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Seaside resort

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Resort located on the coast

Aseaside resort is a city,town, village, or hotel that serves as avacation resort and is located on acoast. Sometimes the concept includes an aspect of an official accreditation based on the satisfaction of certain requirements such as in the GermanSeebad.[a] Where abeach is the primary focus fortourists, it may be called abeach resort.

History

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Brighton, The Front and the Chain Pier Seen in the Distance, an early 19th century watercolour painting ofBrighton, a seaside resort inEast Sussex, England
Barcola inNortheast Italy, a holiday seaside resort
Ac. 1841 illustrationHeiligendamm inMecklenburg,Germany, established in 1793, the oldest seaside resort incontinental Europe

Seaside resorts have existed since antiquity. InRoman times, the town ofBaiae by theTyrrhenian Sea inItaly was a resort for those who were sufficiently prosperous.[1]Barcola by theAdriatic Sea in northern Italy with its Roman luxury villas is considered a special example of ancient leisure culture by the sea.[2]Mersea Island inEssex,England was a seaside holiday destination for wealthy ancient Romans living inColchester.[3]

The development of the beach as a popular leisure resort from the mid-19th century was the first manifestation of what is now the global tourist industry. The first seaside resorts were opened in the 18th century for the aristocracy, who began to frequent the seaside as well as the then fashionable spa towns, for recreation and health.[4] One of the earliest such seaside resorts wasScarborough inYorkshire during the 1720s; it had been a popular spa town since a stream of acidic water was discovered running from one of the cliffs to the south of the town in the 17th century.[4] The first rollingbathing machines were introduced by 1735.

In 1793,Heiligendamm inMecklenburg,Germany was founded as the first seaside resort of the European continent, which successfully attracted Europe's aristocracy to theBaltic Sea.[5]

The opening of the resort inBrighton and its reception ofroyal patronage from KingGeorge IV extended the seaside as a resort for health and pleasure to the much largerLondon market, and the beach became a centre for upper-class pleasure and frivolity. This trend was praised and artistically elevated by the newromantic ideal of the picturesque landscape;Jane Austen's unfinished novelSanditon is an example of that. Later,Queen Victoria's long-standing patronage of theIsle of Wight andRamsgate inKent ensured that a seaside residence was considered a highly fashionable possession for those wealthy enough to afford more than one home.

Seaside resorts for the middle and working classes

[edit]
TheBlackpool promenade inLancashire,England,c. 1898

The extension of this form of leisure to the middle and working classes began with the development of the railways in the 1840s; they offered cheap travel to fast-growing resort towns. In particular, the branch line to the small seaside town ofBlackpool fromPoulton-le-Fylde led to a sustained economic and demographic boom. A sudden influx of visitors arriving by rail motivated entrepreneurs to build accommodation and create new attractions, leading to more visitors and rapid growth throughout the 1850s and 1860s.[6]

The growth was intensified by the practice among the Lancashirecotton mill owners of closing the factories for a week every year to service and repair machinery. These became known aswakes weeks. Each town's mills would close for a different week, allowing Blackpool to manage a steady and reliable stream of visitors over a prolonged period in the summer. A prominent feature of the resort was thepromenade and thepleasure piers, where an eclectic variety of performances vied for the people's attention. In 1863, theNorth Pier in Blackpool was completed, rapidly becoming a centre of attraction for elite[clarification needed] visitors.Central Pier was completed in 1868, with a theatre and a large open-air dance floor.[7]

Many popular beach resorts were equipped withbathing machines, because even the all-coveringbeachwear of the period was considered immodest.

By the end of the century the English coastline had over 100 large resort towns, some with populations exceeding 50,000.[8]

Expansion around the world

[edit]
A seaside façade inMonte Carlo inMonaco in the 1870s
Thestrandkorb became a symbol of seaside tourism by the end of the 19th century, especially on the southernBaltic Sea coast

The development of the seaside resort abroad was stimulated by the well-developedEnglish love of the beach. TheFrench Riviera on theMediterranean Sea had already become a destination for the British upper class by the end of the 18th century. In 1864, the first railway toNice was completed, making the Riviera accessible to visitors from all over Europe. By 1874, foreign residents in Nice, mostly British, numbered 25,000. The coastline became renowned for attracting the royalty of Europe, includingQueen Victoria and KingEdward VII.[9]

In theUnited States, early seaside resorts in the late 1800s catered to the wealthy, including city businessmen.Cape May, New Jersey became one of the first coastal resorts in the United States, when regular steamboat traffic on theDelaware River began after the War of 1812. Early visitors to Cape May includedHenry Clay in 1847, andAbraham Lincoln in 1849. By 1880,Henry Flagler had extended several rail lines southward down the US Atlantic coastline, enticing northern upper-class families south to subtropical Florida. TheFlorida East Coast Railway brought northern tourists toSt. Augustine in greater numbers, and by 1887 Flagler began to build two large ornate hotels in St. Augustine, the 540-roomPonce de Leon Hotel and theHotel Alcazar, and bought theCasa Monica Hotel the next year.

Continental European attitudes towards gambling and nudity tended to be more lax than in Britain, and British and French entrepreneurs were quick to exploit the possibilities. In 1863, the Prince ofMonaco,Charles III andFrançois Blanc, a French businessman, arranged forsteamships and carriages to take visitors from Nice to Monaco, where large luxury hotels, gardens and casinos were built. The place was renamedMonte Carlo.[citation needed] Commercial seabathing also spread to other areas of theUnited States and parts of theBritish Empire such asAustralia, wheresurfing became popular in the early 20th century. By the 1970s cheap and affordable air travel was the catalyst for the growth of a global tourism market.

Since the late 20th century,recreational fishing and leisure boat pursuits have become very lucrative, and traditionalfishing villages are often well positioned to take advantage of this.Destin, Florida, for instance, has evolved from anartisanal fishing village into a seaside resort dedicated to tourism with a large fishing fleet of recreational charter boats.[10]

Around the world

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Albania

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Australia

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Hyams Beach in theJervis Bay Territory inAustralia, renowned for its brilliantly white sand
Manly Beach inSydney, a popular Australian beach
Surfers Paradise, one of the most frequently visited Australian seaside resorts

Belgium

[edit]
The beach and promenade pier inOstend inBelgium

Seaside resorts on the Flemish coast ofWest-Vlaanderen exist at the famousKnokke,Ostend and alsoDe Panne and coastal towns along theNorth Sea served by the coastal tramwayKusttram run byDe Lijn.

Bulgaria

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Nesebar inBulgaria
Sunny Beach in Bulgaria
The coast aroundGolden Sands with the neighbouring nature park
Albena in Bulgaria
Sozopol

Croatia

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Opatija inCroatia

There are many seaside resorts on the jagged coastline of Croatia and its several islands, including:

Cyprus

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Denmark

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Estonia

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Finland

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Naantali, a seaside resort inFinland

France

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A map of theFrench coastline showing various resort areas

With three long coastlines,France has many seaside resorts on its various coasts; for specific towns in each region, see the following articles:

Georgia

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A beach inBatumi inGeorgia

Germany

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Main articles:List of seaside resorts in Germany andList of spa towns in Germany
Steep coast atDarss West Beach, nearAhrenshoop in Germany
Kurhaus ofBinz onRügen island, one of the most famous German seaside spas, which showcases the typicalresort architecture of Germany's Pomeranian coast
An aerial view ofSassnitz seaside resort and the nearbyJasmund National Park chalk cliffs,Rugia island in Germany
Seals sunbathing at a beach inNorderney, a North Sea resort in Germany

Germany is known for its traditional seaside resorts on theBaltic Sea and theNorth Sea coasts, mainly established in the 19th century. InGerman they are calledSeebad ("Sea Spa") orSeeheilbad, sometimes withOstsee- orNordsee- as prefixes for the respective coastline.

The most prestigious resorts can be found along the Baltic coastline, including the islands ofRugia andUsedom. They often feature a unique architectural style calledresort architecture. The coast ofMecklenburg and Western Pomerania alone has an overall length of 2000 km[11] and is nicknamedGermanRiviera.[12]Heiligendamm inMecklenburg, established in 1793, is the oldest seaside resort in Germany andcontinental Europe.[13]

Most important coastal areas with seaside resorts in Germany:

Selection of German seaside resorts along theBaltic Sea coastline:

At theNorth Sea coastline:

Greece

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A hotel inKranidi inGreece

Greece, renowned as a summer destination, features a large amount of seaside resorts. Some of them include:

India

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India has a long coastline and hence has numerous beaches and resort towns. Beaches were already a popular tourist destination for the kings and the masses alike especially in South India where the Dravidian Empires built large temples near the seashore. Beaches are also associated with Hindu rituals where pilgrims from different parts of India go for worshipping rituals. The sunrise and sunset are also associated with Hindu traditions which are considered sacred my many Hindu communities and there are festivals to celebrate the sunset and sunrise. A major example of such festivals isChhath Puja. The British Raj also contributed in the development of Beach Resorts where Europeans used to visit during the harsh and cold winter of Europe.

The archipelago of Andaman and Nicobar Islands and Lakshadweep are also famous for beach resorts. Other beach resorts in India includes:

Iceland

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The beach inNauthólsvík,Iceland

Indonesia

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Ireland

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The seafront inBray, County Wicklow, Ireland
Kilkee on the west coast of Ireland

The 'Irish Riviera' on the South Coast of Ireland features the seaside resorts ofYoughal,Ardmore,Dungarvan,Cóbh andBallycotton, all set close to the south coast ofIreland. Youghal has been a favoured holiday destination for over 100 years, situated on the banks of theRiver Blackwater as it reaches the sea.[citation needed] Dungarvan is a seaside market town beneath the mountains in the centre of the Irish south coast.Kinsale is often described[by whom?] as a food lover's and yachting town, with a diverse range of restaurants, as well as a large and active creative community with numerous art galleries and record and book shops.[citation needed]

Seaside resorts in the East of Ireland developed after the introduction of rail travel. TheDublin and Kingstown Railway introducedday-trippers fromDublin to Kingstown (nowDún Laoghaire) inSouth Dublin, and the coastal town became Ireland's first seaside resort. Other South Dublin towns and villages such asSandycove,Dalkey andKilliney grew as seaside resorts when the rail network was expanded. Since the opening ofBray Daly Station in 1852, theCounty Wicklow coastal town ofBray has become the largest seaside resort on the East Coast of Ireland. The town ofGreystones, five miles south of Bray, also grew as a seaside resort when the railway line was extended in 1855. Other seaside resorts includeCourtown andRosslare Strand inCounty Wexford.

Ulster has a number of seaside resorts, such asPortrush, situated on the north coast, with its two beaches and a world-famous golf course,Royal Portrush Golf Club.[14] Other Ulster seaside resorts areNewcastle, located on the east coast at the foot of the Mourne Mountains;Ballycastle;Portstewart;Rathmullan;Bundoran andBangor.Bangor Marina is one of the largest in Ireland and the marina has on occasion been awarded theBlue Flag for attention to environmental issues.

The main seaside towns in the west of Ireland are inCounty Clare; the largest areLahinch andKilkee. Lahinch is a popularsurfing location.

Like British resorts, many seaside towns in Ireland have turned to other entertainment industries. Larger resorts such as Bray orPortrush hostair shows, while most resorts host summer festivals.[citation needed]

Israel

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Ein Bokek on theDead Sea inIsrael

Israel is a major tourist area. Tourism in Israel is one of the major sources of income, with beautiful beaches, such as those found on theMediterranean Sea and theRed Sea. Most tourists come from the United States and European countries. Other resorts include:

Italy

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Positano and its sea inItaly
A beach inTaormina, Italy

Italy is known for its beach resorts which are visited from both local and foreign tourists. Many of these have a history of tourism that dates back to the 19th century.

Beach resorts include (among many others):

Japan

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There are seaside resorts inHonshu,Shikoku, andKyushu, butOkinawa is particularly known for its beaches.

Jordan

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All seaside resorts inJordan are located inAqaba, the only seaport in Jordan. Seaside resorts of Aqaba includeAyla Oasis andMarsa Zayed in the Tala Bay region.[citation needed]

Kenya

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South Korea

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Many seaside resorts are located inGyeongsang,Jeolla,Chungcheong,Gangwon,Gyeonggi,Incheon,Ulsan andBusan.

Latvia

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Lithuania

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A map ofLithuania andRussia's resorts on theCuronian Spit

Malaysia

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Malta

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Comino inMalta

The following are the main resort towns inMalta:[15]

Mexico

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Cancún inMexico

Mexican resorts are popular with North American and local residents, with Mexico being the second most visited country in the Americas. Notable resorts on the mainland and the Baja Gold Coast andPeninsula include:

Netherlands

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Kurhaus of Scheveningen in theNetherlands

There are many seaside resorts on the Dutch coast, chiefly in the provinces ofNorth Holland,South Holland andZeeland, as well as on theWest Frisian Islands.

A selection includes:

New Zealand

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Norway

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Poland

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Hel inPoland

Poland's coast on theBaltic Sea includes many traditional seaside resorts established throughout the 18th-20th centuries. In the past the resorts have received mostly domestic tourism, however, since the 1990s, following the opening of Polish borders, the international tourism has grown considerably.[16] Notable resorts include:

Portugal

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Quarteira inPortugal

Many local and foreign tourists visit Portuguese resorts, particularly those on theAlgarve andMadeira regions. Notable resorts include:

Romania

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The Romanian Black Sea resorts stretch from the Danube Delta in the north down to the Romanian-Bulgarian border in the south, along 275 kilometers of coastline.

Mangalia Port inMangalia, Romania

Russia

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The "Caucasian Riviera" inSochi,c. 1909
Sochi

South Africa

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Main article:Seaside resorts in South Africa
Cape Town, the most visited tourist destination inSouth Africa, has many beaches sprawling across its metropolitan area
Coffee Bay, a small seaside resort on theWild Coast, known for theHole-in-the-wall, its views and beaches
Durban, a major holiday destination on South Africa's east coast renowned for its warm weather all-year round
Margate, a holiday destination on South Africa's east coast and one of the most visited in the country
Port Elizabeth, a seaside city in theEastern Cape province renowned for its surfing, temperate climate, and beautiful beaches
Hondeklip Bay, a coastal and fishing village on South Africa's west coast well known for its unspoiled beaches and its rock and tidal pools

South America

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Notable seaside resorts in South America includeBúzios,Camboriú,Florianópolis,Fortaleza,Recife andSalvador inBrazil;Mar del Plata inArgentina;Piriapolis andPunta del Este inUruguay;Easter Island andViña del Mar inChile;Barranquilla andCartagena inColombia; andGuayaquil,Salinas and theGalapagos Islands inEcuador.

Spain

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A panoramic view ofSan Sebastián in Spain
Barceloneta beach inBarcelona, Spain

Spanish resorts are popular with many locals and foreigners. Notable resorts on the mainland and islands include:

Sweden

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Tanzania

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Turkey

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A map depicting the Turkish Riviera in blue, highlighting, from east to west, the major settlements ofAlanya,Antalya,Kemer,Fethiye,Marmaris,Bodrum,Kuşadası, andÇeşme

Ukraine

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A panoramic view ofYalta

Some examples ofUkrainian seaside resort towns are:

United Kingdom

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See also:List of seaside resorts in the United Kingdom
Margate inKent, the first seaside resort of England, established in the 1750s
Scarborough's South Bay
Long walkway supported by metal legs arising from the sand, leading to a white painted building. In the foreground are donkeys on sand.
The Grand Pier and donkey rides atWeston-super-Mare

The United Kingdom saw the popularisation ofseaside resorts, and nowhere was this more seen than inBlackpool. Blackpool catered for workers from across industrialNorthern England, who packed its beaches andpromenade. Other northern seaside towns (for exampleBridlington,Cleethorpes,Morecambe,Scarborough,Skegness, andSouthport) shared in the success of this new concept, especially from trade duringwakes weeks. The concept spread rapidly to other British coastal towns, including several on the coast ofNorth Wales, notablyRhyl, andLlandudno, the largest resort inWales and known as "The Queen of the Welsh Resorts", from as early as 1864.[21] As the 19th century progressed, Britishworking classday-trippers travelled on organised trips such asrailway excursions, or bysteamer, for which longpiers were erected so that the ships bringing the trade could berth.

Another area notable for its seaside resorts was (and is) theFirth of Clyde, outside Glasgow. Glaswegians would take a ferry "doon the watter" from the city, down theRiver Clyde, to the Firth's islands and peninsulas and beyond, such asCowal,Bute,Arran, andKintyre. Resorts includeRothesay,Lamlash,Whiting Bay,Dunoon,Tighnabruaich,Carrick Castle,Helensburgh,Largs,Millport andCampbeltown. In contrast to many resorts, some on the Firth of Clyde have continued to prosper as middle-classcommuter towns.

Some resorts, especially those more southerly such asHastings,Worthing,Eastbourne,Bournemouth, andBrighton were built as new towns or extended by local landowners to appeal to wealthier holidaymakers. Others came about due to their proximity to large urban areas of population, such asSouthend-on-Sea, which became increasingly popular with residents of London once rail links were established to it allowing day trips from London. The sunshine and sea air were seen by Victorians as beneficial for health,[22] and resorts such asVentnor owed their growth to a visit being considered as treatment for chest complaints. Owing to its generally better climate, the south coast has many seaside towns, the most being inSussex.

In the later 20th century, the popularity of the British seaside resort declined for the same reason that it first flourished: advances in transport. The greater accessibility of foreign holiday destinations, throughpackage holidays and, more recently, Europeanlow-cost airlines, makes it easier to holiday abroad. Despite the loyalty of returning holidaymakers, resorts such as Blackpool have struggled to compete against the hotter weather ofSouthern Europe and thesunbelt in theUnited States. Now, many symbols of the traditional British resort (holiday camps,end-of-the-pier shows and saucypostcards) are regarded by some[who?] as drab and outdated; the skies are imagined to be overcast and the beach windswept. This is not always true; for exampleBroadstairs inKent has retained much of its old world charm withPunch and Judy anddonkey rides and still remains popular, being only one hour from theM25. Brighton has also seen a fall in visitor numbers in recent years.[when?][23][24] The city has also experienced a rise in homelessness,[when?] especially noticeable on the city streets and in green spaces where tents have been erected.[25]

Many people can now afford "second holidays" and short breaks, resulting in increased tourism in British seaside towns. Many seaside towns have large shopping centres which also attract people from a wide area. Day trippers still come to the coastal towns, but on a more local scale than during the 19th century.[citation needed]

Many coastal towns are also popular retirement hotspots where older people reside permanently or take short breaks in the autumn months. Other English coastal towns have successfully sought to project a sense of their unique character. In particular,Southwold on theSuffolk coast is an active yet peaceful retirement haven with an emphasis on calmness, quiet countryside and jazz.Weymouth, Dorset offers itself as "the gateway to the Jurassic Coast", Britain's only natural World Heritage Site.Newquay inCornwall offers itself as the 'surfing capital of Britain', hosting international surfing events on its shores.

Torbay in SouthDevon is also known as theEnglish Riviera. Consisting of the towns ofTorquay,Paignton with its pier andBrixham, the bay has 20 beaches and coves along its 22-mile (35 km) coastline, ranging from small secluded coves to the larger promenade-style seafronts of Torquay's Torre Abbey Sands and Paignton Sands.

However, British seaside resorts have faced increasingly stiff competition from sunnier resorts overseas since the 1970s. Largely due to the falling price of air travel under theConservative government ofMargaret Thatcher (elected in 1979), the number of British families who took holidays abroad rose significantly in the 1980s.[26] The decline of British seaside resorts was discussed in theMorrissey song "Everyday Is Like Sunday" where daily life in the resort is likened to the emptiness of streets once associated with the shop closures on Sunday.

United States

[edit]
Fort Lauderdale harbor
Fort Lauderdale harbor

With 3,800 miles (6100 km) of coastline, the US mainland has hundreds of seaside resorts on three coasts,Atlantic Ocean,Gulf of Mexico, andPacific Ocean. Unlike in many smaller countries, the seaside resorts in the US are located in various climate zones, with great differences in topography and environment. Many American seaside resorts are popular destination across the world, known for their climates, culture, and entertainment opportunities.

Seaside resorts in the United States first developed near the nation's largest industrial cities on the upperEast Coast, includingNew York City,Philadelphia, andBoston.Cape May, New Jersey, part of thePhiladelphia metropolitan area, andProvincetown, Massachusetts, part of theBoston metropolitan area were two of the nation's first seaside resorts, developed in the 19th century and catering to city workers. Cape May is often called Americas "first seaside resort". The early emergence of Cape May as a summer resort was due to easy transport by water from Philadelphia to the Atlantic Ocean. Early Cape May vacationers were carried to the town on sloops from Philadelphia, and water transport was also easy from New York, Baltimore, Washington, D.C., and points south. The resort business in Cape May began to thrive when regular steamboat traffic on theDelaware River began after theWar of 1812. Early visitors to Cape May includedHenry Clay in 1847, andAbraham Lincoln in 1849. Today, theCape May Historic District is one of the largest and well preserved examples of Victorian architecture in the United States.

On the southern Atlantic coast,Henry Flagler had the idea to makeSt. Augustine, Florida a winter resort. He built several rail lines south, and combined them with existing lines to create theFlorida East Coast Railway in 1885. He built a railroad bridge over theSt. Johns River in 1888, opening up the Atlantic coast of Florida to development. In 1887 Flagler began construction of two large ornate hotels in St. Augustine, the 540-roomPonce de Leon Hotel and theHotel Alcazar, and bought theCasa Monica Hotel the next year.

InMiami, Florida, the community ofCocoanut (now Coconut) Grove began development as a resort town in the 1880s with the building of the Bayview House (aka Peacock Inn) which closed in 1902. Visitors to the greater Miami area then flocked to Camp Biscayne (in Coconut Grove), theRoyal Palm Hotel inDowntown Miami, and other resort hotels in Miami, as well as in smaller numbers to theFlorida Keys. In 1894, the lavishRoyal Poinciana Hotel opened in Palm Beach, Florida, with rave reviews from wealthy New York tourists who picked oranges in January to their delight. On the Gulf of Mexico, the City of Galveston was emerging as a booming city, and in 1882, architectNicholas J. Clayton designed theBeach Hotel. By 1888, Galveston, TX was a wealthy city and booming seaside playground for wealthyNew Orleans businessmen.

On the Pacific coast in California, in April 1886, Babcock and Story created the Coronado Beach Company, which sought to develop Coronado as a seaside resort. In the mid-1880s, the San Diego region was in the midst of one of its first real estate booms. TheHotel del Coronado was built in March 1887, with Babcock's visions for the hotel built around a courtyard of tropical trees, shrubs and flowers, with a dining wing to give full value to the view of the ocean, bay and city. By 1915, more hotels were built along the Los Angeles coastline to serve the wealthy tourists and Hollywood film makers. In May 1926, brothers E.A. "Jack" Harter and T.D. "Til" Harter built theHotel Casa del Mar in Santa Monica, at a cost of $2 million, creating one of the most successful beach clubs in Southern California, popular with socialites and Hollywood celebrities.

In the 1920s, Carl Fisher was the main promoter ofMiami Beach, and helped to develop the city as a seaside resort. To accommodate the wealthy tourists, several grand hotels were built, among them theFlamingo Hotel. In 1926, the massiveThe Breakers hotel in Palm Beach had been rebuilt, and there was a large northern tourist industry in coastal southern Florida. By the 1950s with increasing auto travel, more seaside resorts grew along the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, while small, declining industrial ports were being rebuilt. In 1954, theFontainebleau Miami Beach, and was considered, (at that time) the most lavish seaside hotel in the world.

In the modern era, hundreds of seaside resorts now string the Gulf, Atlantic, and Pacific coasts of the United States. Many Americans move with the seasons when they visit seaside resorts, vacationing in northern seaside areas in the warm season (April through October), and then moving to southern areas in the cold season (November through March). Many seaside resorts in Florida and California however, see travelers all year.

Some examples of well-known and sought-after American coastal resort towns are:

Miami Beach, Florida
Newport Beach, California
La Jolla, California
Ocean City, Maryland
Myrtle Beach, South Carolina
South Padre Island, Texas
Asunset on the beach atAtlantic City, New Jersey, famous for the world's firstboardwalk[27]

See also

[edit]

Notes

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  1. ^Seebad is a name for places with bathing culture and bathing tourism on the seashore. In Germany it is also a rating for health resorts that is given by the federal states. The prestigious title can be given to localities in which medical facilities are available for the implementation of spa measures.Seebad

References

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  1. ^Smith, William (1854)."Baiae".Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography. Retrieved13 August 2019.
  2. ^Zeno Saracino: "Pompei in miniatura": la storia di "Vallicula" o Barcola. In: Trieste All News, 29 September 2018.
  3. ^Tyler, Sue (September 2009).West Mersea: Seaside Heritage Project (Report). Essex County Council. p. 5. Archived fromthe original on 23 September 2015. Retrieved23 September 2014.
  4. ^abJ. Christopher Holloway; Neil Taylor (2006).The business of tourism. Pearson Education. p. 29.ISBN 0-273-70161-4.
  5. ^Bradley, Kimberly."A Spa Town Reclaims Its Glory,"New York Times. 3 June 2007.
  6. ^"Blackpool History"(PDF).Blackpool Tourist Office. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 5 July 2007. Retrieved18 March 2007.
  7. ^Andrews, Robert (2002).The Rough Guide to Britain. Rough Guides. p. 597.ISBN 978-1-85828-881-9.
  8. ^Walton, John K."The seaside resort: a British cultural export". Department of Humanities, University of Central Lancashire.
  9. ^Michael Nelson,Queen Victoria and the Discovery of the Riviera, Tauris Parke Paperbacks, 2007.
  10. ^History of the World's Luckiest Fishing VillageArchived 16 November 2007 at theWayback Machine The Destin Area Chamber of Commerce. Retrieved 21 April 2009.
  11. ^"Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania: Land of Lakes and Leisure – Germanfoods.org". 30 March 2008.
  12. ^"German Riviera – Mecklenburg".german-riviera.com.
  13. ^"Seaside resorts – Seaside resorts – Touristic sites – Destinations in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern".Tourismusverband Mecklenburg-Vorpommern e.V. 4 September 2021.
  14. ^Ranked as the third best course outside the United States byGolf Digest in 2007"GolfDigest.com – Planet Golf". Archived fromthe original on 27 April 2007. Retrieved11 May 2007.
  15. ^Resorts & Regions – visitmalta.com
  16. ^"Seaside Resorts, Regions in Poland". excitingpoland.com. Archived fromthe original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved5 June 2013.
  17. ^"Top 10 Beach Cities". 8 July 2010. Archived fromthe original on 12 July 2010. Retrieved30 July 2010.
  18. ^Movie "Worlds Best Beaches", Discovery Channel 2005
  19. ^"Population booms in summer resorts close to Istanbul due to virus fear - Türkiye News".Hürriyet Daily News. 23 September 2020. Retrieved22 July 2024.
  20. ^"Türkiye".web.deu.edu.tr. Retrieved22 July 2024.
  21. ^Ivor Wynne Jones.Llandudno Queen of Welsh Resorts (chapter 3 page 19) referring to theLiverpool Mercury
  22. ^"Oh, why do we like to be beside the seaside?". BBC News. 28 September 2013. Retrieved1 May 2018.
  23. ^"Drop in day visitors to Brighton and Hove". BBC News. 11 October 2016.
  24. ^"Day visitors to Brighton and Hove fall by a million".The Argus. 11 October 2016.
  25. ^"Homeless camps and human excrement left in city centre".The Argus. 17 August 2019.
  26. ^"Thatcher years in graphics". BBC News. 18 November 2005.
  27. ^"Atlantic City Boardwalk". State of New Jersey. Retrieved6 September 2023.

Further reading

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  • Tom Geoghegan (21 August 2006)."Wish you were (back) here?". BBC News. – Geoghegan looks at the economy of British seaside resorts and considers a possible resurgence in their popularity.
  • Professor John Walton (1 March 2001)."The Victorian Seaside".British History. BBC. – Walton looks at the Victorian traditions that underpin British seaside holidays.

External links

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