Search results

  1. Jerseyman

    Atsion To Boot Hill

    Jack: You can thank RednekF350 for bringing this thread back to the surface. I had totally missed your recent added postings to this old thread. If your interest is Winslow Township, cadastral maps for that locality extend back in time to 1850, when R. Pearsall Smith published a regional map...
  2. Jerseyman

    Gas

    Gasoline and oil price setting is based on a complex paradigm. While there is little doubt that petroleum corporations take full advantage of price shifts, it is a proven policy construct that just a hint or, better yet, a more direct threat by the United States to tap more of its own domestic...
  3. Jerseyman

    Thompson's Beach, Shellpile, and Bivalve

    Dragonfly Whisperer: The Morris Beach development has fascinated me for some years now. About eight or nine years ago, I worked on a project involving the Jobs Point Bridge. As a result, I had to conduct research on Morris Beach. Here is the survey plan for the development from August 1939...
  4. Jerseyman

    Raptors

    Only if he was wearing a wizard's hat! Jerseyman
  5. Jerseyman

    LBI 1962 Storm Photos

    Sorry, George, but the ship’s number is actually 798, not 79. The pole is very nicely hiding the numeral “8.” As you note, she is the U.S.S. Monssen, a Fletcher class destroyer. Here is a quicky reference to her history: http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/sh-usn/usnsh-m/dd798.htm Best...
  6. Jerseyman

    bay days

    Whip: You are correct about steamboats stopping at Lanning’s Wharf. During the late 1880s, Billy Thompson, the so-called Duke of Gloucester, purchased the New York steamers Sylvan Glen and Sylvan Dell to aid in bringing the teaming throngs to his amusements at Gloucester Beach, known to Quaker...
  7. Jerseyman

    Help with a face and a place

    Gibby: I’ve been watching the development of this thread with some fascination and amusement. You are correct: three of the workmen are holding half-hatchets (splitting blade on one end and forged with a hammerhead on the other end) and one is holding what appears to be a tack or nailing...
  8. Jerseyman

    Pieces Of Hampton Park History

    Lost Town Hunter: My “absence of a response” was due to looking for a research folder from a documentary project I completed back in the early 1990s. I am well aware of the Braddock-Rogers article, but that article is a secondary source at best and a tertiary source at worse. Braddock-Rogers...
  9. Jerseyman

    Stop That Jade Run

    Thank you for the definitions. That definition, however, does NOT appear in the OED, my standard for etymological sourcing. Both of the references you provided define the woman as disreputable and, in the latter source, ill-tempered. It says nothing about the woman being an indentured servant...
  10. Jerseyman

    Poking around Mary Ann Forge

    Ben: I can’t speak with certainty here—and I can’t explain why the center channel does not appear on the historic maps—but with the forge working off the one raceway and the sawmill operating on the main stream, if you have the gates shut on both head races, then you still need a way to allow...
  11. Jerseyman

    Stop That Jade Run

    The earliest use of the toponym “Stop the Jade Creek” to be found is in a survey of Daniel Leeds lands dating to 1719. The survey references a sawmill belonging to Thomas Budd on Stop the Jade. Sorry to say, but I have never heard the term “Jade” applied to a slave or indentured servant. I’m...
  12. Jerseyman

    Pieces Of Hampton Park History

    Gentlemen: Just to clarify: I am not disputing the two mill locations on the Wading River branches; I merely disagree with Hawthorne’s assertions concerning who constructed and operated the skit mill. Hawthorne indicates it is unknown and I contend that Evi Bellangee, either Sr. or Jr., built...
  13. Jerseyman

    Pieces Of Hampton Park History

    There were all kinds of permutations of mill combinations. For example, I documented an eighteenth-century windmill in Burlington that began as a gristmill and then later was converted into a combination linseed oil and snuff mill. Certainly there are numerous examples, particularly along the...
  14. Jerseyman

    Pieces Of Hampton Park History

    Gabe: When I have a few minutes, I will check some sources, but it has always been my understanding that Bellangee owned the skit mill. I will double-check later this evening or tomorrow and reply again. I remember reading Hawthorne’s article when it first came out in the magazine and disagreed...
  15. Jerseyman

    Pieces Of Hampton Park History

    Lost Town Hunter: Any mention of Watson Buck always brings a smile to my face as I recall my many trips into the countryside with him. We shared a commonality of friendship with Watson! Lost Town Hunter and pinelandpaddler: I think most people who know the history of Harrisville and Evi...
  16. Jerseyman

    Pieces Of Hampton Park History

    Ted and Gabe: For my convenience and as a time-saving measure, I left off all of Doc’s end notes from my original posting, including the one Ted cites above. Gabe, if you need to know all of those end note references, feel free to email or PM me. Likewise, I have a complete set of the SGO...
  17. Jerseyman

    No county land for dog park

    Let the Dog Wars begin! :rolleyes: Jerseyman
  18. Jerseyman

    Pieces Of Hampton Park History

    Gabe: I am not sure when Ted will return to view the forum, so if you do not mind a response from me, I will quote from the same source that Ted would likely use: In his work, Sign Posts, Doc Bisbee notes: ROBERTS BRANCH. A branch of Batsto River which rises on eastern border of Tabernacle...
  19. Jerseyman

    Lower Bank News 1931

    Welcome back, my friend—you have been sorely missed here! Best regards, Jerseyman
  20. Jerseyman

    Bullock/Pasadena/Mount Misery/Vandalism

    Mudpie: Welcome to the forums! I cannot tell you where Flash obtained the photographs of the Woodmansie/Bullock school and post office, but I can tell you that he derived the photograph of the narrow-gauge locomotive and the Giberson house in Mount Misery from Henry Beck’s original 1936 edition...
Top