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My assignment? To offer you, our readers a picture
postcard of what it is like here in Cape May during the holiday season. I, for
one, would love to know what the inside of a B&B looks like at Christmas. Anyone
coming into town can see the exterior but only a select few get a peek inside.
So, it’s off I go with my camera. I picked the perfect week just before
Thanksgiving weekend and just after.
All the innkeepers are scurrying around
trying to get ready for their holiday guests. |

My first stop was the
John Wesley Inn on Gurney Street. Bonnie
and Lance Pontin are the innkeepers. Bonnie greets me at the door.
I’ve never been inside the John Wesley.
It is the Tuesday before
Thanksgiving and I feel like a little kid when I walk in. The front
parlor is warm and cozy. There are already dolls and teddy bears
about the room. |
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The Christmas tree in the corner by the window is so
colorful. I’m thinking, if I were a kid, what fun it would be to run down the
stairs and turn the corner to find this tree on Christmas morning. |
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And what fun it was to walk into the
John F. Craig House on
Columbia Avenue Friday after Thanksgiving. Barbara Masemore welcomes me to the
inn. Her husband Chip is still putting the finishing touches to his flying Santa
which is suspended from the ceiling in the sun porch. But again, it is the front
parlor that beckons me. The fireplace was lit as was the tree. The songbook was
open inviting me to come on over and play a carol or two but what I really want
to do is just sit in the parlor and look at everything – the Lionel train set
around the tree, the cute little ornament on the tree of Santa in his birthday
suit with only his Santy hat to cover …
well never mind. |
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The point being – there is so much to take in, so many details to discover
that is almost like that book
I Spy… I spy a lovingly inviting place to sit back and get away from the
fast pace. |
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My next stop that morning was
The Mainstay Inn also
on Columbia. I am greeted at the door by Diane, the
Mainstay’s innkeeper. After the preliminary
introductions, she goes back into the kitchen to finish
her chores and I am alone in this impressive house. The
front parlor is regal and more in keeping (ha ha all puns
intended) with the gentlemen’s gambling club that the
Mainstay was built to accommodate. |
| The Christmas tree is, of course, 13
feet tall and it is eerie standing here with the game
table at the opposite end of this very long room already
set for a card game. I can almost imagine the servants
carrying silver trays of bourbon and sherry to the men
sitting about the room. And I think it would be Chopin
not Irving Berlin they would be playing on the lovely
piano next to the Christmas tree. |
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Monday
morning, I pay a visit to the
Mission Inn
on New Jersey Avenue (the east side of town). Innkeeper Susan
Babineau-Roberts comes to the door and as soon s I walk into the
foyer, I am awe struck. Of course, I knew it was a Mexican-styled
house and décor but it is so different, so airy and uncluttered.
Susan has just finished cooking breakfast and checking out the
holiday weekend guests. |
| The smell of baked pears and the aromas of quiche
and baked bread fills the air. The tree in the corner next to the
fireplace is lit, as are the greens-laden sconces on the walls about
this very large, yet inviting room. The star motif throughout the
house, including the tree topper, distinguishes the Mission Inn’s
décor in ways too numerous to describe. Somehow the star says Happy
Holidays, we’re always happy here, and everyday is Christmas to us.
Raymond Roberts tells me the star outside was to be a temporary
decoration but the idea struck such a chord with their guests – that
it has become a part of the Mission. |
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The Queen Victoria on Ocean Street, awaited
me that same afternoon – Innkeeper Anna Marie McMain
graciously showed me the Queen Vic, the adjacent property, the
Prince Albert on Columbia Ave, and the Queens Hotel on Ocean across
the street from her sister property. |
| History exudes from these three inns and it is
particularly embodied in the three Christmas trees on display. In
the front parlor of the Queen Victoria is the McMain family tree.
Upstairs is the tree decorated in the fashion of the 1890s where the
concept of less is more was way beyond the Victorians. In the
front parlor of the Prince Albert the cutest little tree is on
display. It is an 1840s tree, pre-Victorian, not free standing and
very dedicated to the more pagan aspects of the winter solstice
those being fruit primarily. And in the dining room of the Prince
Albert is an 1870s tree, also on a table top and filled with stuff
but not nearly as much stuff as the 1890s tree. Finally, the lobby of the
Queens Hotel is rich and warm. The tree in the corner as you walk in
is welcoming, not imposing, but the best thing is the mirror which,
surrounded by greens, reflects the warmth of the entire room. |
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My
last stop is the Buttonwood Inn at Broadway and Myrtle avenues in
West Cape May. This is the perfect place to stay and watch the
Christmas parade. Diane and Roger Ring are the innkeepers and the
minute I walk into the front parlor, I am hooked. I can keep my eye
on the Christmas tree in front of the large picture window and still
watch the parade as it passes by. |
| If you happen to stay at the Buttonwood on a week
when there is no Christmas parade, no worries, the cozy sofa
arrangement in front of the fireplace will be more than enough to
keep you happy. But the nicest touch in this room is the piano and
the harp at the opposite end from the window. I can’t play the piano
nor the harp but just thinking about playing both makes me feel serene.
The room and the inn look like a divine place to find serenity at
any time of the year. |
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