This mural will be located at Celtic Creamery, 201 N Lake Park Blvd. This mural celebrates the Steamer that brought tourists to Carolina Beach from Wilmington, Captain Harper and the Shoo Fly Train that connected the steamer to the Carolina Beach boardwalk in the late 1800's-early 1900's.
About Captain Harper & Shoo Fly Train :
Captain John William Harper was born in the Masonboro area of Wilmington, NC on November 28, 1856. At age 16 John went to work as a deck hand on the Steamer Eastern owned by his brother James. By 1883 the brothers formed the Harper Brothers Steamship Company and ran steamers between Southport, Fort Caswell and Wilmington carrying mail and cargo.
Later in the 1880s Captain Harper was at the wheel of the Steamer Passport and often made stops at the recently completed New Inlet Dam. Some say it was Captain Harper who first called the project “the rocks”.
In 1886 Captain Harper and others formed the New Hanover Transit Company with the idea of making a resort at Federal Point. The first step was a transportation system to access the pristine mostly undeveloped land that would become Carolina Beach. They planned to bring visitors downriver from Wilmington on a steamer.
The company constructed a pier on the Cape Fear River, first near Sugar Loaf, later at Doctor’s Point where steamship passengers could board a train to carry them over to the sea beach. The train, called the Shoo-Fly, had a wood burning steam engine and pulled open passenger cars as well as flatbed cargo cars. As they neared the beach, the tracks ran along present day Harper Avenue which is fittingly named for Captain Harper.
The transit company built a pavilion on the ocean just south of the terminus of Harper Avenue. The pavilion was designed by Henry Bonitz who also designed Lumina at Wrightsville Beach.
They also built the Oceanic Hotel and a restaurant and had all of them open for the first season in June of 1887. The new resort proved to be so popular that by the end of July the Passport’s 350 capacity was enhanced by pulling a 150 passenger barge called the Caroline. An article in the September 30, 1887 Wilmington Star reported that between 17,000 and 18,000 people had visited the beach by the end of that first season.
Captain Harper bought the Sylvan Grove in 1888 to bring excursionists to the new resort.Three years later it burned to the water line while in winter storage near Eagles Island.
He replaced it with the handsome Steamer Wilmington in 1891 which he purchased in Wilmington, Delaware. It was the perfect choice since it was already named the Wilmington. She had three decks providing ample room for its 500 passengers to dance to the music of an on board band and made four round trips in the season of 1892 with the ticket price of 50 cents for adults and 25 cents for children. The Wilmington is the best known of his steamers and the one most often associated with Captain Harper.
The Cape Fear Transit Company was later sold to other investors but the Steamer Wilmington and Shoo Fly train continued to bring visitors until about 1919 when a fire destroyed the pier at the river and improved roads made automobiles the preferred mode of travel.
Captain Harper died on September 18, 1917 and was mourned by all who had known the jovial and popular gentleman who was known by his generous deeds as well as his skills as a steamer captain. He is remembered as one of the founders of Carolina Beach.
Vanessa Lussier- I have been drawing since I was a young child and painting seriously since I was about 13. My favorite thing to draw has always been people and portraits, but I always try to branch out and challenge myself with any project I'm given. I'll do anything from cartoons to realism, photography to filmmaking, crafts to 3D modeling for video games, and I also write music on piano. I've had a strong interest in drawing comics, animation, and murals from a young age. As a teenager I was often commissioned to do drawings for friends and family, and graphic art for advertisements. My senior project was on tattoo artistry, where I shadowed under a professional tattoo artist. When I was 18, I got my first mural job at Andrea's Salon, which used to be next to Sally's in Wilmington. Since then I've illustrated children's books, painted entire daycare rooms and elevators, drawn hundreds of caricatures, and have sold my art to international collectors. Many of the designs I've done are now logos for social media and local businesses. I have mural art and original paintings in homes and businesses throughout Carolina Beach. I've participated in art shows, Boards Across CB, and have had my art displayed downtown at the Arts Council and in local shops. I currently work and volunteer at PAWS Resale Shoppe, where I often do touch ups, hand painted decals, craft different decorations, and upcycle furniture for the store. My current projects include animating a full-length TV show, animating stop-motion short films, 3D modeling and printing, and doing realistic drawings and paintings of my favorite media, including beautiful Carolina Beach.
Mural #14, "Cape Fear's Captain" is located on the south wall of Celtic Creamery, 201 N Lake Park Blvd.
My inspiration for this piece comes from both a love of rich history and an admiration for the beautiful scenery here in Carolina Beach. When I learned about the Shoo Fly Train and Captain Harper, I was instantly fascinated by the story of how people used to travel to Pleasure Island. I imagined what it would be like, remembering all the peaceful afternoons I spent walking along Cape Fear River with my dog Derp. It must have been a lovely sight to watch the sun set while riding the ferry or the steam train with Harper leading the way, which I wanted to recreate in this mural.
Mural was installed in May of 2023.
Copyright © 2024 Carolina Beach Mural Project - All Rights Reserved.
Powered by GoDaddy Website Builder