Visiting Smith Island: A Glimpse of a Vanishing Way of Life

Smith Island is the home of, and Maryland’s official state dessert is, a cake that features 8 to 15 very thin layers, in between which is creme or, more commonly, cooked chocolate icing. The most common flavor is yellow cake with chocolate icing but the cakes come in other flavors such as coconut, banana cream, strawberry, lemon cream and orange cream.

Smith Island, located in the Chesapeake Bay, offers visitors a unique experience in a place where time seems to stand still. Once home to around 800 residents in the early 1900s, the island now has a population of only 136 people, according to the 2020 U.S. Census. Economic challenges, geographic isolation, and rising sea levels have contributed to this steady decline.

If you want to explore the Chesapeake Bay, check out these daytrip options! Sailing on the Shardana, Sailing on the Selina II and Chesapeake Lighthouses.

Smith Island isn’t one of the Chesapeake Bay’s disappearing islands, yet. But it has been shrinking in size for centuries, due to a combination of its low elevation and storm erosion. In the last 150 years, Smith Island lost more than 3,300 acres of wetlands due to erosion. Although efforts are now underway to prevent the island from being lost. These restoration efforts will last for the next 50 years and will restore 1,900 acres of submerged aquatic vegetation and 240 acres of wetlands.

You’ll notice, too, when you visit, that Smith Island, like Tangier Island, is very Methodist. The Methodist church is the largest, and the island is dry due to its Methodist heritage (traditional Methodists eschewed cards, alcohol and dancing; modern Methodists have largely made their peace with these sins, but the island retains its conservative heritage).

The island is accessible by ferry from Crisfield, Maryland, with seasonal trips from May to October. Visitors arrive at one of three small villages: Ewell, Rhodes Point, or Tylerton. These communities rely on commercial fishing, particularly crabbing, which remains the backbone of the local economy. Catching and marketing soft shell crabs is the island’s primary industry. Smith Island celebrates its blue crabs, especially the sought-after soft-shell crabs that watermen harvest and sell. Many of the islanders get jobs on the barges plying the Bay or work on the mainland.

While fishing remains central to life on the island, a modest tourism industry has emerged in recent years. Visitors can rent bikes, explore the quiet streets, or sample the famous Smith Island Cake, Maryland’s official state dessert. The Smith Island Cultural Center offers insights into the island’s history and the watermen’s enduring traditions.

Visiting Smith Island offers a rare glimpse into a vanishing way of life, shaped by the Chesapeake Bay’s waters and sustained by its crabs.

What to Expect on Smith Island

When we arrived on the island, we docked right in front of one of the town’s two restaurants (although the second one didn’t look open). Many of the other passengers decided to have lunch. Since we’d dined in Crisfield before boarding the ferry, we decided to just have dessert instead.

On the island you may notice that Smith Islanders have a peculiar accent. Not so much like old English anymore, but it does stand out from the typical southern Maryland accent. Apparently, this accent stems from the island being so isolated throughout the years. It originally was settled in 1686 by English farmers John Evans and John Tyler (hence, Tylerton). Also worth noting: Smith Island became a base of operations during the Revolutionary War for British troops.

For those interested in nature, bird watching and kayaking through the island’s marshes are popular activities. The island’s isolation has preserved its natural beauty, but rising waters pose a significant threat to its future.

So what is there to do on Smith Island? Not much, really, and that’s the attraction of it. Relax and enjoy the water sights and scenery. Rent a bicycle and ride around the island (that’s my top recommendation). Or rent a golf cart — which is what we did — and explore the island. I’m fascinated by its many abandoned houses.

The shallow waters surrounding Smith Island are a fishing haven for herons, egrets, ibis, osprey and pelicans. The northern part of the island is home to the Martin National Wildlife Refuge, making the island a destination for bird watchers in certain seasons. We didn’t venture very far out of Ewell, and only saw a great blue heron, a green heron, and an egret — ubiquitous throughout wetlands in the mid-Atlantic region, but still very cool birds.

There were both positive and negative differences between my last visit and this (the photos on the right, above and below, are from 2014.

Tips You Need to Know

Bring bug spray and sun hats and comfortable walking shoes. The green eyed horse flies will bite through the DEET so just resign yourself to having some painful bites. Luckily, they don’t itch. The best way to spend an afternoon is to plan on getting lunch at the restaurant after the ferry docks, so come hungry. Follow lunch with a delightful slice of Smith Island cake. You can also purchase cakes, either half or whole, to bring home, either from the restaurant in front of the ferry or from one of the other bakeries on the island.

By the way, try the banana cream Smith Island cake, although I thought the orange cream was a close runner up. The traditional yellow cake seemed dry or a bit stale. For lunch, get the hushpuppies — to die for! Get the rockfish, avoid the crabcakes.

If you rent a golf cart, 30 minutes is plenty to explore the WHOLE area around Ewell. We wre greedy so we rented it for a full hour: we rode around the twice, taking some time to explore the lovely and deteriorating old gable houses. I felt sure they must be haunted, if only with the memories of a way of life that is fast disappearing.

If you stay over night at one of the island’s few bed and breakfast inns (2-night minimum stay required), you’ll have the opportunity to go kayaking through the island and marshes. The meandering creeks, or “guts,” through the island’s 8,000 acres of marsh provide extensive opportunities for paddlers and photographers. You could also take a boat over to Tylerton, accessible only by boat, even from Ewell. Or you could take the ferry to one of the other nearby islands, including Tangier.

Take a half hour to visit the Smith Island Cultural Center and museum. Jam packed with history and interesting information about the island, it’s well worth the couple-dollar entry fee. You will learn, among other things, that there are 100 operational cars, trucks, and buses on the island, but that there are over 200 vehicles buried on the island.

Eating Smith Island Cake

We tried four kinds of Smith Island Cake: the traditional yellow cake with chocolate icing, orange with orange creme icing, lemon cream and banana cream. The cakes had 10 or 11 layers — impressive and beautiful.

Beginning in the 1800s, Smith Islanders would send these cakes with the watermen on the autumn oyster harvest. Now the cake is often made using a commercial cake mix but with unique additions such as condensed milk, which makes the cake part heavier and more sturdy. It can also be made from scratch using flour. The dessert is baked for any occasion and not reserved only for holidays. Locals told us that girls weren’t considered to be marriageable until they could bake a decent Smith Island Cake. Well, I would have been screwed: I still can’t bake a cake from scratch.

Interested in trying to make this cake the easy way?

For the cake: Position an oven rack in the middle of the oven; preheat to 350 degrees. Use butter to lightly grease ten 9-inch cake pans, or use 2 or 3 cake pans at a time and re-grease them as needed.

For the cake:
4 eggs
1/2 cup evaporated milk
1 cup tap / bottled water
1/2 stick butter
1 box Classic Yellow cake mix

Directions: Place all ingredients in a bow and mix for 10 minutes. Put roughly 3/4 cup batter in greased cake pans (I use a light coating of Pam cooking spray). Use the back of a spoon to gently and evening spread the batter to cover the bottom of each pan. Place in a 350 degree oven and bake for 8 – 10 minutes or until the edge starts to brown. Repeat over and over. Batter should yield 8 layers.

For the icing:
1 lb powdered sugar
3 heaping TBsp dry cocoa
1/2 cup evaporated milk
1 stick COLD butter

Directions: Put powdered sugar, cocoa, evaporated milk in medium sauce pan and mix together. Add cold butter. Place over high heat, stirring constantly until ingredients are combined and butter is melted. Remove from heat and whip icing a few times before icing cake. Icing should have a glossy appearance.

Putting it together:
Add dollop of icing in the middle of the cake plate or cardboard round and put the first layer in place. Add large spoonful of icing to the top of the layer and, working quickly, spread the icing to the edges of the cake. Place the 2nd layer and repeat, through the 7th layer. Add top layer, spread icing on the sides of the cake first and then finish frosting the top.

Smith Island Cake Recipe (from scratch)

16 servings

Ingredients:
For the cake
8 ounces (2 sticks) unsalted butter, at room temperature, cut into chunks; plus more for greasing the pans
3 cups flour
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 heaping teaspoon baking powder
2 cups sugar
5 large eggs
1 cup evaporated milk
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1/2 cup water

For the icing
2 cups sugar
1 cup evaporated milk
5 ounces unsweetened chocolate, chopped
4 ounces (1 stick) unsalted butter
1/2 to 1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Directions:

As the cake layers are done, run a spatula around the edge of the pan and ease out the layers. Let them cool. Place the bottom layer on a cake plate; spread 2 or 3 spoonfuls of icing on each layer. (Don’t worry if a layer tears; no one will notice when the cake is finished.) Cover the top and sides of the cake with the remaining icing; push any icing that runs onto the plate back onto the cake.

Sift together the flour, salt and baking powder.

Combine the butter and sugar in the bowl of a stand mixer or hand-held electric mixer; beat on medium speed until light and creamy. Add the eggs one at a time; beat until smooth. Reduce the speed to low and add the sifted dry ingredients 1 cup at a time; beat until incorporated. Still on low speed, add the evaporated milk, then the vanilla and water, beating until well combined.

Place 3 serving spoonfuls of batter in each of the cake pans (about 2/3 cup); use the back of the spoon to spread it evenly. Bake 2 or 3 layers at a time on the middle oven rack for 8 to 9 minutes. (A layer is done when you hold it near your ear and do not hear it sizzle.)

While the cakes are baking, make the icing: Combine the sugar and evaporated milk in a medium saucepan over medium-low heat. Add the chocolate and butter; warm through, stirring, until both have melted. Increase the heat to medium and cook, stirring occasionally, for 10 to 15 minutes. Remove from the heat and add the vanilla extract, stirring to combine. The icing will be thin but will thicken as it cools.

Know Before You Go

If you want to get there, you’ll do so by boat or ferry. Passenger-only ferries connect Smith Island at Ewell to Point Lookout, on the Western shore of the Chesapeake Bay or from Crisfield, MD. If you take the ferry from Crisfield, it’s about an hour ride on the ferry. From Baltimore, it’s a 2.5 hours over the Bay Bridge and down the Eastern Shore to Crisfield.

If you catch the ferry from Point Lookout, then you’ll have a 2.5 hour ferry ride, but to get to the ferry, it’s about 1.5 hours, so it’s about equivalent in time. The first time I visited Smith Island, we caught the ferry from Crisfield. This time, we opted to catch it from near Solomons Island. The ferry ride itself is such a fantastic part of the day!

You have about 2 to 2 1/2 hours on the island before the ferry returns to the mainland.

Getting there: Check the Smith Island Cruises website below for departure locations and times.
Hours: Check the ferry website for departure times.
Websites: Smith Island, Smith Island Cruises