MAC’s new exhibit combines historic photographs, personal quotes, and original art in reference to racially segregated beaches in Cape May and Atlantic City prior to the civil rights movement.
The CapeMay.com blog
MAC’s new exhibit combines historic photographs, personal quotes, and original art in reference to racially segregated beaches in Cape May and Atlantic City prior to the civil rights movement.
You might not be able to walk through the Physick Estate or make the climb up the lighthouse right now, but Cape May MAC has released new videos that let you experience both from home. Tour the 1879 Emlen Physick Estate Led by Cape May MAC interpretor Jon Vile Climb the 1859 Cape May lighthouse… Read more »
If you’re lucky enough to be with us here in Cape May for the holiday season, you are in for a whole lot of magical. There are some things you’ll definitely want to add to your list of things to do, and here they are: Tree Lighting Ceremonies Tree Lighting Ceremonies are taking place… Read more »
I witnessed a murder at Aleathea’s Restaurant. A murder mystery dinner, that is. It wasn’t a dark or stormy night. My colleague and I arrived at the Inn of Cape May in fading daylight, on an April evening so warm we didn’t need jackets. We’d come for the opening night of An Evening to Die… Read more »
The 2018 Cape May Designer Show House, presented by the Mid-Atlantic Center for the Arts and Humanities (MAC), is nothing short of stunning. Built in 1911, the John P. Forsythe House was part of the East Cape May Project in the early 1900s, which had the goal of making Beach Avenue the most elegant street… Read more »
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