Cranberry Hall

jokerman

Explorer
May 29, 2003
345
17
Manasquan
That was a very interesting history of Pointville, which I hadn't even heard of before. Some of the buildings pictured, especially the farm building, looked extremely old.
 

ChrisNJ

Explorer
Jan 31, 2006
149
0
Medford
Nice pics Jerseyman, thanks.

Are those big trees still there ?

I have been to Brindletown also and failed to find anything to suggest a real town also.
 

bobpbx

Piney
Staff member
Oct 25, 2002
14,661
4,839
Pines; Bamber area
Jerseyman, that Methodist Church looks like a very grand church for its time, considering the small community. It looks well built. Whomever was involved really put their heart into it and knew the meaning of a level line.
 

oji

Piney
Jan 25, 2008
2,126
548
63
Browns Mills
Jerseyman, Thanks for the great pics and info.Your input adds to every thread you post on. I was born on Ft. Dix and have traveled down Texas Ave./Browns Mills Rd. many times and wold never imagined it looking like those pictures. Some of the names are familiar and I think there is a Norcross St. in Pemberton Twp.
 

Gerania

Explorer
May 18, 2004
280
30
Marlton
Thank you Jerseyman.

You might be able to get onto the base. You would have to write a letter of intent to the base commander and name the individuals in the group. Each member would be required to submit probably two forms of identification for a background check a month or two before the visit. You would be escorted to the area(s) which you requested to visit.

That's pretty much the way it went for the folks that I know who have visited the Hindenburg site. You have the weight of this website behind you, they could easily figure out if you are in earnest. It might also mean that brand new members of this list who wish to visit the base might not be allowed.
 
Jerseyman,
WOW. I really never thought it got that big, but those trees along the road were huge, even then.
Thanks,
Tom

Thank you for all the info Jerseyman. Very interesting!

Guy

Great info Jerseyman, and terrific photos!

Thanks, fellows, for your comments. It’s great to examine how things once appeared through historic photographs and post cards!

Best regards,
Jerseyman
__________________
scriptor rerum Nova Caesarea
Dei memor, gratus amicus
 
That was a very interesting history of Pointville, which I hadn't even heard of before. Some of the buildings pictured, especially the farm building, looked extremely old.


Jokerman:

The farmhouse serving as the Soldiers Club in the one post card dates to either the late eighteenth or early nineteenth century based on its appearance and massing. You can see similar houses on Jacksonville Road west of Route 206 and a couple still stand along the Old Monmouth Road. A sizeable population of this dwelling style once proliferated on the farmsteads of southern New Jersey, but developers have razed many of them in the name of “progress.”

Best regards,
Jerseyman
__________________
scriptor rerum Nova Caesarea
Dei memor, gratus amicus
 
Jerseyman, that Methodist Church looks like a very grand church for its time, considering the small community. It looks well built. Whomever was involved really put their heart into it and knew the meaning of a level line.

Bob:

Thanks for your comments, which caused me to conduct some additional research. In point of fact, the original building is still visible in this post card view. It extended parallel to the photographer. The late 1880s or early 1890s additions included the tower entryway and the extension to the right of the tower perpendicular to the original building. The entrance to the original building still features steps on the left side of the building if you look carefully. It also explains the seemingly odd placement of the oil light. The new tower entrance has the appearance of Carpenter Gothic styling, complete with a bracketed cornice and an occulus window. The increase in size for the building represents both congregational growth and a likely memorial gift or gifts to make the new additions a reality. It appears that Saint Paul’s Methodist Episcopal Church remained standing and in use through at least 1938.

Best regards,
Jerseyman
__________________
scriptor rerum Nova Caesarea
Dei memor, gratus amicus
 

MarkBNJ

Piney
Jun 17, 2007
1,875
73
Long Valley, NJ
www.markbetz.net
Great stuff, Jerseyman. I was inspired to open up Google Earth and try to fit the historic map of Pointville into some geographical context. Here is a shot of Pointville today, such as it is:



And here is the same image with the historic map overlayed at 60% opacity:



If you look carefully at the satellite imagery you can just see the hints of the old roads, although the one leading off to the southeast appears to be wrong in terms of angle. Perhaps it was moved at some time before disappearing alltogether, or perhaps the cartographer just got it slightly wrong.

Edit: I looked at it again and I think the mapmaker just got the angle wrong. If you follow the shadow of the old road southeast it lines up with Range Rd., and you can clearly see how it was rerouted around the perimeter of the base.
 
Top