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  1. Jerseyman

    Speedwell

    You are so right, Guy! Virtually all of the more recent books on the Pine Barrens are a regurgitation of previous works and most of the modern authors do not possess the necessary discernment to sort out what is correct and what is not within the older texts. God forbid these same authors should...
  2. Jerseyman

    Obscure settlement deep in Bass River S.F.

    The preferred descriptor phrases these days are: Woman of color Man of color People of color Most people of color no longer like the phrase "African American" and most will tell you they are not "black." Best regards, Jerseyman
  3. Jerseyman

    Shop keeper wanted; must love Pine Barrens

    That is correct. For example, if a building owner used federal tax credits to restore a historic building for a commercial purpose, then the owner is bound by the existing regulations of the AHPA. A good example of this is the Victor Building in Camden, where Philadelphia developer Carl Dranoff...
  4. Jerseyman

    Shop keeper wanted; must love Pine Barrens

    46er: A listing in the National Register of Historic Places comes with no restrictions or regulations for the property owner. The American Historic Preservation Act, first passed in 1966, does contain regulatory mechanisms to protect listed or eligible properties from adverse effects...
  5. Jerseyman

    Private Site

    this_is_nascar: I hope you didn’t become too excited with her Gloucester City piece; it contains several key errors, which is a shame. Best regards, Jerseyman
  6. Jerseyman

    Jersey Devil Alternate Origin

    Ben: The strain in the relationship between Beck and Ewan occurred because Ewan could be very prickly and he held Beck’s approach to documentation in low regard. I have heard more than one story of the verbal clashes when these two men ran into each other. Yes, Ewan’s photographic and...
  7. Jerseyman

    Jersey Devil Alternate Origin

    Bill: Here is my list of early twentieth-century South Jersey historians—actually six in number, when I thought about it—in alphabetical order: Boyer, Charles DeCou, George Ewan, Nathaniel Heston, Alfred Sickler, Joseph Stewart, Frank The worst part of this process is figuring out who is...
  8. Jerseyman

    Pine Barrens Exhibition at the Noyes Museum

    Willy: The David Oliphant who placed this advertisement in The Pennsylvania Gazette is the same David Oliphant who operated the mills pictured above, but he had extensive landholdings as the sale notice suggests. The 1859 Parry, Sykes and Earl New Map of Burlington County still depicts the...
  9. Jerseyman

    Jersey Devil Alternate Origin

    I couldn't agree more, Ben. I am no fan of Heston: he was not a very good historian and he was a racist to boot! Of the five most famous early twentieth-century local historians in South Jersey, I would rank him as dead last. I own the two volumes as part of my Jerseyana collection, but they...
  10. Jerseyman

    Jersey Devil Alternate Origin

    Here you go, Bill: Vol. I, Page 268 Unhitiching Pippin, heedless of the gaping mouths and quizzical eyes of the Mayslanders, we were soon beyond the limits of the county town. We crossed the dam abreast of the cotton mill, passed the old-time tavern, known as Baker's, and leaving the State...
  11. Jerseyman

    Atsion: Old and Renewed

    Bob: The steam pipes ran directly out of the boiler, providing steam heat to the rooms. The pipes served the same purpose as radiators, except the owner did not incur the added expense of purchasing the cast-iron appliance. The "resting on iron" phrase indicates the pipes sat on iron saddles...
  12. Jerseyman

    Pine Barrens Exhibition at the Noyes Museum

    Ben: That mill is Olyphant's grist and saw mill, once located where Hartford Road intersects Taunton Boulevard in Medford Township. Joseph Hinchman had already given up milling there and abandoned the complex when William B. Cooper took this photograph. Best regards, Jerseyman
  13. Jerseyman

    Doctor James Still's Plant Lists

    Johnny: That is very nice of your wife to volunteer at the Dr. Still center. While there, she will likely encounter one or more person who claims to an "expert" on Dr. Still and the herbal medicine he produced and used in his practice. The truth is, however, that no records remain from Still's...
  14. Jerseyman

    Atsion: Old and Renewed

    I am sorry to have asked you to do so, Guy, but I thank you for your action. I’m sure kbright64 only wanted to help provide more information in the thread about the branch and he likely did not consider copyright issues, but we all need to be aware of such matters. I hope all involved understand...
  15. Jerseyman

    Atsion: Old and Renewed

    I completely concur with your assessment, Guy. Either kbright64 needs to delete the post or the administrators should act. Jerseyman
  16. Jerseyman

    Pine Barrens Exhibition at the Noyes Museum

    Best regards, Jerseyman
  17. Jerseyman

    Lebanon State Forest Project

    Guy: "W.O." stands for "White Oak." Surveyors would often pick a tree in a survey area that would stand out from the other trees. Other similar abbreviations exist for these survey point or witness trees, depending upon the species of the tree. Best regards, Jerseyman
  18. Jerseyman

    Jersey Devil Alternate Origin

    Willy: Not to put too fine a point on it—and I knew of the Jersey Wagon Jaunts reference—Beck cites the year 1928, which is two years after Heston released his two-volume set of jaunts. Perhaps Beck just had the date wrong, in which case it is Vol. 1 as you cite; or it may be something else...
  19. Jerseyman

    Jersey Devil Alternate Origin

    Bill Sprouse: In reviewing the Heston reference in Jersey Genesis, Beck fails to provide his readers with the exact nature of Heston’s 1928 recounting of the story concerning the birth of the Jersey Devil and Estellville. It certainly did not appear in any published book or pamphlet that I have...
  20. Jerseyman

    Southern/western terminus of the NJ central line

    jdragon130: The easiest and fastest access to understand the chronology of railroads in South Jersey is here: www.westjersey.org and select the link labeled “Railroad Evolution into South Jersey (1832-1897).” Best regards, Jerseyman
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