+13,000 Years of Transhumance
Buckykattnj, Lakesgirl,
The Black Horse and White Horse Pikes are roughly the modern equivalent to the Long-a-Coming Trail, an ancient Indian path that ran from Camden to Jobs Point near Somers Point. Upon European settlement, Cooper’s Ferry linked the track with Philadelphia, and Job’s Ferry provided crossing to Beesleys Point where the Cape Trail could be followed to Cape May. This trail was improved several times through the centuries, and had become a stage route during the first half of the 19th century. The White Horse Pike remained but a sandy track until 1896, when it was gravelled for bicyclists who referred to it as the Appian Way. Hard-surfacing began in 1918, but wasn’t completed until 1922.
Planning for the Black Horse Pike started in 1925 in anticipation of the Delaware River Bridge (i.e., Ben Franklin). Its layout was completed by 1928. Passage through the Lochs-of-the-Swamp proved troublesome. Woodsman Fountain Gale, of Weymouth, guided engineers through these wilds saving much surveying time. I am told that one of the project planners who enlisted Gale was a Steelman. Coincidently, an earlier Steelman improved the original Long-a-Coming Trail during the 1690s, and by 1706 this family of Swedish ancestry settled upon a plantation situated between up-to mile-long lochs (narrow spungs). The three largest "winter ponds" were Lookout (Loch-Out?), Crane, and Brake Ponds. The Steelman Place was located near today’s Custard Castle, across from Galletta’s blueberry field. The Pike was opened to traffic in 1932.
Spung-Man
Boucher, J.E., 1963: Absegami Yesteryear. Egg Harbor City, NJ: Laureate Press. 149 pp. (nice photo of Fountain).
Chalmers, K.H., 1951: Down the Long-a-Coming. Moorestown, NJ: The News Chronicle. 206 pp.
Wilson, H.F., 1953: The Jersey Shore: A Social and Economic History of the Counties of Atlantic, Cape May, Monmouth and Ocean (2 vols.). New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Co. 1055 pp. A third but separate volume contains family and personal history.