Has anyone read
The Jersey Shore: A Social and Economic History of the Counties of Atlantic, Cape May, Monmouth and Ocean? The most impressive South Jersey history happens to also be the most enigmatic. It is a formidable two-volume set – comprehensive, well researched, with lots of obscure citations. Still, Wilson’s work lacks Beck’s flair for language; communication that transcends time. In refresher I reread Forgotten... and More Forgotten... this spring and wow, it wasn’t a chore! Jersey Genesis is more of a task.
Few remember Wilson while few forget Beck. Anything that makes history fun is OK with me. I even reference Sceurman and Moran in talks. You’d be surprised at the number of
Weird N.J. fans who cut their teeth there, liked the topic, and then continued on to more earnest literature. There is an innate, deep-seated human need for myths and legends. Disney made a fortune off traditional knowledge, albeit in a much more sanitized form. Real lore can be pretty gritty stuff.
Wilson, H.F., 1953: The Jersey Shore: A Social and Economic History of the Counties of Atlantic, Cape May, Monmouth and Ocean (2 vols.). New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Co. 1055 pp. A third but separate volume contains family and personal history.
S-M