Willy,
I am not surprised to see a Swain at Fordville, a suburb of Gouldtown. I am under the impression that there was a large Black and small Native population in western Atlantic, eastern Cumberland, and northern Cape May Counties that no one bothered to acknowledge. This was the Great Wilderness and there is a whole lot of forest exploitation going on by an unknown itinerant population.
The Swain family arrived in New Hampshire in 1636, then soon resettled on Nantucket. They were whaling in Cape May County by 1690. When the whales are “fished out” (poor word, I know), they turn to forest products in support of ship- and boatbuilding—especially naval stores like tar, pitch, and rosin. When Rev. Robert Steelman wrote his introduction to the Swain diary, even he was unsure of where the Old Swain Place was, and vaguely placed it somewhere near Head-of-the River.
His brother was Jim Steelman, an engineer who was quite active in the Atlantic County Historical Society in the study of the Steelman line. I helped Jim with locating the Long-A-Coming trail and the Indiantown settlement by the Lochs-of-the-Swamp (Mays Landing). There I met Robert and turned him on to the Hartman maps. In review of Robert's hand-written notes it is verified the Old Swain Place of Rev. Richard Swain’s family was indeed on the Old Cape Road.
It never ceases to amaze me how much of the early eighteenth century busy landscape is all-but-forgotten—roads, taverns, ponds, graveyards… Gone!
S-M