Buena Vista Ave is modern day Harding Hwy/US Route 40. I didn't realize the road kept the name into Hamilton Township. Does anyone know if the entire stretch of US40 between Mays Landing and Buena was called Buena Vista Ave? It was my understanding that roadway didn't extend that far before it was rebuilt as US40 in the 1920s.BKNJ
Bucky, Route 40 was laid out at 3-rods wide between Downstown and May Landing in 1817 (Gloucester County Book B, Page 207). The old Egg Harbour/Cohansey trail was its predecessor. The name Buena Vista Avenue was used on the 1870 Landisville survey, a proposed county seat for a new county to be named after Vineland's founder. It is my understanding that Buena Vista Avenue was unimproved until 1908. That year Richland General Store opened and the center of the village commerce began to move away from the West Jersey Railroad and to the newly graveled road. Before that Buena Vista Avenue was impassible in winter thaw and in rainy seasons. Richland farmers with horse teams were called out to rescue mired wagons and on occasion a newfangled automobile.
Various ethnic settlements between Buena and Mays Landing were laid out as railroad enterprises so Buena Vista Avenue was of secondary importance but listed on survey maps. Those settlements, respectively, included: New Rome (Sicilian), Richland (Welsh, originally Deerton), Ruskville (Jewish), Mizpah (Jewish), and Edwina (Jewish). The "Buena Vista" referred to the tavern (name changes something like Campbell's to Veal's to Hamilton's to Campbell's to Buena Vista to Midway Inn).
When purchased by Cake in 1848, the tavern was renamed the Buena Vista after the 1847 Mexican War battle victory. Outnumbered, we whopped the Spanish, and refused to honor it with a Spanish pronunciation. Both the tavern and the hamlet were known as Buena Vista, and was the political center of the area. This curious pronunciation (
Byoó·na) is the same with other Buena Vistas of the time (
e.g., Cumberland County "Buena Vista" near Greenwich, NJ; VA; CO).
There is much confusion with Campbell's Tavern's past, and I suspect the original establishment may have actually begun at Archibald Campbell, Senior's eighteenth century cabin located about a half-mile east of the Midway at the intersection of the original Cohansey and Tuckahoe trail intersection (near today's Tuckahoe and Union Roads). That cabin is described in the October 12, 1907 edition of
Valley Ventura:
Also read about the Buena Powder Charcoal Mill (October 05, 1907), built about the time of the 1817 road improvement. I suspect the post log cabin Campbell's tavern and its associated charcoal works are c.1817.
S-M