All,
I thought I would go into a little more detail on what I have been doing in this area, and hopefully some of you will find it interesting. I have been trying to find out as much as I can about the parcel of land shown in the below link. Notice the lines surrounding the red target symbol.
http://www.topozone.com/map.asp?lat=39.79581&lon=-74.80993&datum=nad27&u=4&layer=DRG&size=m&s=24
As I mentioned this property was once owned by Jesse S. Braddock of Medford. He was married in June 1856 to Rachel Ann Evans of Marlton. The Evans family were prominent Marlton residents who owned the bogs where Kings Grant is now. They also were involved with Friendship Bogs along with the Wills Family. I am uncertain if Rachel Evans was from that line of the family, but I suspect she was. There is a member of this site who may answer that here one day.
Jesse Braddock died at the age of 64 on December, 7 1895, and his wife Rachel lived to the age of 72 and passed away on Sept 11th 1904. Does Sept 11 and Dec 7 mean anything to you?
An interesting coincidence!
Since I did not have the exact location of this property, I used an educated guess on where the corners would be, and Rob and I found the first stone on our hike a week ago. To refresh here is that photo.
Once I find one stone and have a bearing and distance to another one, it is quite easy to find the rest, except physically finding them in the woods. I have acquired the below survey showing the info I needed to do just that. Now take notice of three things in the below photo. First, on the left it says “Beginning stone in coal pit bottom”, and just to the right is a small triangular tract. And just above that is penciled in “Does not show on tax map”. This coal pit stone is what Rob and I was looking for when I lost my stick. The line that comes down on an angle from the top of the map and creates that small triangle is the Medford and Shamong boundary line, with Shamong on the right and Medford on the left. So we now know that for some reason the Medford portion of this property did not show on tax maps, and I was wondering if because the property was not fully surveyed, maybe the property did not actually extend into Medford, and I wanted to find that out.
So today using the info from that map, and our find the week before, Jessica and I traveled yet again there to find that stone. In minutes I found it in semi dense woods that one would never have known at one time had been a coal pit.
In order to get an idea of what that area looked like in the 1930’s, I made this “Then and Now” showing this area in 1930 and today.
Next I needed to find one more stone to be able to get a good idea of the actual property location. Almost 800 feet away we found it flat on the ground along a path.
A search for the fourth was unsuccessful today, so next weekend I will be there again. However, I had found enough of them to accurately see how much of that property extended into Medford. Sure enough the survey map above is quite accurate which you can see by this map. The triangle on the left proves that this property did indeed extend into Medford Township.
Guy