I grew up to age 15 (1965) in Haddonfield, and hid out during much of the summer at my father's warehouse business on Rt. 73 in Marlton, at the edge of the Barrens. I stayed at Camp Columbus just north of Bamber Lake in 1960 and 1961. To say that the camp changed my life is an understatement--I was introduced to natural history, to the Barrens legends, to 18th and 19th century history, to cedar water, to pitcher plants, skunk cabbage, and sundews, to rattlers, to Pineys, to blueberries, and to sand, sand, and more sand during those two or three summers, not to mention to discipline like I had never known. I took the lessons with me and grew them into a life's work. I encountered this group when I did a whimsical search for Camp Columbus on the web, and I see from the lack of apparent information that the place is probably long-gone. I remember that the owner(?) director was a gentleman named Callahan, and it was basically a camp for Catholic boys--we had Mass every morning and longer Mass on Sundays, two activity periods per day (hiking, crafts, swimming, boating, etc), twice-daily cabin inspections (woe betide the cabin with a dust bunny on the floor), and a nighttime assembly that was my favorite part because the naturalist did a presentation nearly every night (we didn't sing "Kumbaya" but we didn't sing hymns either). The naturalist during my time at the camp was a high school teacher from Pennsylvania named Joe Semanchek (sp?), and I will always remember him for introducing me to natural history and to music (he was a fine resonator guitar player).
I'm posting primarily to polish my own memory of a significant but long-bygone time, but also to inquire whether anyone else on this forum might have attended the camp, perhaps might have some knowledge about Mr. Callahan, Mr. Semanchek (sp?), the camp--how long did it survive past my time, what happened to Mr. S? etc. I'm quite sure that if I returned now I would be deeply grief-stricken by all the changes to the Barrens (I live in northern California and last visited NJ in 1980), so I'm content with the memories and with the daily application of those influences in my own life. Still, if anyone has any insight I'd love to hear it.
Sean Barry
I'm posting primarily to polish my own memory of a significant but long-bygone time, but also to inquire whether anyone else on this forum might have attended the camp, perhaps might have some knowledge about Mr. Callahan, Mr. Semanchek (sp?), the camp--how long did it survive past my time, what happened to Mr. S? etc. I'm quite sure that if I returned now I would be deeply grief-stricken by all the changes to the Barrens (I live in northern California and last visited NJ in 1980), so I'm content with the memories and with the daily application of those influences in my own life. Still, if anyone has any insight I'd love to hear it.
Sean Barry