Chas B. Mathis was a doctor that formed The Mathis Company, producing drugs and medical supplies. He had a store in Island Heights and lived in Toms River where the company existed. His store still stands and is on the Island Heights walking tour. You might consider donating the bottle to the Ocean County Historical Society in Toms River."Chas. B. Mathis Main Street Toms River N.J.
I'm pleasantly surprised that they did another dig. Monmouth University again?
Yes, being done over the course of several weekends. Most likely will not be the last one.
Can folks stop by to watch?
Many of the old and beautiful bottles that grace my shelves turned up in my Shinnecock rake while raking clam in Barnegat Bay. Having a clamming licence at the time, I don't know of any legal reason not to have kept them. There's probably countless more out there and you benefit by getting some tasty little necks in the process!
bobpbx -
A NJ Resident Recreational Shellfish License can be had for the bargain price of $10.00! If you are 62 or older, the price drops to $2.00!
http://www.state.nj.us/dep/fgw/pdf/marine_shellfish_license.pdf.
Thanks JeepWagoneer! My go to beach is at Corson's Inlet from the boat launch parking lot. The D-ville in is my "cool down" spot afterwards! I need to get my diving cert. apparently.
Leaving old bottles in the ground does not "preserve" them. The longer they lay covered with dirt and tree roots, the more damaged they become. Most of them (like the ones in the photo above) are of no real dollar value and are just fun little things to hunt for. A bottle lover would have a very hard time leaving a nice old bottle lying in the swamp, when it could be taken home and cleaned up and enjoyed by many people. Unlike arrow points, if an old bottle lays in the dirt for another 50-100 years, it will just be reduced to nothing. IMO...........of course.