woodjin said:Ben, I am not certain why you think the forge was around c.1861-1877 It is stated in the text that the forge was built shortly after 1827. Or are you saying that it ended around 1861-77 In which case I don't know if that could be considered a short life.
In 1851, Samuel H. Jones gave a mortgage to Anthony S. Morris, trustee, for one half of the Hanover Furnace Tract, Mount Misery Tract, and Mary Ann Forge Tract and several other tracts, which is the first recorded notice of the forge that has been located. The forge itself continued to be operated until late in the Civil War, and on a map made in 1877 is marked "not now in use," and today the only trace of the old plant is a pile of forge cinders, the dam, and sheeting.
Henry Bisbee said:MARY ANN FURNACE: A map of 1861 calls this place MARION FORGE. The site is located in the township of PEMBERTON east of NEW LISBON on a branch of MOUNT MISERY BROOK. Most recent maps call the place a furnace. However N. R. Ewan declares that this is a misnomer, and that it was a forge and never a furnace. Here is another forge that "never helped win the American Revolution" for the simple reason that it did not come into being around 1830. Gordon's map makes no mention of this place although it does appear on the Finley map of 1831. A map of 1849 simply calls it MARY ANN and the name of R. Jones "saw mill" and the word "furnace" is shown. Even though the word "furnace" appears on the 1849 map this writer has come to distrust "map-makers" and is more inclined to accept such authorities as Ewan and Boyer. A furnace and a forge even after several centuries can be distinginguished by the difference in the type of slag found at the site. Boyer states that the forge was in still in operation late in the Civil War. The principal product was bar iron and in later years wagon axles and tires.
TeeGate said:That Mrsid crap is a pain in the ass. I am so frustrated with it. Why somone would put a map on that format is beyond me! Just use a format that works!
Guy
BobM said:Thanks Ben, that really is a nice map......
BobM said:I remember going downstream just a bit from there and seeing remains of a wooden dam.
Skido said:Mary Ann Forge was sold by Benjamin Jones during the Panic of 1837 to a man (who's name I can't recall at the moment) who purchased the then-defunct forge to open a sawmill. [Jones manuscript collection, HSP]
I'm not sure where the later dates come from, unless perhaps they are simply derivations of a Beckian mistake.
woodjin said:Bob, do you remember it being a dam for certain, or could it just have been a bridge/ruins of a bridge? Jeff
BobM said:Thanks Ben, that really is a nice map......
Also, notice the ruins down below Hampton. Ruins in 1833 have to be really old, eh?
bruset said:I just added the Gordon 1833 map to the Historic Map Archive.
http://forums.njpinebarrens.com/gallery/displayimage.php?album=lastup&cat=0&pos=0
It's in JPG format.
BobM said:Guy, did you notice that the purple lines seem to denote survey lines of some sort?
TeeGate said:Bob,
I have been meaning to comment on those line. I don't think you are correct.
The person who drew those lines was quite knowledgeable on "high spots" with some of the locations pretty obvious. They also were familiar with some locations that one would not normally think as a high spot but they are. For example, in Evesham (Marlton) where all of the lines converge is exactly the location I grew up. That spot could be my moms house if the map was modern. I can bet that there are very few people who live in Marlton who even have heard of Gilbo Hill let alone even know they are on one. From that location if there were no trees you could see to Moorestown.
Knowing where a deer stand is near the Forked River Mountains and knowing of Gilbo Hill, I am impressed with the person who did that. Why they did it is another question. It would be interesting if the lines were placed there many years ago because it may mean that the hill my mom lives on had a purpose at one time such as a lookout.
What the yellow lines are is a mystery.
With that said the map has some flaws such as the Old Half Way error. The person who wrote on the map correctly moved it to the proper location. I would think where Old Half Way was incorrectly written was Woodmansie.
Guy
BobM said:I wonder, is this the only clean map left? I doubt it. Also, look at the Forked River, see the mill called Homes? I think it should be Holmes. Thats the one I want to see if we can find remnants. I have also seen that on an 1812 map, but not with the pond like this one. Very interesting map indeed.
Couple more interesting things; He has 8 mile branch by the forked river mountains in the wrong location. It is further east and does not extend far beyond lacey road. And check out Black Cedar Swamp by "Blacks" stone.
PS: how much longer before its a frigging geocache?
New URL posted!TeeGate said:Ben,
You need to fix the link. It has changed.
Guy
TeeGate said:Bob,
I have been meaning to comment on those line. I don't think you are correct.
The person who drew those lines was quite knowledgeable on "high spots" with some of the locations pretty obvious. They also were familiar with some locations that one would not normally think as a high spot but they are. For example, in Evesham (Marlton) where all of the lines converge is exactly the location I grew up. That spot could be my moms house if the map was modern. I can bet that there are very few people who live in Marlton who even have heard of Gilbo Hill let alone even know they are on one. From that location if there were no trees you could see to Moorestown.
Knowing where a deer stand is near the Forked River Mountains and knowing of Gilbo Hill, I am impressed with the person who did that. Why they did it is another question. It would be interesting if the lines were placed there many years ago because it may mean that the hill my mom lives on had a purpose at one time such as a lookout.
What the yellow lines are is a mystery.
With that said the map has some flaws such as the Old Half Way error. The person who wrote on the map correctly moved it to the proper location. I would think where Old Half Way was incorrectly written was Woodmansie.
Guy