But the sentence is footnoted with a reference: Kevin Wright, “A Century of Forest Stewardship in New Jersey, 1905-2005,” 22.
I tried to track down the author, but sadly he passed away up in Bergen County.
"Kevin Wright, a quintessential New Jersey historian and indefatigable champion and protector of New Bridge Landing, Bergen County’s cherished Revolutionary War site, died Thursday at Hackensack University Medical Center. He was 64 and a resident of River Edge":
Kevin Wright, a quintessential New Jersey historian and indefatigable champion and protector of New Bridge Landing, Bergen County’s cherished Revolutionary War site, died Thursday at Hackensack University Medical Center. He was 64 and a resident...
www.northjersey.com
What I found striking was Wright's notes on John Clayton Gifford, the first forester with a PhD degree. He also taught forestry at Cornell and the University of Miami. While I knew Gifford had deep interest in South Jersey landscapes, I had no idea he grew up in Mays Landing next to Spoony's Marina (born 1870). John spent much of his youth in the Hamilton Township woods, when he wasn't working on his father's boat. I was particularly interested in his thoughts on spungs, cripples, and savannahs. Contemporaries note he could tell a good yarn.
Gifford secretly married Edith D. McCarthy, of Plainfield, New Jersey, at his Mays Landing home in 1896. Herself a forester, she is credited with saving the Palisades along the Hudson from destruction by quarry operations:
The champion racing yacht Marietta set sail from Pier A in lower Manhattan on the chilly late morning of September 22, 1897. Mrs. Edith Gifford was aboard along with fellow members of the New Jersey State Federation of Women’s Clubs (NJSFWC) and their male allies from the American Scenic and...
behindthescenes.nyhistory.org
Gifford was a contemporary of Weymouth's resident storyteller Fountain Gale (born 1871 at Gloucester Furnace; moved to Weymouth ~1890). Fountain was enlisted as an early fire warden around the time Gifford was Secretary of the Sate Forestry Association. I mention Fountain because Special Collections at the Bjork Library (through the South Jersey Culture and History Center) recently salvaged an early 45-minute recording of the forester discovered by PPA's Jason Howell—his great great grandson. This interview covers events around Gloucester and Weymouth Furnaces, and stories of fighting forest fires in Atlantic County. The tape should be available soon ans an upload in digital format.
S-M