This is one of the reasons I love the river. No matter how well I think I know it, there is always something more to be found, even if its been under my nose the whole time. I must have paddled by this location a couple hundred times, but not until last week did I notice some pilings jutting out of the mud:
http://gallery.njpinebarrens.com/showphoto.php/photo/14673/title/dsc02298/cat/500
All of this time, I thought they were just some of the many stumps to be found in the mud in this area. This time around, there was no mistake about it. I paddled up the shore to take a closer look:
http://gallery.njpinebarrens.com/showphoto.php/photo/14674/title/dsc02290/cat/500
The mud is soft and deep here, and prodding revealed that a good portion of the ruins lie submerged in the muck. They looked to be old, but there were metal components that didn't strike me as old-looking:
http://gallery.njpinebarrens.com/showphoto.php/photo/14671/title/dsc02291/cat/500
Cable clamps:
http://gallery.njpinebarrens.com/showphoto.php/photo/14672/title/dsc02297/cat/500
When I returned home from my paddle, I looked into the history of wire rope. I found that John Roebling started manufacturing wire rope in Trenton by 1850. Just how old could these ruins be?
The dock was situated on the north side of the river (Wharton State Forest), just upstream from a major historic landing. Could this be evidence that the dock was used when the river was a much busier place? As I mentioned, much mud has been deposited since the dock was built, and the channel itself is too shallow today even at high tide for a boat to make it to the dock.
Yet, I'm more inclined to think that the dock isn't so old, perhaps built for recreational purposes by a Winterbottom or another local.
More investigation is necessary!
http://gallery.njpinebarrens.com/showphoto.php/photo/14673/title/dsc02298/cat/500
All of this time, I thought they were just some of the many stumps to be found in the mud in this area. This time around, there was no mistake about it. I paddled up the shore to take a closer look:
http://gallery.njpinebarrens.com/showphoto.php/photo/14674/title/dsc02290/cat/500
The mud is soft and deep here, and prodding revealed that a good portion of the ruins lie submerged in the muck. They looked to be old, but there were metal components that didn't strike me as old-looking:
http://gallery.njpinebarrens.com/showphoto.php/photo/14671/title/dsc02291/cat/500
Cable clamps:
http://gallery.njpinebarrens.com/showphoto.php/photo/14672/title/dsc02297/cat/500
When I returned home from my paddle, I looked into the history of wire rope. I found that John Roebling started manufacturing wire rope in Trenton by 1850. Just how old could these ruins be?
The dock was situated on the north side of the river (Wharton State Forest), just upstream from a major historic landing. Could this be evidence that the dock was used when the river was a much busier place? As I mentioned, much mud has been deposited since the dock was built, and the channel itself is too shallow today even at high tide for a boat to make it to the dock.
Yet, I'm more inclined to think that the dock isn't so old, perhaps built for recreational purposes by a Winterbottom or another local.
More investigation is necessary!