Pinelands use of “caves” as living space continued into the twentieth century. In deep woods behind our farm a hermit called Ikey-the-Wild-man lived through the 30’s in such a structure. It was located along the old South River Indian trail that linked the Oasis in Vanamans Thick n’ Hole (
hole = spung) Tract with the Smith/Ireland settlement near the artesian well at Atlantic County Park. He was a classic image of an isolate; unkempt long black trench-coat, with long grey hair and beard. On rare occasion Ikey left the woods to visit neighbors.
His abode was a series of tunnels dug into a gravel knob. There the ground is very hard soil of the Aura series, its densification in part attributed to cold Ice-Age conditions. Large (>6-feet X 6-feet) sand-filled permafrost crack relicts crisscrossed the site, allowing easy digging in what would otherwise be pebbly rock-like ground. The entrance was an A-frame wood structure clad with flattened tin cans to shed the rain.
Here’s Ikeys Spung:
Another equally grizzled hermit, Billy Adams, lived in a shack at the Lee Ponds. The hovel was located where South River Road crossed an ancient charcoal road that linked Cumberland and Weymouth Furnaces via Doughty's Tavern.
Billy rode a bicycle into East Vineland to farm-labor when he needed money, the sight of which scared children. Later, he moved to a five-acre clearing and even married late-in-life, thence becoming known as Five-acre Farmer. He even bought a Model-T.
Some hermits were itinerant laborers that had worked as coalers, and remained in the woods after the industry petered out. Doughty's Tavern (
c.1790), a charcoal station shown above, was located near Milmay at the junction of Tuckahoe Road, the Weymouth-Cumberland Road, and the old Bears Head Road. Tuckahoe Road was realigned in 1817, so I can not tell you if this was the original building moved from the first site a quarter-mile away, or an 1817 rebuild. It was torn down around 1915 and replaced with the Osterly house from across the road. That house burned down. The current home was an outbuilding that took the place of the burned structure, although the original basement remains beneath it.
S-M