Cape May Inlet (formerly Cold Spring Inlet) is an inlet in southeastern Cape May County, New Jersey.
Geography
editCape May Inlet is 1 mile (1.6 km) long and connects Cape May Harbor with the Atlantic Ocean, and separates Two Mile Beach to the northeast from Poverty Beach to the southwest. It is 2.5 miles (4.0 km) northeast of the City of Cape May. The United States Coast Guard Training Center Cape May is located on the southwest shore of Cape May Inlet.
It was described in 1834 as,
Cold Spring Inlet, Lower t-ship, Cape May co., between Two Mile Beach and Poverty Beach, upon the Atlantic sea-board. It is less than half a mile in width. It has its name from a spring about 3 or 4 miles inland, which sends its tribute to the ocean by this passage.[1]
Cold Spring Inlet was described in 1878, viz.,
Cold Spring Inlet, at the south end of this beach, leads to Jarvis Sound and Cape Island channel and creek. It is navigable for vessels of small tonnage only, and for these only at high water. Its navigation is difficult, and attended with danger, yet it is the commercial highway to the growing and enterprising city of Cape May.[2]
History
editCold Spring Inlet appears on maps as early as 1700,[3] and as "Cold Spring" the inlet is labeled on a map published in 1749 by Lewis Evans.[4] Cold Spring Inlet had been named for the local community of Cold Spring, and its eponymous spring. In time, it became associated with the City of Cape May after the city became the center of development in the area. With the creation of Cape May Harbor, the inlet was considered a part of that body of water, but began to be referred to locally as "Cape May Inlet". On April 9, 1987 the United States Board on Geographic Names approved the naming of the inlet as "Cape May Inlet".[5]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Gordon, Thomas Francis (1834). A Gazetteer of the State of New Jersey - Thomas F. Gordon - Google Books. Retrieved October 28, 2018.
- ^ Historical and Biographical Atlas of the New Jersey Coast, Woolman and Rose, Philadelphia, 1878; p. 21
- ^ Thornton, John (1706). A New Mapp of East and West New Jarsey, Being an Exact Survey Taken by Mr. John Worlidge (Map). London.
- ^ Evans, Lewis (1749). A Map of Pensilvania, New-Jersey, New-York, and the Three Delaware Counties (Map). Philadelphia.
- ^ "Cape May Inlet". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior.