Microtopography. Hmm, there is a $2 word if ever I saw one. It appears that is what they were trying to create at Franklin Parker Preserve when they scooped thousands of holes the width of a backhoe.
Spungman, speculation often times lead to discovery when those leads are followed up on.Tracker Jim,
I like long shots, so here are a couple added clues to stir the pot. Even if unrelated, the information provided may be useful towards other pursuits.
Note how Old Forks Road in Hammonton makes a bee-line starting from Winslow, Shinn’s hamlet, to Desolation Pond (my favorite spung name). One day Uncle Budd pointed out the window and said he was told the eighteenth century building still standing in the point between Myrtle Street and Union Road was once a tavern. An ancient trail marker tree grows nearby in association.
Old Forks Road, now Columbia Road (for a Nesco tavern) continues on to Westcoatville, Nescochague (translates to “wet, grassy, and muddy” by Becker 1964: 48, probably another spung), thence to the Forks of the Mullica and eventually Egg Harbor.
View attachment 6149
More provocative, a Middle Road strikes northward from the old tavern candidate, I’d like to think towards Rockwood judging by the LiDAR record by circling around the Great Swamp by heading toward Pestletown first. Any guess as to Rockwood's antiquity?
Desolation Pond evokes one wild landscape. If not a tavern, then perhaps this was a charcoal station (which were tavern-like). Centered between Blue Anchor/Winslow and Westcoatville/Nesco the area around Desolation Pond would make a serviceable watering hole (brewski for me). I hope this isn't too speculative, but this site is about adventure.
S-M
This is the earliest map I have found that shows the Goose Ponds, later Rockwood...Rockwood bog appears to be the remnants of a big spung called "Goose Pond". See:
https://forums.njpinebarrens.com/threads/linear-mounds-in-stafford-wma.7472/#post-87913
https://forums.njpinebarrens.com/threads/goose-pond.6965/#post-82511
The 1872 Beers map shows a large spung about where Rockwood is, a location that likely has 14,000 years of transhumance. I also like how Hammonton's planners (incl. Landis) planned major roads to develop farms up to Rockwood. Two Desolation Pond buildings at the suspected tavern site are in the Shoemaker estate in 1872.
The 1887 Cook/Vermeule map indicates cranberry culture is already established at Rockwood about where the Goose Pond was. Note that the old trails all seem to head to Nesco's New Columbia Tavern, hence all the Columbia Roads (some of which are King's Roads). The Blue Anchor and New Columbia taverns were super truck stops on the way to Egg Harbor, while the others might be thought of as mini-marts.
Anyone have a name for the spungs below West Mills?
Also note spungs at the suspected tavern site:
It is possible that I have Desolation Pond in the wrong place, or even that the ponds were collectively called Desolation Ponds like the Lee Ponds.
S-M
This is the earliest map I have found that shows the Goose Ponds, later Rockwood...
1860 Kitchell - Hopkins State map
View attachment 6188
Just a short update. I dove deeper into the Clement collection and found two more maps that help with the story we're trying to put together.
First is the 1794 West Mill tract survey as “now Atsion Land" (Clement Volume 3, Page 19). I’m surprised at West Mill’s importance given how little has been written about it.
Second is an 1813 resurvey of the same Atsion land (Clement Volume 1, Page 17) showing the location of Cedar Branch in Hammonton.
Of course this doesn’t prove a Shinn connection, but does demonstrate just how much there is left to learn about old places in western Atlantic County and environs if you look. For example, in Clement (Volume 1, Page 71) I found a 1761 survey that shows a structure where the Blue Bell Tavern is on Tuckahoe Road in Franklin Township, suggesting the watering hole is much older than most believed. In 1891 Blue Bell becomes the short-lived site of the Jewish industrial colony of Ziontown
S-M
S-M,
Do you know why they did those two surveys, Atsion owned West Mill on both dates?
Tracker Jim.
You provide awesome material to contemplate! Sadly, early charcoal stations (some jug taverns?) don’t always show up on maps. Take the Weymouth border places presented earlier. Abbotts is an existing timber-frame structure built between 1820 and 1830 yet fails to appear on any map until Beers 1872. The same goes for Annie Huff’s existing timber frame home at Peters (c.1830). It is my understanding that house timber framing ended by ~1830 (someone correct me if mistaken). For example the c.1840 Mathias Veal (collier) house in Buena on Hartman (1978: Map 5) was disappointingly balloon framed.
The Lee Place does not show up on any map except an 1867 Weymouth tract exceptions survey, yet I have seen large hand-forged strap hinges recovered by the current property owner indicating habitation. Horse Break Pond so far only appears on an obscure 1867 Davis case survey and its reputed Swedish cemetery is totally without documentation. Berrys only appears on an 1812 map (http://www.njpinebarrens.com/historic-maps/state/#jp-carousel-778), yet deeds show Scotts living there from 1790–1940. To echo historian Frank Stewart, western Atlantic County is replete with long-forgotten places. The hunt is exciting, but don't expect perfection as records are poor. The wetland terrain can incredibly complex in geomorphology making it confounding to surveyors.
I have some old low-resolution copies of Clement maps where the fine print is hard to read. The handwriting is almost as bad as mine (pretty poor). I will not bet the family farm on the correctness of the location on this one but put the map out for play in hope that someone might be able to verify the survey’s ultimate placement (Clements v. 1: 58, Maps + Draughts)
On the below Clement copy of a an earlier survey the features Cedar Branch and Desolation Pond are decipherable, but Drivers Branch much less so. If this is the same Cedar Branch as the one today in Hammonton then there is a laid-out land plot about where the mystery station would be. It appears to be on the edge of a major property line. Farr (2002: 27–28) lists another Cedar Branch in Camden County (aka Tomlinsons Rail Branch) out where Williamstown/New Freedom Road intersects with the Blenheim-Erial-New Brooklyn Road but that waterway doesn’t match well.
Below is a close-up excerpt of the land plot. It is hard to read, so I'm curious to see if others see what I see.
S-M
S-M,
Do you know why they did those two surveys, Atsion owned West Mill on both dates?
Don't know when the Atsion Iron Works bought the West Mill Tract, but in 1817 Jacob Downing one of the owners of Atsion mortgages his interest in the West Mill Tract. 1819 he defaulted on the mortgage and the Bank of N. America took over his share of the Works. Then Samuel Richards bought it from the Bank of North America. So it remained with Atsion until Wharton sold off some of it.
Yea, I was young myself back then, but that doesn't change the fact that there were two extensive surveys made on the west mill tract for some reason. Maybe mapping to determine the potential use of the land. We do know that the west mill tract was part of the Atsion property from before 1800 to 1898. Therefore it may not have been the land that Michael Landis, Charles K's dad, bought from Coughlin of Philadelphia in 1860. I do think you are right, the west mill was an important tract. In every description of the Atsion property they were sure to mention that the west mill tract was included.I was a wee tyke, so barely remember.
Is this part of the Atsion estate land that Michael Landis, Charles K's dad, bought from Coughlin of Philadelphia in 1860? MG Landis was the silent money-bags behind the scenes. I did a report on Margaret Mead's home for the Pinelands Commission some years ago and will have to find my notes.
On a Clement copy (Volume 3, Page 8) of an earlier 1848 survey the writing on a squiggly road "Old" and "Road" are decipherable, "Fork" is harder to read. I am under the impression that Old Forks Road is ancient and predates Hammonton's Old Egg Harbor Road and the the current newer Old Egg Harbor Road (see https://forums.njpinebarrens.com/threads/tavern-in-pleasant-mills-nj.9582/page-4#post-117180); an Old Old Old Egg Harbor? Cedar Branch is legible. This survey shows an unnamed head pond at Cedar Branch's source. Hammonton’s Cedar Branch sources or heads at a large spung that was once known as North Pond, for an early physician who lived on the property. That pond is just a short distance from anthropologist Margaret Mead’s childhood “6-Acre farm” where she was home schooled by her grandmother. The road crossing Cedar Branch would then be today's White Horse Pike.
S-M
All,
In more recent times the West Mill track was sold to Andrew Rider the founder of Rider Collage by Joseph Wharton and others on January 15, 1898. Rider quickly placed stones on the 4 corners of the property. Here they are. The R. 98 stands for Rider 1898.
This one is at the southern end of the property right where all of the camping went on. Actually, after finding the stone I could see that much of Wharton was being used as the campground.
It eventually was owned by Frank E. and Franklin E. Haines of Medford, and at the time the state purchased Wharton is was owned by Earl Haines. Wharton survey crew #1 run by R. Wolf did the survey.
Guy
Don,
To contribute to our search for a date of Atsion's acquisition of the West's Mill tract, I offer this advertisement from November 10, 1763...
Collection: The Pennsylvania Gazette
Publication: The Pennsylvania Gazette
Date: November 10, 1763
Title: To be SOLD or LETT,
To be SOLD or LETT,
A Saw mill, together with the Lands thereunto belonging, lying
on one side of the South Branches of LittleEggharbour River,
within 4 Miles of a Landing, where the Produce may be
transported either to New York or Philadelphia. Also to be
sold a House and Lot, situate in Mountholly, lying in a
convenient Place for a Storekeeper or Tradesman. Any Person
inclining to purchase, may know the Terms, by applying to JOHN
WEST, at the Old Ferry, Philadelphia.
Could this be the West's Mill? If so could Atsion have acquired the West's Mill track from it's very beginning?
Additionally, I would like to call attention to the following two advertisements offering the Atsion Iron-works for sale. The first one is from March 2, 1791, and the other is from December 8, 1804. Both of these advertise as assets "two sawmills, and a seat for a third mill."
Could the two saw mills be the one by the iron works and the other the West Mill, and the seat be the one at the locks?
This is the March 2, 1791 ad...
View attachment 6212
Fortunately I have a typed version of this...
Collection: The Pennsylvania Gazette
Publication: The Pennsylvania Gazette
Date: March 2, 1791
Title: TO BE SOLD
TO BE SOLD
The ATSION IRON-WORKS.
WITH the Mills, Lands and Improvements appurtenant thereto, situate partly in Burlington, and partly in Gloucester counties, in the state of New Jersey, within thirty miles of the city of Philadelphia, and about nine miles from the navigable waters of LittleEggHarbour, and sixteen miles from a landing on the tide waters of Delaware; consisting of a blast furnace now at work, the stack of which is new, and the casting-house, bellows, &c. lately put in through repair; an air furnace in good repair; a forge with four fires and two hammers in complete order; a stamping mill for cinder; a grist-mill nearly new; two saw-mills, well repaired, and a seat for a third mill, which may answer well either for a grist-mill, saw mill, slitting or rolling mill, or other water-works, having a dam, &c. ready and well supplied with water; a spacious coal-house for the furnace, and another for the forge, the late just built, and the former nearly new; a smith's shop; a convenient large dwelling-house, with a roomy, commodious kitchen, a smoke house, spring-house and other useful out-buildings; an extensive storehouse, barn, stables, &c. a garden well inclosed, a young thriving orchard and several hundred acres of cleared plow and meadowland, enclosed with good cedar fence: also, three commodious farm-houses, barns and out-houses, and for the accommodation of workmen and their families, upwards of 20 good frame and log-dwellings, to many of which are improved gardens. Belonging to this estate are about 20,000 acres of land, conveniently surrounding the improvements, mostly covered with thriving and good timber for coaling and sawing; a considerable part of the soil well adapted to raising of rye and Indian corn, and latterly several large lots of bottom land having been cleared and drained, promise will for good meadow. The ore lies in great quantities from 14 to 12 mile from the furnace --- the most distant don't exceed four miles, and the roads level and good. The quality of the ore is well known, the refined bar-iron made therefrom being well approved both in New York and Philadelphia, and the castings are allowed to be equal to any, and superior to most for toughness of quality, the potash kettles made at Atsion having had the preference to most, if not all, brought to the New York market. Upon the whole, the main objects generally sought for in profitable iron-works are not wanting here. The stream of water is large and good, the ore and wood to all appearance may last a long series of years, and the carriage to market short and convenient. --- These works have been profitable to the concerned, as their books will shew; which may be viewed by persons inclining to purchase. The estate will, nevertheless, be sold on low terms, and a considerable sacrifice made for the ease and relief of one of the owners, who has long had the principal management of it, and is earnestly desirous of being released from the weight of the business. Any person or persons inclining to treat for the whole, or any part thereof, are desired to apply to JOSEPH SALTER, on the premises, GEORGE BOWNE, merchant, in new York, or to JOHN or HENRY DRINKER, in Philadelphia.
25th 2d mo. 1791.
This is the December 8, 1804 ad...
View attachment 6213
Unfortunately I do not have a typed version of this.
Thank you for taking the time to view all this
James
Nice connections Spungman! I'll do some homework.Did anyone notice that the Sailor Boy Tavern was owned by Charles Shoemaker and heirs?
The Desolation Pond tavern is listed on the 1872 Beers map as property owned by the Shoemakers estate.
Other similarities exist: 1) both parcels are square; 2) Sailor Boy on “New” and “Old” Old Egg Harbor Road and the Desolation Pond Tavern on “Old, Old” Egg Harbor Road; 3) both may be connected by a very old Gloucester Road; and 4) both are equidistant from the Coumbia Tavern.
In review of the pamphlet:
Trustees of the Weymouth Farm and Agricultural Company. 1856. Brief of Title of Lands Belonging to the Weymouth Farm and Agricultural Company. Philadelphia. 16 pp.
The Sailor Boy Tavern parcel is listed as Exception A to the Weymouth tract. The title chain is: Elijah Clark and Richard Westcott 1768 – John Crammer 1776 – Recompence, David and Daniel Scull 1784 – Clayton Earl 1802 – Charles Shoemaker 1802. Like Doughty, I suspect that Shoemaker may be involved with tavern enterprises in support of coaling. Does anyone have information on Charles Shoemaker?
Old Forks Road has the right stuff to be ancient. For example, on the 1848 survey its depiction is squiggly (unimproved). Furthermore the road is called "Old" in 1848. Unlike later straight roads, properties are not aligned to Old Forks Road, but Old Forks adjusts to landscape features.
Go back to the Sailor Boy thread (see https://forums.njpinebarrens.com/threads/tavern-in-pleasant-mills-nj.9582/page-4#post-117180) and the squiggly "Forks Road" at Green Tree Tavern is related to the 1737 Beaver Dam Road survey (as is Sailor Boys' Gloucester Road).
As I understand the Forks community is pretty much an eighteenth century phenomenon. By 1850, is there much going on there anyway?
S-M
Tracker Jim,Nice connections Spungman! I'll do some homework.