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  1. Spung-Man

    Dennis?

    Well, buy me a drink at the Jack Puddin'; West Jersey Bob might just be right! He's been trying to document a tavern there for some time. Jeseryman, I do hope you can find a tavern record. Would that icon use hold true for Berrys and Smiths on Weymouth Road (New Kuban) too? S-M
  2. Spung-Man

    Dennis?

    Willy, It is likely the settlement of Jack Pudding, about where the Liepe Farm is today in Germania, and is probably named for the Dennis family that lived there. The settlement is on an perplexing trail, a southern equivalent to Old Forks Road, both of which might have been later replaced...
  3. Spung-Man

    Tavern in Pleasant Mills, NJ

    TR, No need to complicate things. I think Wescotts lived in Wescotville, where there was an early millpond on the Old Forks Road. On Clements (Volume 3, page 4) there appears to be a mill and millpond on Long Meadow Branch (Hammonton Creek). Sorry I don’t have a lot of time to double check for...
  4. Spung-Man

    Are Coyotes a threat?

    I feel coyotes are not a danger, unless you go out of your way to provoke them. Having spent much of my youth wandering the woods, this is my half-century plus woods faunal experience: At five I was lost in deep snowy woods behind the farm for a couple hours, but a trusty dog “Trooper” led me...
  5. Spung-Man

    Are Coyotes a threat?

    JH, I am the last place on the edge of a big wood patch bordering the Village footprint. As such coyote like to pack at a big sand hickory, called the Resting Tree, that marks my property boundary from Thomas’ old charcoal camp and livery. During daylight hours and on quite nights I have no...
  6. Spung-Man

    The Sale of Atsion Furnace

    In 1854 Clayton Allen, Secretary of the Weymouth Farm and Agricultural Company (I argue the prototype for Hammonton, Vineland, Fruitland development), uses the following "esq." as references that will attest to the Weymouth/New Germany (Folsom & Newtonville) land quality: Stephen Colwell; Joseph...
  7. Spung-Man

    New Sweden

    MB, Have you read a family history by Turp (1975)? While I'm not partial to the author's poetic license with his ancestors, the work provides the author's interpretation of early dynamics to Swedes associated with West Jersey, including those in the Pines. Turp, R.K., 1975: West Jersey: Under...
  8. Spung-Man

    New Sweden

    MB, I have some good news; Swedish dynamics are relevant to the Pines! Unfortunately their presence was not well recorded. I like to joke that history always begins with the English (maybe Scots), and the Swedes just weren’t white enough to count! One anecdotal account by old-timers put a...
  9. Spung-Man

    The Sale of Atsion Furnace

    I was playing with google and came across a pertinent digital book: Gans E.W. 1900. A Pennsylvania Pioneer: Biographical Sketch with Report of the Executive Committee of the Ball Estate Association. Pages 306–386 are the Jersey interests, mostly Weymouth and Martha land. Many deeds and their...
  10. Spung-Man

    Happy B-Day, Spung-Man!

    All, I am tickled to be part of this great group! I thank my dear old friend Jerseyman for the original invitation here. There is hardly a day, whether through maps or blog, that I don’t learn something new here. I can’t wait to see what new aspect of Piney insight the next post will bring...
  11. Spung-Man

    The Sale of Atsion Furnace

    Landis is partners with Allen and Matlack at the Weymouth Farm and Agricultural Company (Elwood, Newtonville, Folsom, founded 1854, prospectus below).
  12. Spung-Man

    The Sale of Atsion Furnace

    I've asked the VHAS curator to be on the lookout for Atsion-related archives. Patt is amazing!
  13. Spung-Man

    The Sale of Atsion Furnace

    Peer review really helps hone our accounts! Although a county concept was not fully dead (poor choice of word?) with Carruth’s demise in 1875, the Fruitland namesake appears in 1871; good catch. One source for the Landis County narrative was an unpublished manuscript by Professor Harry...
  14. Spung-Man

    The Sale of Atsion Furnace

    Jerseyman, As always I do enjoy your feedback! I provide suggestions to stimulate discourse and conjure possible connections worthy of consideration. Heston (1924: 271) states, "Michael G. Landis, the father of Charles K. Landis, was a merchant in Lancaster,Pennsylvania, and afterwards a...
  15. Spung-Man

    The Sale of Atsion Furnace

    Vineland–Fruitland–Wheatland... Charles K. Landis in-part founded the New Hammonton and as I understand financed the Vineland Railway Company (1870) that later became the Vineland Railroad Company (1877) between Bayside and Atsion. Is there any evidence that Landis was proactive in any part of...
  16. Spung-Man

    The EM and G.W.T Stones.

    I'm impressed that you are such a keen observer of cleavage! S-M
  17. Spung-Man

    Destruction at Friendship

    Let’s not forget that the mission of the 1979 Pinelands Act, in part, states: "Pinelands Commission is an independent state agency whose mission is to 'preserve, protect, and enhance the natural and cultural resources of the Pinelands National Reserve'". Jack McCormick, in his ecological...
  18. Spung-Man

    Destruction at Friendship

    I don’t get it. We should put the same value to cultural resources that we do to natural resources. It does little good to vilify off-roaders, yet ignore politically-connected entrepreneurs. https://forums.njpinebarrens.com/threads/buzbys-is-up-for-sale.7302/page-3#post-92292...
  19. Spung-Man

    Destruction at Friendship

    Last Year Stockton University hosted Down Jersey, a national Vernacular Architecture Forum, which included a strong Pinelands component. https://forums.njpinebarrens.com/threads/historic-preservation-in-wharton-state-forest-a-lost-cause.8145/#post-119879 The event was well-attended by...
  20. Spung-Man

    Reading South Jersey

    Whither the old books. I have word envy! Today’s LITT program was truly engaging; thanks Jerseyman. Book passages when read aloud took on new significance, adding context missed by reading alone. Writers a century ago were keen observers and knew how to play their literature with melodic...
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