The urban legend is that Harry Kulkowitz won the Carroll Villa Hotel in a poker game. Well, he was playing cards with the owner, probably poker, and he most likely won, but the reality is โ he fell in love. Where others saw what might best be described as a โfixer upper,โ Harry was a dreamer and saw a gathering place for those who loved good food, beautiful art and beautiful surroundings. The price tag was $96,000. Although he owned the prestigious Kenmore Art Gallery in Philadelphia, Harry did not have the money to buy the Cape May, NJ hotel.ย However, a man he met in Cape May, Henry Gorelick, happened to take a shine to him and put in a good word with the bank. In 1976, Harry Kulkowitz became an innkeeper and restaurateur.
He named his restaurant The Mad Batter. At the time, Cape May had few good restaurants and no gourmet dining to speak of, but Harry had a knack for spotting talent and in no time, The Mad Batter Restaurant was garnering a reputation for fine food. After a favorable review by nationally acclaimed food critic Jim Quinn, which appeared in the Philadelphia Inquirer on a Friday, The Mad Batter Restaurant was discovered. Thus, began the start of the Cape May restaurant scene.
While Harry was launching his Cape May lodging property and restaurant near the beach on the Jersey Shore, his son Mark was in the Army doing a three-year stint in Europe. His father kept writing to him telling him about what a great place he had in a town Mark had never heard of โ Cape May. He kept asking him to come help him run it, but Mark had other plans. He describes himself as a โNew York Jew who got traded to Philadelphia [where the family moved] who hated it and moved back to Woodstock, New York. Iโm a counter-culture hippy, anti-intellectual-intellectualโ who decided to see what this town of Cape May was all about after his discharge from the Army in October 1978. โI went to Frankfort,โ says Mark, โwhere I was discharged. I threw my uniform in the trash. Put Civilian clothes on and got on a train to the Kaiserstuhl. The next day I was picking grapes. I returned to the United States in January 1979.โ
He headed down to Cape May, met a woman by the name of Pam Huber, who was working for his father until Harry fired her โ again. โI had this Russian hat on,โ he recalls, โfrom Bullwinkle and Rocky. My sister introduced us. She said, โThis is Harryโs son.โ Pam said, โI didnโt know he had a son.โ And against her better judgment, we started dating and we got married.โ
Harry fired Pam and Mark (always separately) several more times over the years but, he maintained, โHad to hire them backโ because he โneeded the help.โ Amidst the family dramas, Pam and Mark have managed the Carroll Villa Hotel and The Mad Batter Restaurant for over 30 years and had three children in the process, who also grew up with the family business. Pamโs artistic sensibilities are reflected throughout the property. Her mosaic tile artistry can be seen in the newly refurbished bar and she manages the art gallery, which regularly hosts the best photography and art in the county. โShe is the heart and soul of the place,โ says Mark of his wife of 29 years.
And now the third generation is posed to step in. Marta, Kyle and Tess โ three Huberwitzes (as Mark and Pam refer to them) are now taking an active part in the business. Kyle runs the bar. Marta, along with her mother, has updated the guest rooms to be more contemporary, moving away from the Victorian sensibilities which characterized the property over the decades. And Tess is there to help in the summer months when she is not in college.
Summarizing what he likes best about running both a Cape May, NJ hotel and restaurant for 30-plus years, Mark says simply, โIโm a Kosher ham. We tried to provide a very warm atmosphere here. And thatโs the thing thatโs hard to realize, that the staff does a great job. In the Mad Batter, we serve over 75,000 people a year or something like that and everybody needs a โHelloโ and a โThank you.โ You lose sight of that sometimes because the summer is so driven. And that was my fatherโs philosophy of life too. You work hard all your life, and you deserve that. You deserve a warm โHelloโ when you get here and a โThank youโ when you leave. And thatโs my job and I love it.โ