Tuesday, March 12, 2019

Early History of the Ocean Plaza Hotel Part Two

Ocean Plaza 2019
Welcome back to "The Book Of Historical Secrets." This post is the second in a series of three parts on the early history of the Ocean Plaza Hotel. If you haven't read my last post "Early History of the Ocean Plaza Hotel Part One" I would recommend that you read that first before reading part two.

After Martha’s death, the ownership of the Inskip Cottage passed to John E. Inskip, who was at the time of Martha’s passing a resident of N.Y. State. John Edward Inskip was born in 1859; he was the grandson of Rev. John and Martha Inskip. John E.’s father, John Foster Inskip died when John E. was less than a year old.

In 1893, when John E. Inskip was in his 30's, he purchased the business owned by Joseph A. Wainright. The business was located in the building where the museum of the Historical Society of Ocean Grove is today at 50 Pitman Ave. Mr. Inskip purchased the Grocery, Hardware and Crockery Departments, while Mr. Wainright continued to operate the house-furnishing department. After Mr. Inskip purchased the grocery business of Mr. Wainright, Mr. Inskip moved himself and his family (wife, Emma and two sons, Harry and John) to Ocean Grove. 

In 1894, John E. Inskip hired a local contractor named Nelson H. Kilmer to renovate and enlarge the Inskip Cottage. The photo below was taken in 1894 showing the Inskip Cottage before construction was started. The cottage was transformed within 60 days into a 3½ story hotel with 36 rooms. Mr. Inskip named his new hotel, The Inskip House. It appears that Mr. Inskip decided that rather than run the hotel himself, he would rent it out. It was a common practice in that day for people such as Mr. Inskip to rent their hotels to entrepreneurs who would run their own hospitality business out of them.

Photo from the 25th Annual Report of the President OGCMA 1894

Inskip House 1911
When construction of the Inskip House was nearing completion, there was a notice in the Ocean Grove Times (11/17/1894) that The Inskip was being leased for 5 years to a Miss M. J. Holt. This apparently fell through because two months later in the January 12th, 1895 addition of the Ocean Grove Record, there was an ad announcing that The Inskip House was for rent. A few months later The Inskip was rented to Mrs. Mary Fitzgerald of Baltimore. Mrs. Fitzgerald rented The Inskip for 10 years. All together The Inskip House was rented for a period of 33 years to various individuals until the property was sold in 1929 to someone outside of the Inskip family.

In May of 1896, it appears that Mr. John E. Inskip sold his property at the corner of Ocean Pathway and Beach Ave. (Lots 487 & 488) to his father-in-law, Isaac G. Flack. For the sum of  $5,996.96.


Sanborn Map of Ocean Grove 1905 Sheet 52
Mr. Isaac G. Flack was a businessman from Lansingburgh New York and a well-known summer resident of Ocean Grove, New Jersey. Mr. Flack was born In Lisbon, St. Lawrence County, New York, July 4th, 1830. Mr. Flack was involved in many different business ventures in his life. The most notable of which was in 1871, when he established with his brother, William A. Flack, a wholesale grocery house in Troy, New York, under the firm name of Flack & Brother. In 1884 William A. Flack retired and Isaac G. Flack formed the firm of Flack & Co., his sons being interested in the business. He also found time to take an interest in public matters. The people of Lansingburgh elected him as their supervisor twice and once as their village president. Church matters occupied a considerable amount of his attention and for many years he was a trusted steward of his local Methodist Church. Isaac Flack also was a director of the Union National Bank of Troy, New York and his advice in financial matters was often sought and heeded. Mr. Flack was married twice. His first marriage was to Mary E. Abrams on April 12th, 1856. She died seventeen years later on May 17th 1873. His second marriage was to Mary S. Wade, on January 7th, 1875. She was a cousin of his first wife. Mr. Flack had six children, four sons, George A. Flack, Frank Flack, Harry Flack and Charles I. Flack, (both Frank and Harry died in early childhood) and two daughters, Mrs. Emma S. Inskip and Miss Mary L. Flack. On October 26th, 1899, at the age of 69, Isaac G. Flack died of a stroke at his home in Lansingburgh, New York.

The next owner of the Inskip House was Mrs. Emma S. Inskip, who was the daughter of Isaac and Mary E. Flack and the wife of John E. Inskip. Emma S. Flack was born in 1860. In 1881 while spending the summer in Ocean Grove she met her future husband, John E. Inskip. The couple where married the following year on March 28th, 1882. The ceremony took place in Lansingburg, New York and was officiated by the groom's grandfather, Rev. John S. Inskip. Emma and John E. had two children, Harry born in 1883 and John born in 1885.

After Emma and her husband John sold their Ocean Pathway properties to Emma's Father, Isaac Flack, it appears that they moved their residence back to New York State.  After the death of Emma's Father Isaac, it was mentioned in the November 3rd 1899 edition of the Asbury Park Journal, in the death notice of Isaac G. Flack, that “He (Isaac Flack) was the father of Mrs. John E. Inskip, wife of a former merchant of Ocean Grove." It would seem that by 1899, John no longer operated his Ocean Grove grocery store.

Guests on the porch of the Inskip House. (year unknown)
In 1903 there was a notice in the Ocean Grove Times (6/13/1903), which said that Emma and her son Harry arrived in Ocean Grove from Lansingburg, New York and that they were at their family’s cottage on Beach Avenue. It also said that while there, Emma was going to look after some repairs "to her property, the Inskip House, on Ocean Pathway.”

In 1905, there was another mention of Emma in the Ocean Grove Times. (2/25/1905) It said that she pledged to use natural gas in her cottage (the cottage directly behind the Inskip house) on Beach Ave. and McClintock Street. This would indicate that ownership of the Inskip House and the surrounding properties had returned to the Inskip Family and Emma was the owner.


Ocean Pathway Between  1913 - 1919
On December 27th, 1914, Emma's Husband, John E. Inskip died of "apoplexy" (stroke) at their Ocean Grove cottage, on the corner of Beach avenue and McClintock street. John's Funeral was held at their cottage and was conducted by Rev. A.E. Ballard, who was at the time the president of the OGCMA. After the death of John, it appears that Emma spent her remaining summers in Ocean Grove, at her cottage on the corner of Beach and McClintock. It was here that she entertained family, who came to visit and spend a week or two, for a vacation by the sea. Then On March 21st, 1924, Emma S. Inskip died, at the Leonard hospital in Troy, New York.

This concludes part two of the early history of the Ocean Plaza Hotel. I have saved the best for last, so keep your eyes open for part three, which once again is coming out next week. If you found this post interesting please share and Comment. Until next time… Justin Truth.

Early History of the Ocean Plaza Hotel Part Three







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