Have you ever noticed how some roads are named for places that they once went to but no longer reach? For example, In Shamong and Tabernacle there is a road called Oakshade Road. It passes the old villages of Dellet (at Atsion Road), continues to Small's (Indian Mills Road) then on to Flyat (at Tuckerton). If you keep going, Oakshade Road essentially ends at Medford Lakes-Tabernacle Road (it only extends on the other side for about a quarter of a mile.) When the pavement ends, a small footpath continues. If you were to walk this path you would eventually merge onto Old Indian Mills Road which connects to Rt 206 at the same place that Carranza does. This is the site of the village of Oakshade. The village was the center of one of the largest farms in South Jersey at the time.
I'm not quite 40 yet but have seen many once passable roads swallowed up by the pines.
So Oakshade Road doesn't make it to Oakshade anymore. I can think of at least 3 other such roads off the top of my head. Can anyone think of some others?
How about roads that could once be driven but have since vanished? That's what amazes me - how some roads have followed the same route for hundreds of years while so many others dissappear. I wonder what would happen to many of them if it weren't for pine barrens explorers and hunters.
I'm not quite 40 yet but have seen many once passable roads swallowed up by the pines.
So Oakshade Road doesn't make it to Oakshade anymore. I can think of at least 3 other such roads off the top of my head. Can anyone think of some others?
How about roads that could once be driven but have since vanished? That's what amazes me - how some roads have followed the same route for hundreds of years while so many others dissappear. I wonder what would happen to many of them if it weren't for pine barrens explorers and hunters.