Tylertown

Teegate

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Sep 17, 2002
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I do not have the info on when the state purchased it, but my info shows that Joseph Wharton did acquire it before the state did. That is not certain but it looks that way. But I can tell you with certainty that the parcel of land designated as Tylertown is 83.2455 acres.

And it is a gold mind for stones!

Guy
 

gagliarchives

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Mar 7, 2004
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Thanks for the info...I was wondering what kind of town this was at one point. We know where it is...just wanted to see if there was any particular signifigance to the area.

tg
 

shetzer9213

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Jun 24, 2004
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gagliarchives said:
We know where it is...just wanted to see if there was any particular signifigance to the area.

Sorry, I misread your original post & thought you were asking where it was. Guess it's time to get the ol' eyes checked out.
 

Ben Ruset

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Oct 12, 2004
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From "Place Names of Burlington County" by Henry Bisbee (1955)

Tylertown: This "cross roads" hamlet is probably not more than 50 years old. It is located two miles north of Bulltown in Washington.

Gordons makes no mention of it, so it's not an "old" town by any means.
 

kayak karl

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Sep 18, 2008
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Swedesboro, NJ

turtle

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Feb 4, 2009
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a village...in the pines
I was wondering what kind of town this was at one point. We know where it is...just wanted to see if there was any particular signifigance to the area.

There was some cranberry and blueberry farming in the area. From what I have recall there were some very old families (a few still there) who made a living off the land and in the local towns nearby.... The "town" Tylertown may not have existed much before 1900, but the family homesteads were there. I know some of the folk still living up there....been there quite some time and proud of it.

turtle
 

Kevinhooa

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Mar 12, 2008
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Hammonton, NJ.
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From driving through it, the place seems like a nice place to live. Very quite and peaceful and completely surrounded by the forest. I would just worry about the forest fires though. It's not too far from the Batsto - Wash turnpike and Bulltown. I could see there being homes there in the early part of the 1900s, but I've never really explored the area.
 
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