A common perception today is that the vast area known as the New Jersey Pine Barrens is an undeveloped, undisturbed expanse ideal for fleeing the daily grind to find a little peace and tranquility. Ask the average non-southern New Jersey resident what images the Pine Barrens conjure up and you might hear about the endless tract of trees they drove through to get to the seashore, the folklore of the Jersey Devil, or the place where Paulie and Christopher got lost trying to bury a body on The Sopranos.
The Pine Barrens (or Pinelands) is, in fact, one of the largest contiguous stretches of wilderness on the East Coast, encompassing parts of seven counties, three state forests, and over a million acres protected by the state DEP. “Barrens” is sort of a misnomer, though, in that hundreds of species of plants and animals — many indigenous and completely unique to this area — lurk in those bogs, woods and creeks.
What is also erroneous is the common assumption that the Pine Barrens is, and always was, undeveloped. In fact, when the nation was in its outset during the 18th and 19th centuries, the Pine Barrens was a hub of all sorts of industry.
By Ray Schweibert
http://www.atlanticcityweekly.com/news-and-views/local-history/Pinelands-Evolution--133089408.html
The Pine Barrens (or Pinelands) is, in fact, one of the largest contiguous stretches of wilderness on the East Coast, encompassing parts of seven counties, three state forests, and over a million acres protected by the state DEP. “Barrens” is sort of a misnomer, though, in that hundreds of species of plants and animals — many indigenous and completely unique to this area — lurk in those bogs, woods and creeks.
What is also erroneous is the common assumption that the Pine Barrens is, and always was, undeveloped. In fact, when the nation was in its outset during the 18th and 19th centuries, the Pine Barrens was a hub of all sorts of industry.
By Ray Schweibert
http://www.atlanticcityweekly.com/news-and-views/local-history/Pinelands-Evolution--133089408.html