training base
for the NC National Guard. The facility was also used as a Coast Guard aviation
base during WW I and a Navy base in WW II. Located just three miles west of The Atlantic Hotel, the base assured a steady stream of “officers and gentlemen” attired in dress uniform. They would partake of the fine food served in the dining room and attend the gala balls, a fitting addition to the tuxedo-clad men. A young lady’s dance card would always be full.
By the late 1920s, time and
circumstance were taking their toll on The Atlantic. Social conventions changed,
newer resort areas competed for attention, roads improved, automobiles became more
reliable, technology brought new diversions, home and office air conditioning
came on the scene.
As the attractiveness of The
Atlantic Hotel began to fade, many of those who had summered there built
cottages along the Morehead City Bogue Sound waterfront to continue their
social traditions. The era of the
Atlantic Hotel came to an end in 1933 when fire destroyed the facility.
The Atlantic Hotel collection, The History Place, Morehead City, NC |
Few remember The Atlantic or
are unaware of the fame and grandeur it brought to Morehead City in the early
1900s. The only acknowledgement of its
existence is a fading highway historical marker on the access road to the Port
of Morehead.
It is likely that the first
exposure to Carteret County Alice Green Hoffman had was of The Atlantic Hotel
as she stopped and, perhaps, disembarked at the station in Morehead in 1915.
The ambience, fashions and culture at The Atlantic might have been reassuring. Granted
the painted wood frame building would not compare favorably with the grand and
opulent stone and brick structures on Park Avenue in New York City or Avenue du
Bois de Boulogne in Paris, it still represented a touch of refinement and
culture in a rural setting. If the
registration books from the Atlantic had been preserved, Mrs. Hoffman’s name
appearing among the guests would not be a surprise.
An alternate scene can be
envisioned in light of the fact that in 1906 the Atlantic and North Carolina
railroad was extended to Beaufort, where the train traveled down Broad St. to
the depot at the corner of Pollock St. So,
perhaps she sat on the train while it stopped at the Atlantic Hotel station and
watched a large portion of the train’s passengers disembark. While the
uniformed hotel staff assisted with their luggage, she sat there wondering if
the accommodations could be better in Beaufort.
During that first visit to
Carteret County in 1915, Alice Hoffman found land to
her liking and in 1917 bought a large portion of her Bogue Banks estate from
John Royall. When the family of John A. Royall of Boston, Massachusetts visited
their Bogue Banks land holdings, which represented 75% of the island by 1910,
they traveled by private yacht. It is
conceivable that after the voyage, staying at the Atlantic was a welcome change
from life aboard ship.
So, while Alice was living in
a rather primitive style at Shore House, a short way across the waters a social
scene reminiscent to her life in Paris and New York played out.
_____________
Post Author: Walt Zaenker, revised 1/11/15
To contact the author or the History Committee
To contact the author or the History Committee
In addition to original research by the author, the
following reference material aided in the writing of this post and are excellent sources
for information on this subject:
1 “Tales of the Atlantic Hotel 1880-1933” by Virginia Pou
Doughton, published 1994, Griffin & Tilghman Printers, Inc
2. “Morehead City, A Walk Through Time” by Jack Dudley,
copyright @2003, Coastal Heritage Series
3. Atlantic Hotel collection in the Goodwin Library at The
History Place, Morehead City, The Carteret County Historical Society
4. Recorder of Deeds Office, Carteret County Gouvernment Center, Beaufort, NC