I am trying to find out any info I can about these two place names. They can be seen on maps of Winslow Twp but I can't find any info except that Penbryn had a sand mine many years ago and it is now a lake. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks!
Johnrocket:
Here is information concerning Dicktown, courtesy of research from a late friend, Bill Farr:
DICKTOWN
This toponym appears on several maps as a settlement of sorts on or near the Cross Keys-Berlin Road, but little is known about it, and an assured location is lacking.
The Nunan 1850 Gloucester Township map shows a meandering indistinct “road” from Clementon through present Pine Hill to the Cross Keys Road. It would appear from several maps that the Clementon Road crossed the main road to end at Erial-Brooklyn Road (Winslow Township Street Map, rev. 1981, which shows its name as Clementon-Brooklyn Road, as does the Gloucester Township tax map. But it is not recognizable on the ground, and a new housing development is wiping out any roads that previously existed.
The portion of the Clementon Road from the Cross Keys Road up to Clementon, at the request of Theodore B. Gibbs and others, was laid out in 1880 (Cam RR-222) and improved and is now county road No. 704 (Kearsley Road). The road return starts at the Cross Keys-Berlin Road at "John Dick’s house now occupied by Samuel Gilmore, within a few feet where John Ware was shot and killed by his son John Ware." (This crime resulted in a notorious 1871 trial, and the initial first degree murder conviction in Camden County; Life, Trial, Confession, and Conviction of John Ware). Since the father was shot in front of his house, he must have lived at the intersection. It appears from the testimony in the murder trial that the Clementon Road was then known as the Joseph Green road, at least from that end.
The route of the road from Cross Keys-Berlin Road to Erial Brooklyn Road is now obliterated by the housing development. But several maps show a dirt road (also obliterated) starting at PENBRYN and running southwest, below Prosser’s Pond Branch, to meet the now obliterated Clementon-Brooklyn Road (1953 Clementon Quad, Topo No. 31, and Harry Marvin’s 1928 map of Winslow Township).
The Clementon Quad shows Dicktown at the spot where the Clementon Road crossed Cross Keys-Berlin Road, as does the Gloucester Township tax map and the 1991 Patton map of Camden County. But Topo No. 31 locates it where the dirt road from Penbryn meets the Clementon-Brooklyn Road. The Winslow tax map, as well as the 1986 Patton county map (thus before the housing development), show a road leaving Clementon-Brooklyn Road (on the latter map, the Erial-Brooklyn Road), not far above where it meets the latter road, and running east about 1500 feet, then turning north to Prosser’s Pond Branch (on the Patton map, further on to Sharp’s Branch), and it is named both Woods Road and John Dick Road. And Harry Marvin, with a long time and personal knowledge of that section of the county, also located Dicktown at that location on his 1928 map.
Nothing has been found which acknowledges the existence of this place, or shows its location, other than the maps mentioned. This writer is inclined to believe that, notwithstanding the use of "town", Dicktown was a sectional name for a scattering of houses in the vicinity of the roads mentioned, there being no other settled community for several miles in all directions.
I will try to post information tomorrow on Penbryn.
Best regards,
Jerseyman