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  1. Jerseyman

    Carranza road

    Ed: Where Carranza Road leaves Route 206 at Oakshade, its official name is “Red Lion Road” until you arrive in the center of Tabernacle. Continuing south out of Tabernacle, the official name for Carranza Road is “Hampton Gate Road.” Best regards, Jerseyman
  2. Jerseyman

    Dig?!

    Jeff: Thanks for keeping a sharp eye on the Pines’ cultural resources! John King first opened his Half Moon Tavern at this location at the turn of the nineteenth century. The small community that sprang up around the tavern reportedly first carried the name Flyatem, but the locals supposedly...
  3. Jerseyman

    Structure at White's Bogs

    Mark and Guy: Based on the photographs—and particularly the first one—it appears the power source, probably steam or perhaps a gasoline engine, sat down in the lower portion of the structure and the drive belt came up through the relatively narrow opening aligned with the one side of the...
  4. Jerseyman

    Stills, Hills, Pigs, Beer

    Jim: Looks like you enjoyed another great foray into the Pines; thanks for sharing! It is unfortunate, but my indepth research on Jacob’s Chapel and Colemantown refutes much of what appears on the cast marker in your first photo, so do not take the text there for gospel. Best regards...
  5. Jerseyman

    Marlton Circle

    Turtle: The former Marlton Baptist Church still sits adjacent to Main Street, although the edifice now belongs to another denomination/congregation. In addition, the Methodist Episcopal Church once stood at 43 East Main Street until the congregants constructed the new one off Plymouth Drive...
  6. Jerseyman

    Marlton Circle

    :mrgreen: :mrgreen: :mrgreen: :bang: [wall made from Somers Brick Company bricks] Best regards, Jerseyman
  7. Jerseyman

    Hanover Furnace to Callico, 3-28-09

    Mark: A great trip and a very nice report! Starting with your last photograph, I noted that very same canoe within the last week or so on a trip through Medford to Shamong—it is a right and lasting memorial to the floodwaters that swept through the region now almost five years ago. Wow—Tempus...
  8. Jerseyman

    Where Have All the Pine Barrens Gone? Long Time Passing!

    PINEY MIKE: While I did state we now know what many of those sawmill operators were doing out in the Pines, I used the term “Pines” in the generic sense and meant not to imply the mills were processing pinewood. While that is a possibility, I think it much more likely the cordwood producers...
  9. Jerseyman

    Where Have All the Pine Barrens Gone? Long Time Passing!

    George: You may highjack when ready, Gridley! By all means you may take this thread as far as you wish, based on the direction you are already heading! Reflecting on our recent email exchange, I can see the wheels spinning in your head and I fully support your contention that these sites...
  10. Jerseyman

    Where Have All the Pine Barrens Gone? Long Time Passing!

    Guy: Be careful what you say; you may just have to change your tune soon! George?!?!? :ninja: :ninja: :ninja: Best regards, Jerseyman
  11. Jerseyman

    Where Have All the Pine Barrens Gone? Long Time Passing!

    Spungman: No, sawmills are not necessarily involved, but, as the article states, if woodsmen are shipping thousands of cords out of state, that suggest a very high level of production, and the economy of scale offered through the use of a sawmill would not be lost on those processing the...
  12. Jerseyman

    Where Have All the Pine Barrens Gone? Long Time Passing!

    A short notice appeared on page 1 of the 9 May 1892 edition of The Philadelphia Inquirer: South Jersey is shipping thousands of cords of wood to glass factories and brick plants in other States. Now you know what many of those sawmill operators were doing out in the Pines! Best regards...
  13. Jerseyman

    unnecessary pollution

    Spungman: Socially restrictive covenants of such an exclusivity nature are common from about the 1920s on. Prior to that time, restrictive covenants usually referred to dispensing spirituous liquors and refraining from certain industrial activities. However, the rise of eugenics and social...
  14. Jerseyman

    haunted graveyards

    George: I am SO GRATEFUL you said that!!! Rock on, brother, rock on! Best regards, Jerseyman
  15. Jerseyman

    10 inches of snow on the way.....

    Grendel: Where abouts are you in Stafford? I am currently working on two archaeological investigations in Stafford County: a Phase I at Leeland Station and a Phase II at Brooke Station. There is some fascinating history down there! Best regards, Jerseyman
  16. Jerseyman

    10 inches of snow on the way.....

    I put some fresh gas in the tank, shook the equipment a wee bit, pumped the primer about nine times and the snowblower fired right up on the first push of the start button—just like I had started it yesterday instead of last year. I was absolutely amazed! Best regards, Jerseyman
  17. Jerseyman

    Fox Hunting in Waterford Township

    From The Philadelphia Inquirer, 9 January 1898, page 6 FOLLOWING HOUNDS IN THE JERSEY WILDS Down Around Waterford the Fox Hunting Fad Now Prevails THE RABBITS ARE GLAD “Bunny” Has a Rest While Villagers on “Old Dobbin” Try to Catch Sly Reynard—The Radnor Hunt Outdone. Special to...
  18. Jerseyman

    Brick ID

    Michael: I saw the reference to the other stamped identifiers on the bricks and I think the person who wrote that caption is simply incorrect. Bricks stamped “S&F Co.” and “S&FB Co.” have always been products of the firm of Sayre & Fisher, one of the mega brick producers along the Raritan...
  19. Jerseyman

    Brick ID

    Gabe: It would be a little difficult to know who made the bricks and where without some type of identifying marks. Did the exhibit indicate the age of the bricks? I know in March 1904, Egg Harbor City awarded a contract to the Atlantic City Concrete, Construction and Paving Company for...
  20. Jerseyman

    Brick ID

    Somers Brick Company Gabe, Michael, et al.: I hope you can add to the information below, Michael, as Gabe has requested. This is what I have in my files: The Somers Brick Company filed its incorporation papers with the New Jersey Secretary of State on 8 May 1900. The official corporate...
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