I actually live over near the old San Domingo tract. I know that neighborhood your talking about, did not know of the names Clarksborough and Sand Hill in connection with that community, have always just known the neighborhood as "the hill". Have also been told it was called, by some folks back in the day, a few racial slurs attached to "hill", folks in general were a lot more racist back then. Seemed to be a lot of prejudice toward "Creek Angels" too back then, you'd be hard pressed to find anyone who knows about the Creek Angels anymore, my older relatives avoided talking about them too much, so I don't know a lot about them either. Mount Holly's first black chief of police, Gene Stafford, was from that neighborhood, I've been told he knows a lot of the neighborhood's history, I think he may still live there. Yup, I know that cemetery your talking about. We did have an impressive sand hill on the southeast corner of the town known as the "sand pits" or the "dunes" I witnessed them at the tail end of their existence as a very young child. You certainly know a lot of the history of my town, the history which most folks don't know about.
Cudgel:
Aah, so you live in Top-E-Toy! That section of town has a great history, too. When the Santa Domingo slave rebellion occurred in Haiti in 1791, some of the white French-speaking refugees came to Mount Holly and settled in Top-E-Toy. According to one source I have in my library, this area became a way station for some fugitive slaves on their travels further north during the antebellum nineteenth century. Your mention of Gene Stafford brought a smile to my face. While I never actually met him, my mother has spoken of him on several occasions as she attended Rancocas Valley for a year with him. I have heard of his historical knowledge of the Sand Hill area.
I lived in Rancocas Village for five years and became acquainted with the Crick Angels. Here is a portion of what I have written about them in the past:
“Crick Angels” refer specifically to a number of families that lived along the Rancocas Creek in Burlington County. The families included the Armstrong, Dolan, Fenimore, and Ireland surname. These families lived in pre-Levitt Willingboro, near the village of Rancocas and over in and near the Centreton section of Mount Laurel Township. The families were heavily inter-married and many of their number (both male and female alike) had certain physical features that predominated, including large bulbous noses, very little hair on their heads and most had a rather cherubic and comical look to them. The information about the Crick Angels I know first-hand. Not all of the members of those families can be identified as true Crick Angels. But for those who intermarried, the physical appearance is unmistakable. I suspect many of the old-time Crick Angels have died off by now and their progeny have either married outside the family or relocated to other areas. Nonetheless, they are a known quantity to some people.
Sand located to the east and southeast of Mount Holly proved valuable for use in water treatment filtration beds. The Philadelphia Water Department’s Torresdale Filtration Plant, constructed in the early part of the twentieth century,contained sand mined solely in this area when it was first built.
Best regards,
Jerseyman