Looks like it comes from a bogus wikipedia edit from January 2019.Park Service had this little info page printed out:
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Where did "Petty Coat Pile" come from? This is the exact kind of situation where I'd like to see what Doc Bisbee has to say about it, but that book still eludes me. I think I'll have to check it out from the library again.
In looking around that area with the mid-atlantic lidar, this is an interesting knob (109') in the Birches cranberry watershed. Kind of thing I look at and determine to go and see. Won't be easy, but will be interesting.
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Will do.When you go let me know. On the easterly side of the hill is a property stone. I will look for the deed I found that.
In looking around that area with the mid-atlantic lidar, this is an interesting knob (109') in the Birches cranberry watershed. Kind of thing I look at and determine to go and see. Won't be easy, but will be interesting.
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Apple Pie Hill (Tabernacle Township)
Located on eastern border of township near the Woodland Township line. Some claim this "hill" elevation two hundred and nine feet above sea level, resembles an old-fashioned apple pie. This writer could find no such resemblance. The name is first found on the 1849 map. However, it is surprising to note that it was named in the eighteenth century. A survey for T. Earl records a grant "near Apple Pie Hill" on June 19, 1759.⁷
7. Surveyor General's Office Book H p 209, 1759
Thinking out loud here...Why was it called Apple Pie Hill?
Perhaps there was a landowner with the last name Appleby or the such?