33 Photos That Capture Atlantic City's Dramatic Rise And Fall
Once called "America's Playground," Atlantic City has become engulfed with crime and corruption — and the seeming death spiral of its casinos.
A century ago, Atlantic City was a booming tourist destination — a rare location in America where you could gamble and drink to your heart’s desire. Prohibition never seemed to make it to the small New Jersey metropolis, and the lavish hotels and beachfront properties made the vacation spot a perfect place for pre-Depression wealth to be flaunted.
But then, something started to change. By the 1950s, tourists had begun to lose interest in Atlantic City. The town, which had long been infamous for its corruption, began seeing even more mob activity than it had in previous years, as well as other criminal enterprises. Before long, many local landmarks were being torn down and replaced with massive, gaudy casinos.
The casinos initially brought business, but Atlantic City failed to capture the same magic found in its Western counterpart, Las Vegas.
And the issues of corruption and crime continued. Now, as of 2020, the poverty rate in Atlantic City is 35.2 percent, which is more than triple the national poverty rate in America. And the city seems to teeter on the edge of economic collapse.
So, what exactly caused the decline of the former “Boardwalk Empire?” See some of the most compelling photos from the city’s history below, then learn why this place has changed so dramatically throughout the decades.
A woman sits on a donkey while a man lying on the beach holds the animal's reins. Atlantic City, New Jersey. 1901.GHI/Universal Images Group via Getty Images A crowd on the Atlantic City Boardwalk in January 1920, just weeks before Prohibition began. Many believe that time period was the peak of Atlantic City's success, as the illegality of alcohol was largely ignored there.Bettmann/Getty Images Even at the height of its success, Atlantic City still endured many (literal) storms, like a hurricane that hit the city in 1936.ullstein bild/ullstein bild via Getty Images The Great Atlantic Hurricane ravaged much of the East Coast in September 1944 — and Atlantic City sustained extensive damage.Bettmann/Getty Images Though Atlantic City was a prime tourist destination for much of the early 20th century, the town began to decline after World War II.During the war, Americans were far less likely to go on vacation than they were in years prior. And even after the war ended, the rise of suburbia and air conditioning made people less inclined to flock to the Atlantic City beach to cool off. This meant less tourism, and therefore less job opportunities and money for residents.
Archive Photos/Getty Images Despite Atlantic City's gradually declining fortunes, the metropolis was still able to generate excitement over famous events, like the annual Miss America contest.The 1959 winner, Mary Ann Mobley, accepts her crown here. She would later go on to become a successful actress and television personality.
Slim Aarons/Getty Images The neon lights lit up at night along the Atlantic City Boardwalk in 1965.Jack Rosen/Getty Images The contestants of the 1972 Miss America beauty pageant. Though the competition initially focused mostly on looks, the talent portion of the contest became more important as time went on, thanks in part to activism from feminist groups.Bettmann/Getty Images A march by the National Organization for Women (NOW) in September 1974, held the same week as the Miss America pageant. Bettmann/Getty Images A police officer patrols the famous Boardwalk of Atlantic City in 1976.That same year, voters approved the legalization of casino gambling in the small New Jersey metropolis, hoping to redevelop the areas that had become crime-ridden and blighted.
Peter Keegan/Keystone/Getty Images The famous "Diving Horse" at the Steel Pier in Atlantic City in 1977. At this point, the metropolis was arguably entering its second golden era, with many new casinos and Boardwalk attractions bringing an influx of cash to the area. PL Gould/IMAGES/Getty Images The Atlantic City skyline in 1978.Universal History Archive/Getty Images The destruction of the Marlborough-Blenheim Hotel in 1979, once considered the pride of Atlantic City. The final part of the hotel, the rotunda, was demolished by Bally Construction Company to make room for its new casino. The decision to tear down the hotel was opposed by many, including several environmental groups. Bettmann/Getty Images Playboy founder Hugh Hefner with a group of Playboy Bunnies at the grand opening of the Playboy Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City in 1981. The casino operated under that name until 1984.Derek Hudson/Getty Images Mob leader Nicodemo "Little Nicky" Scarfo appears before the New Jersey Casino Control Commission in 1982. Questioned about his ties to organized crime and an Atlantic City hotel union, Scarfo pleads the Fifth at least 30 times.Atlantic City has long had ties to the Mafia, and back in 1929, it was even chosen as the perfect place for the first "national convention" of mob bosses by none other than Lucky Luciano.
Bettmann/Getty Images Boxer Mike Tyson squares off against Tyrell Biggs at the Convention Hall in Atlantic City, New Jersey. October 16, 1987.Jeffrey Asher/Getty Images Actors Jack Nicholson and Warren Beatty attend the Tyson vs. Spinks boxing match at the Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino alongside businessman and future U.S. President Donald Trump. Ron Gallela/Getty Images Donald Trump at the opening of Trump Taj Mahal, his third Atlantic City casino, which he billed as the "eighth wonder of the world" in 1990. The property cost $1.2 billion to build, and though its opening night was a success, it eventually went bankrupt and later closed in 2016.Bettmann/Getty Images The Atlantic City Boardwalk in 1998.Douglas Graham/Congressional Quarterly/Getty Images Despite the popularity of the casinos in Atlantic City, they didn't solve the town's lingering issues, like homelessness and poverty.Here, unhoused people line up at the Atlantic City Rescue Mission in hopes of receiving food and a bed for the night on October 28, 2003.
Amy Toensing/Getty Images Atlantic City Rescue Mission workers offer help to a homeless man sleeping on the beach in Atlantic City on July 25, 2003. Amy Toensing/Getty Images A woman plays at a slot machine at an Atlantic City casino by herself on April 29, 2009.Earlier that year, 11 casinos in the city eliminated 1,270 jobs. This meant that since March 2008, a total of 3,092 casino workers were jobless.
Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images A man walks past an abandoned building in Atlantic City on April 29, 2009. Since many residents of the city are dependent on the gambling industry for employment, they often struggle whenever the casinos struggle.Spencer Platt/Getty Images The Atlantic City skyline in April 2011. John Greim/LightRocket via Getty Images Amidst ongoing financial challenges, Atlantic City was hit hard by Hurricane Sandy in 2012.Here, a 2,000-foot section of the "uptown" boardwalk was destroyed by flooding.
Mario Tama/Getty Images An unhoused grandmother named Valencia Terrell and her grandchild temporarily move in with a friend in Atlantic City on August 26, 2015.Terrell, who lost her home during Hurricane Sandy and quit her job at a casino to help her family, became one of many locals who rely on soup kitchens and food stamps to survive.
John Moore/Getty Images Abandoned homes in Atlantic City in 2017. Just one year prior, authorities reported an estimated 500 abandoned buildings in the city.Murat Nazarov/EyeEm/Getty Images The Atlantic City Boardwalk at dusk in May 2018. In modern times, many people are surprised that only nine casinos remain open in town.Michael S. Williamson/The Washington Post via Getty Images A building near the famous Boardwalk of Atlantic City, pictured in 2019. Despite the town's many hardships, some locals have used art to bring hope to residents and visitors.Wikimedia Commons A jogger runs past a closed Atlantic City Boardwalk store with a sign that reads, "HELP PLEASE SHOP" in May 2020. The height of the COVID-19 pandemic affected the entire nation, but the effects were especially devastating for impoverished places like Atlantic City.Mark Makela/Getty Images The long-shuttered Trump Plaza is demolished in February 2021. The implosion toppled the 39-story building in seconds, and a viewing party of people who paid $10 to watch from their cars instantly broke into applause.Michael S. Williamson/The Washington Post via Getty Images Debris from the demolished Trump Plaza. Eduardo Munoz Alvarez/Getty Images A tourist poses for a photo near the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Atlantic City in August 2022.Despite the city's ongoing struggles, some residents remain hopeful that the casino town can make a true comeback someday.
Bruce Bennett/Getty Images
The Early Years Of Atlantic City
Long before it was nationally famous as Atlantic City, the region of land in southern New Jersey was known as Further Island, and it piqued the interest of an early 19th-century doctor named Jonathan Pitney.
According to City Journal, Pitney got the idea to turn Further Island into a health resort for wealthy clients. His critics called it "Pitney's Folly."
However, the doctor managed to convince investors to construct a rail line from Camden to the island, where he also used investors' money to construct a 600-bedroom hotel. Soon after, Atlantic City was officially born. By the mid-1800s, Atlantic City was receiving around 3,000 visitors each year. About half a century later, that number climbed to 3 million.
And during its heyday in the 1930s, nearly 16 million tourists visited the small metropolis dubbed "America's Playground" every summer.
Perhaps most popular was the iconic Boardwalk, which was filled with entertainment for people of all ages and stunning views of the Atlantic Ocean. Naturally, though, with the large number of people visiting Atlantic City each year, there were bound to be visitors of the less savory fashion.
As Nelson Johnson wrote in his book Boardwalk Empire: The Birth, High Times and Corruption of Atlantic City, the city was also filled with "gambling parlors, speakeasies, and brothels," all operating "as if they were legal." Johnson added, "The only time the local police clamped down on anyone was if they were late with their payments" to politicians.

George A. McKeague Company/Library of Congress/Corbis/VCG via Getty ImagesA massive crowd on the Atlantic City Boardwalk on Easter Sunday in 1910.
This seedy underbelly was both a blessing and a curse. When the U.S. government prohibited the sale of alcohol from 1920 to 1933, the news never seemed to reach Atlantic City. Well, it did, but Prohibition was ignored there.
In fact, in 1923, a Justice Department representative called Atlantic City "the most corrupt city in the country" after local officials threw a Prohibition agent in jail for three days and refused to let him contact Washington.
Illegal boozing certainly brought a lot of tourism — and money — to Atlantic City, but it also brought in some other controversial guests.
In 1929, Atlantic City became infamous as a mob hotspot when Lucky Luciano decided that it was the perfect place to hold a "national convention" of mob bosses. This convention was hosted by Enoch "Nucky" Johnson and attended by the likes of Al Capone, Frank Costello, and Meyer Lansky.
Johnson, the mob boss of Atlantic City, was eventually thrown in jail for tax evasion in 1941, but that did little to stop mob activity, as his political machine passed to state legislator Frank Farley, known among mobsters as "the man to see." He would stay in power for about three decades.
When World War II broke out, Atlantic City became a training center for U.S. Army recruits, which helped to drive tourists — and money — away from the city. Meanwhile, the mob continued its operations in the background.
The Fight For Legalized Casino Gambling
Between the 1940s and the 1970s, the reputation of Atlantic City worsened. Though federal and state governments attempted to crack down on mob activity, mobsters were still purchasing prominent property in the city.
Though some tourists still enjoyed visiting the area, the rise of suburbia, the widespread availability of cars, and the introduction of commercial air travel drove many former visitors to other vacation spots across America.
As tourism declined, so did the availability of jobs. Crime rose throughout the city, and many homes and businesses were abandoned, giving the metropolis a blighted, unsettling appearance. Then, in the 1970s, Farley and the mob came up with a new idea to bring the tourists back: legal gambling.
Though the proposition seemed improbable, it actually worked in 1976. Voters approved the legalization of casino gambling in the city in an attempt to redevelop crime-ridden areas. And at first, the experiment seemed to be a success, as this opened the doors for new jobs to be created.
"The first casinos opened [in the] late '70s and there were crowds of people waiting to get into them," Heather Pérez, an archivist at the Atlantic City Free Public Library, told Marketplace. "The boardwalk was filled with these lines and, one by one, the casinos popped up along the beach."
The success of casinos continued in the 1980s and 1990s. Future U.S. President Donald Trump even built three casinos there: Trump Plaza, Trump Taj Mahal, and Trump's Castle. All of these businesses attracted attention, especially when Trump Plaza hosted boxer Mike Tyson's fights.

Jasper Sassen/EyeEm/Getty ImagesThough casinos initially saw a lot of success in Atlantic City, many of them would later close, resulting in staggering job losses.
Celebrities like Jack Nicholson, Warren Beatty, and Madonna flocked to the city to watch the fights. But despite all the stars and bright lights, the casinos in Atlantic City weren't enough to fully revive the embattled town.
For one thing, the success of the casinos didn't seem to improve the rest of the city or its lingering issues, as reported by The New York Times. In 1986, one local retailer named Murray Raphel complained, "People look at Atlantic City and say, 'It was once a slum. Now it is a slum with casinos.'"
Indeed, the town was still plagued with poverty, crime, government corruption, and abandoned buildings. As local NAACP leader Pierre Hollingsworth put it: "We're a small city, but... we have big-city problems."
And the fact that the city relied so much on the gambling industry — with no clear Plan B in sight — certainly didn't help. Unlike other famous gambling cities like Las Vegas, Atlantic City didn't seem to make a name for itself for other perks (like Vegas' stunning architecture and high-end shopping).
Though many visitors have expressed their sympathy for the city's troubles, few of them stick around for long — leaving locals largely on their own.
The Modern Challenges Of Moving Forward
By the early 2000s, many of Atlantic City's ornate buildings had been demolished and replaced with boring, uninspired structures. Even the Trump Taj Mahal, which was a very costly investment, managed to go bankrupt. According to The Guardian, the closure of the Trump Taj Mahal and the former president's other businesses led to thousands of job losses.
But of course, Trump's casinos weren't the only ones that shut down. The Revel Casino Hotel shuttered in 2014 after operating for only two years. And Sands Casino Hotel, which had a far longer run, closed down in 2006 after operating since 1980. As of 2022, there are nine casinos currently operating in Atlantic City, some of which reportedly require tax aid to stay open.
Perhaps most worrying to casino workers in the city is that there are other places on the East Coast where people can legally gamble now, likely making potential visitors less inclined to travel to Atlantic City.
Sadly, the appearance of the city itself may also be driving some people away. In 2016, the city reported an estimated 500 abandoned buildings that had been left to rot, according to The Press of Atlantic City.

Mario Tama/Getty ImagesIn 2012, Hurricane Sandy destroyed many homes and buildings in Atlantic City, further devastating the local economy.
Along with the visible blight, the issue of poverty remains widespread. According to the 2020 U.S. census, the poverty rate in the city stands at 35.2 percent, which is more than three times the national poverty rate. Another ongoing problem is government corruption. The city has also faced embarrassing scandals as recently as 2006 and 2007 — when three city council members were found guilty of accepting bribes.
One bright piece of news is that the city's violent crime rate has actually been dropping in recent years, but many residents and casino employees are skeptical of these reports and say they still feel unsafe there.
Overall, it's tough to imagine that this embattled city was once known as "America's Playground." For years, the gambling industry helped keep Atlantic City afloat, but politicians and entrepreneurs put all their eggs into one basket, and that basket eventually broke. Add the consistent damage from hurricanes, a largely impoverished population, and a reputation for crime, and it's not too shocking that Atlantic City is still struggling.
But not everyone is giving up on the town. A number of ambitious projects took off in 2022, some of which involved adding new amenities to casinos, like theaters. And others had nothing to do with casinos at all — but instead family entertainment, the offshore wind industry, and education.
Though the city may never return to its glory days of the early 20th century, many are hopeful that diversifying the local economy will improve the lives of the people who live there. The question now is this: What's next?
After reading about the rise and fall of Atlantic City, go inside the unparalleled death spiral of St. Louis. Then, learn how Gary, Indiana went from the "Magic City" to "the most miserable city in America."
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