Take a step back into the past as each bedroom includes it's own private bath, most with authentic claw-foot tubs. Imagine the picturesque beauty and romance of nestling in front of a cozy fireplace with that special someone in your own private room. The ambiance of a by-gone era has been captured in each room for your relaxation and a rejuvenating stay.
Breakfast is a "special time." Start your day with a full buffet breakfast served in our Colonial Dining Room consisting of freshly squeezed juices, homemade breads and coffee cakes, entrees ranging from over-stuffed French toast to soufflés to hot fruit dishes.
ACTIVITIES
You are just minutes from Dr. Pitney's Atlantic City for fine dining, casinos, convention center, boardwalk and beaches. Historic Smithville and Hamilton Mall for shopping. Renault Winery for a historic tour, Marriott Seaview Country Club for golfers, and Edward B. Forsythe Bird Sanctuary for the bird watcher to name a few activities to pass your time. Or take a stroll, nestle down to a good book, relax or just day-dream in the quintessential Commonyard of convivial blooming flowers, bushes and trees located between the Pitney House and the Doctor's Guest Quarters. In the winter, gather in the Granville Room for a glass of wine, sparkling cider or a spot of tea and enjoy the warmth of the fireplace while chatting with other guests.
Saddlebags packed with medical supplies and some clothing, a blanket and strong cloth rolled behind his saddle, a young man rode into town.
The village was Absecon (Absecum), the year was about 1819 and the horseman was young Dr. Jonathan Pitney. Only twenty-one years old, Pitney has just completed two years as an assistant in a hospital on Staten Island, following his graduation from a New York medical school. Probably few noticed the youthful horseman as he arrived in the village. Certainly no one knew or cared that he had just completed the long trip from his birthplace and home in Mendham, Morris County, where he had been born October 29, 1797. How could anyone have foreseen that this young doctor would become forever famous and one day be called the "Father of Atlantic City," Queen Resort of the Coast? He was to be responsible for the construction of the railroad east across New Jersey through the salt marshes to Absecon Island, now Atlantic City.
His efforts were to cause the Federal Government to construct and commission a lighthouse at the north end of Absecon Island, finally putting an end to the countless scores of shipwrecks along the shoals and beaches near "Graveyard Inlet."
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