All,
If you have not acquired it yet I would highly recommend that you purchase the latest edition of the SoJourn magazine. Our very own member "Oriental" (Rich Watson) has researched Calico and has written an interesting article about it titled "Calico or Dobbin's Bog." You can purchase the issue in question on Amazon at the below link.
https://www.amazon.com/SoJourn-2-2-...123784&sr=8-1&keywords=sojourn+winter+2017/18
Adding to the subject matter ..... here is some information that may interest you. If you currently have the issue of SoJourn open it to the map in the center. The Calico tract shown in the two page map displays the various parcels that were included in it over the years. There are two parcels shown that were owned by Thomas and Kenneth Morey that Manumuskin and myself explored back in 2010. While exploring there we did find the property stone that marks the northern location where their property adjoins.
Over the years I have not spent as much time as I should have looking for property corners in that area, so today Jessica and I spent some time there looking for the outer corners of the Calico Tract; however, some of them I have to guess at. Today was a guess that panned out quite well. Here is another stone for the outer corners of the original Calico Tract.
On page 58 of the article Rich mentions the canal was dug in 1868 to supply water to the NJ Cranberry Bogs. That property line was surveyed sometime in the 1980's and I was able to go today to the exact location my GPS pointed me to. It is right at the most NE corner of the Calico Tract where the canal curves. The survey mentioned a "point" which usually means the absence of monuments and I suspect nothing is there as I did not find anything today. There is a possibility it is just a metal rod in the ground. In any event, standing where my GPS told me to go, I have a feeling that the canal may have drifted off of the 33 foot wide tract of land it should have been on.
Guy
If you have not acquired it yet I would highly recommend that you purchase the latest edition of the SoJourn magazine. Our very own member "Oriental" (Rich Watson) has researched Calico and has written an interesting article about it titled "Calico or Dobbin's Bog." You can purchase the issue in question on Amazon at the below link.
https://www.amazon.com/SoJourn-2-2-...123784&sr=8-1&keywords=sojourn+winter+2017/18
Adding to the subject matter ..... here is some information that may interest you. If you currently have the issue of SoJourn open it to the map in the center. The Calico tract shown in the two page map displays the various parcels that were included in it over the years. There are two parcels shown that were owned by Thomas and Kenneth Morey that Manumuskin and myself explored back in 2010. While exploring there we did find the property stone that marks the northern location where their property adjoins.
Over the years I have not spent as much time as I should have looking for property corners in that area, so today Jessica and I spent some time there looking for the outer corners of the Calico Tract; however, some of them I have to guess at. Today was a guess that panned out quite well. Here is another stone for the outer corners of the original Calico Tract.
On page 58 of the article Rich mentions the canal was dug in 1868 to supply water to the NJ Cranberry Bogs. That property line was surveyed sometime in the 1980's and I was able to go today to the exact location my GPS pointed me to. It is right at the most NE corner of the Calico Tract where the canal curves. The survey mentioned a "point" which usually means the absence of monuments and I suspect nothing is there as I did not find anything today. There is a possibility it is just a metal rod in the ground. In any event, standing where my GPS told me to go, I have a feeling that the canal may have drifted off of the 33 foot wide tract of land it should have been on.
Guy