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Posts Tagged ‘Main Avenue’

April Cornell, Pet Shop, DJ’s 2 stores are recently all gone due to sharp rent increases.  This is #60 Main Avenue.

In 2002, author Ted David published a book called The Other Side of Ocean Grove.  We interviewed him this past July.   Here is a link:

Ted David author

Chapter 11 of his book is called “Main Avenue”  He says that Ocean Grove was planned to have “that kind of Main Street designed to serve the immediate community and none other.”  But then he went on to say, “Main Avenue has grown into a tourist attraction that caters to the summertime buying urges of visitors as well as serving the needs of year round residents of the Grove.”

But after that, he notes, parking became much more difficult on Main Avenue with many tourists coming to town. However, he said that locals could still walk or bike to carry groceries and other items back home.  What would he say today?

David takes his readers on a 2002 walking tour of our shopping area, and he notes and comments about the stores which were there when he walked around town.  Here is the list that he came up with, and you will see that most of them are now gone:  (* means still open)

Macaroon Shop bakery

Flower shop

Barber shop gone in Ted’s time

Sampler Inn (gone in Ted’s time)

Video and snack shop  (before that there was a barber)

Daily Grind:  coffee shop and bakery

Favorite Things owned then by Harvey and Aida *

Ocean Grove Trading Co.*

Main Avenue Deli

Shell Shop

Raspberry Café

Moonstruck restaurant  (now in A. Park)

Captain Jack’s restaurant  (now Seagrass)*

Kitch and Kaboodle

Tina’s Gift Shop

Gannon Construction

Century 21 Realtors*

Freedman’s Bakery (now OG Bake Shoppe) *

Bronson and Blair Real Estate

Ace Hardware  (now OG  Hardware)*

Cleaners

Diane Turton Real Estate *

Nagle’s*

Newsstand/toy store

The Chamber of Commercials has rented a house on Main Ave.  But when they close the street, it’s not where they live.

David concludes his chapter by saying , “The commercial area that is Main Avenue continues to evolve.”

He says, ” The Great Auditorium is the heart and soul of the Grove, but Main Avenue is its skeleton and nerves.”

David’s updated version of his book will be out soon.  We don’t know yet if he has a new Main Avenue chapter.

Recently we lost the Yoga studio, Surf shop, Fusion Jewels, Candy shop, Season’s General Store, and PNC Bank. A new Christmas shop remains open (when it’s open), and there is a new yogurt store.  A couple of lunch places have started out. The Comfort Zone has expanded as has the Emporium clothing store.

Favorite Things is open, but it is for sale.  Cheese on Main remains open and successful——in the gourmet food category.

Some inns have closed on Main, but two hotels are still open.

Vacancies at #50 Main Avenue–a new building.

 

The sign on the door says “private residence.” 9/14/18. Main Avenue.

Soon a yarn store will open called Balzac Company. We still need a coffee shop, and maybe one will open soon  (That’s the rumor).

Balzac, the yarn shop, is in the offing at #50. Blogfinger photo 9/14/18

One could imagine that some sort of cultural  or economic tidal wave is tossing Main Avenue around, but it seems that the shifts which we have seen recently may be no different from the fluctuations that have occurred in the past  (as seen in Ted David’s walking tour.)

The tides of change are probably due to multiple factors such as the impressive seasonal fluctuations in business on Main.  Maybe Asbury Park’s  successes are effecting business here, and also the worsened parking situation has chased away potential customers.  Is there a fundamental economic theory at play, such as an impending recession?

Whatever the explanation(s,) Main Avenue seems dreary and worrisome now.  What is the Chamber of Commercials planning to do about the situation?

 

ALLAN SHERMAN:

 

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Morning, Main Avenue, Ocean Grove, New Jersey. By Paul Goldfinger

Editor’s note: 8//18/17.     Recently we have seen a fragrance shop and a Christmas shop open on Main Avenue.  We have been discussing the future of the Grove and we have questioned the idea that this should be a tourist town.

This article (below) from 5 years ago addresses that topic and will offer some perspective when we consider the businesses in the Grove today and when we realize that the residents of the town get short shrift if their  lifestyles are even considered.

By Paul Goldfinger, editor  @Blogfinger

In 2002, Mr. Ted David self-published a book called “The Other Side of  Ocean Grove.”  Mr. David was fascinated by the quirky nature of the town, so his chapters had titles like “The Wisdom Bench,” “Krisanna’s,” “Blasted Mosquitoes” and “The Gates.” Chapter 11, however, was called “Main Avenue.” About that subject, Mr. David said, “The Great Auditorium is the heart and soul of the Grove, but Main Avenue is its skeleton and nerves.”

Recently we learned that a toy store would open in town, and an interesting discussion developed as to the nature of Main Avenue and what kinds of businesses should be here. There is, however, no set policy on this subject, so perhaps we can learn something from history.

A long-time Grover told me that early in the town’s history there were businesses up and down Main and on the side streets. Judging from a published list from 1938, it would appear that she is correct. Ted David points out that the founders wanted businesses in town to serve only the community who lived here. They had little interest in tourism other than the summer church programs.

In 1938.* on Main Avenue, we had the following businesses:  1 restaurant, 2 pharmacies, 1 electrician, 3 plumbing and heating, 1 fish and vegetable, 1 bead shop, 1 jeweler/watch repair, 5 real estate/insurance, 2 newsstands, 1 taxi stand, 1 book/needle shop, 2 gift shops and 13 hotels. Down multiple other  streets were: 1 ice cream, 1 antique, 3 carpenters, 1 auto repair, 1 dry cleaning, 1 fish market, 1 greenhouse, 1 groceries and meats, 1 milk/dairy, 1 movie house, 1 butcher, 1 painting and decorating, and 4 restaurants.

Mr David points out that until around 1990, the downtown was still devoted mostly to businesses that served the townspeople. But since then, as Ocean Grove rebounded from a downhill slide in the ’70’s and ’80’s, the idea developed that Main Avenue should change to attract tourists, and that is where we are now.

Main Avenue 2010. Paul Goldfinger photo

In recent years we have lost a cleaners, an internist, a bank branch, a quality restaurant (Moonstruck),  two serious bakeries, a cafeteria, a real deli, a real grocery, a barber shop, a newsstand (recently), a gas station (at the hardware store) and a pharmacy.

Who’s to say what happens next on Main Avenue? In this town, we can’t even trust zoning to protect our town  (Remember Mary’s Place?)    We have a Chamber of Commerce, but what do they do for the town’s residents besides close Main Ave. for car shows and other events?  Do they ever consider the lifestyles and needs of those who actually live in town? And where’s our coffee shop?  

And is it time to abolish blue laws to give the town a pick-me-up? It’s been a new ball game since 1980. 

*  Ref: Gibbons History of Ocean Grove

JONI MITCHELL  “In France They Kiss on Main Street”

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