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  1. Jerseyman

    Help on Applegate Sawmill

    Joe: I hope you understand my reticence to display the maps until I better understood what you are doing out there. I never want to aid pot-holers in their dastardly deeds of destroying undisturbed archaeological sites. You may have already examined some of these maps, but I will post them for...
  2. Jerseyman

    Help on Applegate Sawmill

    German: Steam was in use as early as the 1820s for sawmills. The 1838 Report to the United States Treasurer on steam engines is full of all types of mills powered by steam. Since Lewis Applegate did not construct his mill until 1842, it certainly possible he employed steam. An alternative is...
  3. Jerseyman

    Help on Applegate Sawmill

    Joe Kelly: I thank you for your service to our country and I hope the VA is taking care of your disabilities. I do have some maps that would aid you with what was located on Cattus Island, but I hesitate to post them here. Based on your email above, I discern you are someone who owns a metal...
  4. Jerseyman

    Burrs Mill

    jokerman: Based on an examination of Google Earth, I think some of the original roads remain and some have undergone modification: Best regards, Jerseyman
  5. Jerseyman

    Burrs Mill

    ohnnyb: Joseph Burr established a sawmill in what then was Northampton Township in circa 1750. It was certainly there in 1753 when surveyors drafted a return for a road between “Vincent Leeds sawmill to Joseph Burr’s mill, Northampton.” In 1765, armed and disguised men entered a Joseph Burr’s...
  6. Jerseyman

    Lebanon State Forest Project

    Absolutely, Guy! The survey is dated 1782. Best regards, Jerseyman
  7. Jerseyman

    Lebanon State Forest Project

    Guy: Based on the Surveyor General's Office, Survey Book T, Page 160, your “TT” stands for Thomas Taylor. Best regards, Jerseyman
  8. Jerseyman

    Greenwich NJ Oldest House

    amf: The popularity of gambrel roofs in West New Jersey and the Delaware Valley can be traced to the early part of the eighteenth century, say from approximately 1715 to 1735 or thereabouts. It is entirely possible that the houses claimed to be seventeenth century actually underwent changes to...
  9. Jerseyman

    Sooy Family

    I think it's great you guys are replying to a thread on the Sooy family, as it interests me, too, but I hope you do understand that this thread is from 2012. Shelby joined on 5 October 2012 and she has not logged into the site since November 2012. Best regards, Jerseyman
  10. Jerseyman

    The lost and forgotten Sandy Ridge Station

    Gibby: If this is the correct foundation that I recall, it once supported a stationary engine used to power the factory at Union Clay Works. An issue of the New Jersey Courier, published in Toms River, from sometime between 1858 and 1860, carried a squib about moving a stationary engine by...
  11. Jerseyman

    Capewell Glass Negative Collection

    Unknowable, Joe? Hardly. I can state with absolute certitude that this body of water is Almonesson Lake. The treeline, especially the rise of it on the left-hand side of the image, is still that way today! Note the two boats out on the lake, a favorite pastime for those who visited this...
  12. Jerseyman

    Abandoned racetracks.

    This oval track is located just over the line in Shamong Township and sits on land belonging to the Branco family since at least the 1960s. Based on a quick review of Historic Aerials, the track was established sometime between 1956 and 1963. It was still in use in 1970, but the trees were...
  13. Jerseyman

    Capewell Glass Negative Collection

    Joe: Sorry, but Bob is just plain wrong, despite him having resided in Almonesson since 1950. Here is a post card view of the mill and the bridge over the dam and it exactly matches these structures in your photograph: The only difference is the tree on the lake bank is gone in your...
  14. Jerseyman

    Bard's Neck

    Willy: That explains why I did not find a survey of 193 acres to Bennet Bard! For a better description of the land in question, I suggest you examine two deeds in Colonial Deeds and Conveyances for West New Jersey, Liber I-K, beginning on page 71 and on page 84. You can also look at SGO...
  15. Jerseyman

    Bard's Neck

    Willy: I just conducted a second review of Bennet Bard’s surveys recorded in the Surveyor General’s books and did not find a parcel containing 193 acres. I also examined the deeds granting Bard land, although I am missing one roll of microfilm that contains two deeds in which he is the...
  16. Jerseyman

    Bard's Neck

    Willy: Welcome to the forums! In an attempt to provide a reasoned response to your query, I just completed a brief review of all Surveyor General surveys related to Bennet Bard and I find most of his land lay more or less northward of his sawmill on Bard’s Branch. This suggests to me that...
  17. Jerseyman

    Archeological dig at Red Bank Battlefield

    Folks: If you are interested in Red Bank and the battle of Fort Mercer, you may want to read two entries on my blog: http://jerseyman-historynowandthen.blogspot.com/2010/11/plantation-yclept-bromley.html http://jerseyman-historynowandthen.blogspot.com/2011_02_01_archive.html Best...
  18. Jerseyman

    Genealogy Issues

    Marcia: I concur with Teegate about where to post your genealogical queries, but with this caveat. There are numerous national and regional genealogical forums, e.g., Ancestry, Genforum, Rootsweb, New Jersey Genealogical Forum, etc., where you can post queries and your findings about families...
  19. Jerseyman

    Capewell Glass Negative Collection

    Based on post cards in my collection, there is little doubt in my mind that Capewell stepped out onto the bridge over the dam and shot this photograph of Almonesson Lake. Best regards, Jerseyman
  20. Jerseyman

    Capewell Glass Negative Collection

    Folks: This is an incredible photograph of the grist and saw mill in Almonesson, Deptford Township, Gloucester County. I have seen very few images of this mill and even the post card view in my collection is poor when compared with this photo! Almonesson was originally known as Lambtown...
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