Is it the house at 653½
Washington Street, also known as The Colonial House? Or
is it the old “Whilldin-Miller House” at 416 South
Broadway where Daniels on Broadway Restaurant currently
resides.
Can CapeMay.com’s architectural detectives solve the
mystery? Probably not, because we can’t even figure that
whole Beach Avenue/Beach Drive thing.
Nevertheless, we’re on the scent. To aid us in our
investigation, we’ve adopted some helpful hints from the
good folks at PBS’s show History Detectives. Their
website
www.pbs.org/opb/historydetectives
provides a “Buildings Checklist” in helping
with an architectural investigation.
The checklist, which by the way, coincides with
recommendations formulated by the Secretary
of Interior’s Standards for the Treatment of Historic
Projects, offers the following advise:
Get Familiar by learning the local history i.e.,
read newspapers from the construction year and do your
homework by scrutinizing house details including
additions, artifacts and construction.
Get It In Writing. Translation? Do a title
search, check tax assessment records, and research
building permits.
Get The Support. This includes: obtaining fire
insurance maps; architectural plans and appraiser
records; lot drawings and maps; photographs; county
history and Atlases; newspapers; libraries and
historical societies.
Get Personal. Learn who the previous residents
and/or owners were; talk to the neighbors; get oral
histories and check estate records, personal papers,
birth, death, and marriage certificates as well as
cemetery and church records, and census records provided
by the state or federal governments.
Manned with our checklist, we’re ready to get to the
bottom of this mystery and to assemble our team of
experts.
Our experts include; James Campbell, historian at the
Greater Cape May Historical Society and Joan Berkey,
historic preservation consultant. Berkey authored the
Whilldin-Miller House (Daniel’s Restaurant, AKA, The Fow
House) nomination report seeking to have the house
placed on the National Register of Historic Houses. The
house was placed on the National Register in 2003.
Determining the age of the
building, particularly a single family dwelling like
Colonial House and the Whilldin House is a dicey
proposition.
Most
of the inquiries Jim Campbell receives at the Greater
Cape May Historical Society are from new home owners
wanting to trace the lineage of their property. Because
of the lack of documentation, it’s “very, very
difficult” says Campbell, to precisely determine the age
of many of Cape May’s historic homes, particularly those
which predate the Victorians like the Colonial and
Whilldin House.
Campbell recommends checking the deed to the property.
However, the deed to a property, he says, only outlines
the perimeters of the property and really doesn’t say
whether or not a house was built on the land. For that
information, he suggests trying to get hold of mortgage
books or tax records. A spike in the property’s tax
assessment, said Campbell, is a good indication that a
building or house has been constructed on the land. Oral
history is also helpful although even not conclusive
evidence.
When all is said and done, determining the age of a
house often comes down to the construction and the
materials used.
Colonial
House is the favorite project of Jim Campbell. It was
built by Revolutionary War patriot Memucan Hughes and is
believed to be the oldest house still standing in Cape
May (built around 1775). The Colonial House was run by
Memucan Hughes as a tavern and also served as his family
home. Currently, it is City of Cape May leases the
property to the Historical Society, which operates the
house as a museum and is open to the public in the
summer.
Memuchan Hughes was a member of one of the whaler yeoman
families. When Israel Hughes, Memuchan’s first son
married Mary Eldridge in 1806, the simple six room
tavern became their home.
It was originally located on the current site of
Alexander’s Restaurant but the Hughes family needed more
room so they moved the house to back and built what is
now the cite of Alexander’s Restaurant.
Although local lore dates the Memuchan Hughes house at
1775, a recent inspection of the house by an
architectural historian dates the house to “around
1800.”
According to a brief history written by Campbell,
“Scratched on the outside of a second story window pane
are the names of
a
couple and dated June 10, 1806. One is Elizabeth
Eldredge. The other Eldredge’s first name is illegible.
A couple named Enoch and Elizabeth Eldredge were married
in the Old Brick Church on February 19, 1805, and are
buried in the churchyard. Enoch’s sister married a son
of Ellis Hughes. They were all one big, happy family
back then.”
On the other hand, (one thing to note: for history
detective there is always an “on the other hand”)
Rutgers professor and author Jeffrey M. Dorwart, writes
in his Cape May County, New Jersey: The Making of an
American Resort Community, that there were "at least
three licensed public houses, and probably one
unlicensed house of entertainment--the Cape May County
grand jury indicted
Memucan Hughes in 1799 for causing a
public nuisance" and running a disorderly house
(brothel). This information, documented in court
records, supports the thought that Colonial House was
indeed built around
the Revolutionary War or at least prior to 1800.
Furthermore, there is evidence, according Greater Cape
May Historical Society president Harry Savage, that a
tavern license was issued to one Memuchan Hughes in
1769.
Architecturally though, the historian found that the
timbers and the nails used in constructing the building
were more in keeping with “around 1800.”
So, the disagreement continues. As a compromise, the
historical society’s new sign calls the house both The
Colonial House and the Memuchan Hughes House.
Let’s
move on to our other property in question – The Whilldin-Miller
House, AKA Daniels on Broadway Restaurant, at 416 South
Broadway.
The property is actually located in West Cape May and
was built by Joseph Whilldin somewhere around 1711-1718
with an expanded addition built by Jonas Miller in 1860.
Whilldin was also a member of the whaler yeoman
families.
As the story goes,
Whilldin bought the property from Chief Nummy whose
tribe owned the land.
According to historic preservation consultant Joan
Berkey, the house consists of three parts: the main
section “which is a vernacular
Victorian building with Gothic and Italianate details
built ca. 1860, a heavy timber frame section, 1 ½
stories tall, built in the early 18th century” and
located in the rear of the house, and a modern one-story
addition where the restaurant is located.
Berkey notes that the main section of the house “has a
rectangular footprint and features original wood
clapboards, original windows, and original exterior and
interior Victorian details.”
The reason the rear section of the house is thought to
date ca. 1711-1718 is again because of construction and
construction materials. “The heavy timber frame section
of the rear also has a rectangular footprint and
features exposed framing members (some of them molded),
random width pine floors, many original doors, and a
large walk-in fireplace. Adjacent to the fireplace is a
cooking/warming oven, a feature rarely seen in Cape May
County.”
Berkey notes that the “framing members” as well as the
“molded post” are characteristics
“common to the first
period construction in Cape May County.” That period is
thought to have begun in 1695 and run through 1730 or
1740.
Berkey has really done her research and traces the
family history of the house in great detail.
After Joseph Whilldin’s death in either 1747 or ’48, his
son James inherited the property and 140 acres. It looks
as though he expanded the house to include a center hall
and center chimney and a double parlor. Joseph Whilldin,
like Memuchan Hughes, was granted a tavern license in
1764,’65,’67, and ’68.
His son James inherited the property upon his death in
1780. James sold the house to Jeremiah Bennett a sea
captain in 1798. The Bennett heirs sold it to Jonas
Miller in 1841. Miller had already purchased Congress
Hall in 1835 and is credited with adding the Italianate
main block shortly before selling the property and four
acres to his daughter Sarah Newkirk, wife of
Philadelphia hotel owner Thompson Newkirk. The purchase
price? $3,000.
This is the kind of spike Campbell says to watch for
because it indicates, as Berkey notes, that a
“substantial house has been erected.”
The Newkirks lost the house in a sheriff’s sale in 1879.
The Fows took over ownership somewhere around 1900-1919.
And where did Berkey
find this information? It looks as though she followed
the history detectives checklist to the letter, as well
as Campbell’s suggestions. Deeds, wills, and physical
evidence are the key to unlocking your historic house’s
secrets.
The Whilldin-Miller house’s rich history predates Joseph
Whilldin. Whilldin senior bought the land from “King
Nummy” chief of the tribe, which owned the land.
So, where does that
leave us? When asked what he thought the oldest house in
Cape Island is Jim Campbell said, “I couldn’t say which
is older.”
But it looks as though they both win. Colonial House
stands uncontested as the oldest house standing in Cape
May. Daniels Restaurant plays host to the oldest house
in West Cape May.
And that Beach Drive/Beach Avenue thing? Also a win win.
Both sides of that fence swear they’re right and you
know what? They probably are.
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