Atlantic City's wooden Boardwalk was originally built as a temporary walkway, raised above the beach so that vacationers could take a seaside stroll without treading sand into the grand hotels. Alongside the brash 99ยข shops and exotically named palm-readers, a few beautiful Victorian buildings that survived the wrecker's ball invoke past elegance, despite being dwarfed by the casinos and housing fast-food joints. Early in the morning, when the breezes from the ocean are at their most pleasant, the Boardwalk is peaceful, peopled only by keen cyclists and a few lost souls down on their luck.
The Central Pier offers all the fun of a fair, with rides, games and old-fashioned "guess your weight" challenges. A few blocks south, another pier has been remodeled into an ocean-liner-shaped shopping center. The small and faded Arts Center and Historic Museum (tel 609/347-5837), on the Garden Pier at the quiet northern end of the Boardwalk, has a free collection of seaside memorabilia, postcards, photos and a special exhibit on Miss America, as well as traveling art shows. A block off the Boardwalk, where Pacific Avenue meets Rhode Island Avenue, and at the heart of some of the city's worst deprivation, stands the Absecon Lighthouse . Active until 1933, it's recently been fully restored and offers a terrific view from its 167ft tower (July-Aug daily 11am-4pm, Sat also 7pm-9pm; Sept-Dec and March-June Thurs-Mon 11am-4pm; call for Jan-Feb hours; $4; tel 609/449-1360).
Atlantic City's beach is free, family filled and surprisingly clean, considering its proximity to the Boardwalk. Beaches at well-to-do Ventnor , a jitney ride away, are quieter, but charge users $3 per week. For the same fee, New Jersey's beautiful people pose on the beaches of Margate , three miles south of Atlantic City; all watched over by Lucy, the Margate Elephant at 9200 Atlantic Ave. A 65ft wood and tin Victorian oddity, Lucy was built as a seaside attraction in 1881 and used variously as a tavern and a hotel. Today her huge belly is filled with a museum of Atlantic City memorabilia, and photos and artifacts from her own history (Apr-May and Sept-Oct Sat & Sun 10am-5pm; June-Aug Mon-Sat 10am-8pm, Sun 10am-5pm; closed Nov-Mar; $4; tel 609/823-6473). -- location id = 41786 -->
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