In his seminal work, Father Henry Charlton Beck reported that TWO stage roads went to/through Cedar Bridge (More Forgotton Towns of Southern New Jersey, Rutgers University Press, 1963, paperbound edition, p. 83.).
From "...a map of New Jersey, issued in 1834, the principal route to Barnegat was shown through Bordentown, Recklesstown, Fooltown or Georgetown, Penny Hill, Mary Ann Forge, Mount Misery, and Old Half Way." (Beck, Ibid.)This route is quite apparent, today, as for much of its length, it parallels Route 72. It is the same road that has garnered the interests of Scott W. and Guy Thompson.
However, there was a second route, that went to/through Cedar Bridge, too: "At Cedar Bridge this highway, built by order of the Crown, converged with another aproaching from Burlington, through Mount Holly and Ong's Hat." (Beck, Ibid.)
Can anyone "point" me to the 1834 map that Father Beck is referring to? On more modern maps (USGS or those new aerial/topographic maps or tax maps) can anyone trace that second stage route, today?
ebsi
From "...a map of New Jersey, issued in 1834, the principal route to Barnegat was shown through Bordentown, Recklesstown, Fooltown or Georgetown, Penny Hill, Mary Ann Forge, Mount Misery, and Old Half Way." (Beck, Ibid.)This route is quite apparent, today, as for much of its length, it parallels Route 72. It is the same road that has garnered the interests of Scott W. and Guy Thompson.
However, there was a second route, that went to/through Cedar Bridge, too: "At Cedar Bridge this highway, built by order of the Crown, converged with another aproaching from Burlington, through Mount Holly and Ong's Hat." (Beck, Ibid.)
Can anyone "point" me to the 1834 map that Father Beck is referring to? On more modern maps (USGS or those new aerial/topographic maps or tax maps) can anyone trace that second stage route, today?
ebsi