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Beginning in 1900, African Americans were excluded from most sections of Atlantic City’s beaches and boardwalk. They would be relegated to the beach along Missouri Avenue.
What followed was six decades of what Henrietta Wallace Shelton described as a “beautiful family atmosphere.”
“We always seem to make lemon out of lemonade as a culture,” said Shelton, president of the Chicken Bone Beach Historical Foundation. “I’m always very proud to be a Black African American. And I’m very proud of the accomplishments that we have done throughout the years.”
Shelton made the remarks Thursday before dozens of people at the unveiling of a historical marker signifying the inclusion of Chicken Bone Beach into New Jersey’s Black Heritage Trail. It is the third marker unveiling in the last week.

A marker was unveiled in Cape May to recognize the Macedonia Baptist Church, which has not only served as a haven for the city’s Black community, but has also worked to preserve Black history there. The next day, a marker was unveiled in Lawnside, Camden County, the state’s only incorporated antebellum Black community.
Shelton said work towards getting state recognition of the Chicken Bone Beach historical site took nearly three decades.
“I’m really impressed. It’s beautiful, isn’t it?,” she said. “My family and I have taken a long time to get this point.”
Chicken Bone Beach is a product of Jim Crow segregation
According to the foundation, African Americans had started to be excluded from major sections of the beach and the boardwalk around 1900, as more white travelers from the Jim Crow South came to Atlantic City.
As a result, African Americans, who were not allowed to eat at nearby restaurants, brought homemade meals — which included fried chicken — to the beach with them. The leftover bones would be found in the sand during beach clean up.
The beach became a cultural touchpoint where notable African Americans such as Sammy Davis Jr. and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. spent time there.
Synatra Smith, project manager for the Black Heritage Trail at the New Jersey Historical Commission, said she is inspired by a snapshot of King at the beach.
“When I look at that image of Dr. King, I see Black leisure,” she said. “I see a human flesh and bone; just like us, who not only deserves rest, but actually implemented it.”
Chicken Bone Beach is among 77 Black Heritage Trail sites throughout 16 counties in the state, according to Smith. An additional 30 sites are currently under review.











