Continuing Studies Program Does AC Through Walking Tours

Participants entering Civil Rights Garden

Galloway, N.J. 鈥 Around 30 people braved a heat wave to embark on a tour through Atlantic City鈥檚 former 鈥済ayborhood,鈥 now known as the Orange Loop, on Friday, July 22. Thanks to the occasional ocean breeze and some shadowed areas along the route, participants of the program, sponsored by 淫性视频鈥檚 Office of Continuing Studies, learned about Atlantic City鈥檚 cultural history. 

Diana Strelczyk, assistant director of the Office of Continuing Studies, developed the walking tours in the summer of 2018 after seeing an article about Levi Fox, adjunct professor of General Studies and Atlantic City historian, leading tours of former casinos. Strelczyk thought a similar tour, but encompassing all of Atlantic City鈥檚 history, would be a lot of fun, and that led her to develop the program with Fox.

鈥淔or me personally, these tours offer so many valuable things,鈥 Strelczyk said. 鈥淚 get to learn about local history in a fun and engaging way, I experience my city鈥檚 life and culture street by street, embracing the small details I don鈥檛 notice from my car. I love the exercise, sun and ocean breeze from the walk, and it reminds me of all the walking tours I have experienced in my world travels.鈥 

Professor in front of Park Place Beach

Led by Fox, the group visited notable sites such as Louisa Mack鈥檚 (now demolished) Entertainer鈥檚 Club along what used to be called 鈥淪nake Alley鈥; the Civil Rights Garden on Pacific Avenue and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard; and Park Place Beach, which was designated as 鈥済ay-friendly鈥 by former Mayor Don Guardian.

Fox was enthusiastic to give tour participants an experience of Atlantic City grounded in the lived experiences of the local community, which will then lead to more interactions between locals and nonlocals.

鈥淔or the Ducktown tour, we go all throughout the neighborhood and get to experience history live and up close. For example, on the most recent tour, you could smell freshly baked bread on the last leg of the walk and a third of the group lined up to purchase fresh Italian rolls as the tour concluded,鈥 Fox said. 鈥淭his reminded me of when I gave tours for two years at the James Candy Factory in 2012-13, and the smell of chocolate would inspire tourists to line up to purchase souvenir taffy.鈥

Participants felt the same way. Brooke Riester, a new Atlantic City resident who considered the Civil Rights Garden 鈥渁 hidden gem,鈥 said the tour鈥檚 intimacy compared to similar ones in Washington, D.C., which was something she really enjoyed. 

鈥淭he only other tour that I鈥檝e done was a two-mile tour of all of the monuments, and it was cool because it was like having 600 of your new closest friends from all around the world,鈥 Riester said. 鈥淚t was much better having only 30 (in Atlantic City). You couldn鈥檛 really keep up with the tour guide on the D.C. tour because it was so large, so it was nice that I could stay close enough to the tour guide and get all of the information that he was relaying.鈥 

Participants in front of Bourre

Riester, Strelczyck and Fox are all looking forward to the next tour, which will be in the Lower Chelsea neighborhood on July 29. That tour, which is already sold out, is a new collaboration with the . Fox is ecstatic about the tour because of the evolution of its theme. 

鈥淭he theme started focusing on the Jewish heritage of Atlantic City, which includes my own family background,鈥 Fox said. 鈥淗owever, it now focuses on changing Chelsea, and waves of immigration into Atlantic City over the last century.鈥 

Since the walking tours only allow 30 people, spots tend to fill up quickly. Even after canceling tours due to the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, the program has been sold out every time it has been offered. The Office of Continuing Studies hopes, with continued increases in popularity, to expand the tours into the fall and to include more routes.

鈥淭his year we have seen unprecedented community support for the tours, and we are planning more tours soon,鈥 Strelczyk said. 鈥淲e hope to build our partnerships with community leaders in 鈥榥ew鈥 neighborhoods such as Bungalow Park, the North/South Inlets, Midtown, and more, to offer a more collaborative and inclusive picture of Atlantic City history.鈥

Both Fox and Strelczyk believe the tours not only provide a fun and informative experience but also encourage trusting relationships among tourists and residents. 

Flowers surrounding the placard for the Civil Rights Garden

鈥淵ou may have heard that you shouldn鈥檛 leave the Boardwalk once you're in Atlantic City, but we really should,鈥 Fox said. 鈥淏y walking around, not only do we get to know the area, but it will make others want to do the same and so forth. It all builds upon itself.鈥 

鈥淭hese tours offer folks the ability to see the human side of Atlantic City, and maybe break some of the stereotypes and negative images we have about the city,鈥 Strelczyk said. 鈥淏y visiting the local businesses, understanding the history of the residents and being in-tune with the city, I think people will become more comfortable with walking around.鈥 

Riester is already looking to build more relationships in Atlantic City and is even more interested after the tour. 

鈥淚've already posted on Nextdoor about this series and that was before I even came on the tour,鈥 Riester said. 鈥淚 was trying to find out if anyone was in my particular neighborhood because I'm trying to network and meet new neighbors and to see if they would want to meet me in person on one of the tours. I took a lot of pictures today. I plan on following up that post on Nextdoor, and I hope that folks will join me next time.鈥 

-Story and photos by Loukaia Taylor