Way cool! Maybe some of the ancient accounts of Delaware River Swedes finding old buried foundations and wells had merit, as well as accounts of the war-like, blue-eyed Indian clan of Mullica River lore. One Cumberland County artifact still haunts me as the real deal.
Jim Holder, a roofer, skilled banjo player, and archaeological enthusiast from Bridgeton unearthed a stone knife that was a dead ringer for an early European relict I had seen in the Museum of London. He found it in a peat deposit along the Delaware Bay. From fifteen-year-old memory I recollect it as a solid piece of grey stone, with cross-hatched handle and a dibble-shaped blade. Credible experts have suggested it is real, but argue the knife may have been brought over by later people as a keepsake.
Jim was fount of local knowledge, and the only man I ever met that could recount the exact location of Bridgeton's once-famed Pamphylia Spring on the Cohansey Trail, the spring being that town's original seventeenth century namesake. His father, Lincoln, would use its spring water to fill the cisterns on the fishing boat before setting off into the Delaware Bay. A sunken barrel provided freeboard into the Cohansey River bank muck. He passed on in 2011.
S-M