I've seen my share of Library Lesson Plan websites, but this one is heads above the rest! Check it out, and make your weekends longer by springboarding off this LP site!
Bookinitat50: OCTOBER CURRICULUM: *Author Study: Steven Kellogg; Jeanette Winter (illustrator for "The Librarian of Basra") Read Aloud Book List: "The Libr...
Southern New Jersey is full of small towns that often don't show up on any map. The book "Forgotten towns of southern New Jersey" by Henry Beck introduced some of these disappearing towns decades ago. In Following Beck we are going to see where some of these towns are now, and visiting other towns in Southern New Jersey that may be unknown and undiscovered.
Saturday, October 19, 2013
Monday, September 30, 2013
Dennisville: shipbuilders down by the shore
Cape May County, NJ has many enjoyable hidden treasures from the lighthouses to shore towns and enjoyable tourist attractions like the Cape May Zoo, but some of these hidden treasures are merely passed through on the way to something else. Dennisville is one of these hidden treasures not everyone notices.
Dennisville is a small, unicorportated town just outside Sea Isle City and too far from Avalon. Resting along Rt. 47 in Southern, NJ (Delsea Drive—named for its connection from Delaware to the Sea) it’s also not that far from Ocean City, which makes Dennisville a delightful place to visit when you’re down the shore for the summer. The town was founded back in 1726 by Anthony Ludlam making it one of those American towns that has the distinction of being older than the nation itself.
Beck himself has been to Dennisville, dedicating an entire Chapter about it in his book More Forgotten Towns of Southern New Jersey. In this chapter he describes Dennisville’s forming shipbuilding industry. He’d gone down at the advice of a friend to visit an old sailor who was getting up there in years, a gentleman by the name of Captain Ogden Gandy (the Gandy family can still be found in and around that area). The ships built there, according to Captain Gandy weren’t just the little ones. Huge, massive ships were built and sailed out to Sea Isle City, taken there down Dennis Creek when high tide came.
Exploring Dennisville is easy to do if you’re willing to slow down, take a turn off the beaten interstate and faster roads whizzing you along to shore towns. The history of the shipbuilding industry is evident in the stories there, but the quaintness of Dennisville can also provide a pleasant afternoon detour on your way to the shore. So the next time you find yourself heading toward the shores of Sea Isle, Ocean City or Avalon, take a detour and discover a hidden treasure of Southern New Jersey!
Friday, September 20, 2013
September Slacker: My Hiatus from Following Beck
Hello fellow travelers!
It's good to be back!
I've been missing from this journey for a couple weeks as I took a side trip back to work. My school year is up and running, and thanks to new management techniques on myself, and the fact that I have put myself on a schedule for the first time in my life things are going swimmingly as I strive for excellence in more areas of my life (see "Quitter" by Jon Acuff).
I have also gone back to college to become a certified teacher, a goal achieved by taking 3 Master's Level education classes, something else that has occupied my time.
Now, with these things as an established part of my routine, it's time for us to once again hit the open road.
Come with me as we resume our journey to explore towns forgotten, towns hidden here in Southern, New Jersey as we go Following Beck.
Is there a hidden, forgotten town you know of that we should all explore? Please feel free to comment and post about it by clicking the words "No comment" at the bottom of this or any other post.
Happy Trails!
It's good to be back!
I've been missing from this journey for a couple weeks as I took a side trip back to work. My school year is up and running, and thanks to new management techniques on myself, and the fact that I have put myself on a schedule for the first time in my life things are going swimmingly as I strive for excellence in more areas of my life (see "Quitter" by Jon Acuff).
I have also gone back to college to become a certified teacher, a goal achieved by taking 3 Master's Level education classes, something else that has occupied my time.
Now, with these things as an established part of my routine, it's time for us to once again hit the open road.
Come with me as we resume our journey to explore towns forgotten, towns hidden here in Southern, New Jersey as we go Following Beck.
Is there a hidden, forgotten town you know of that we should all explore? Please feel free to comment and post about it by clicking the words "No comment" at the bottom of this or any other post.
Happy Trails!
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
10 Commandments of blogging
This is not an original piece, but unfortunately I forget where I found it! This was buried in an old file inside of another file inside of My Documents--you know how it goes.
I appreciate these rules--they speak volumes.
I hope you enjoy them.
I appreciate these rules--they speak volumes.
I hope you enjoy them.
1. Thou shalt
offer fresh and personal content and perspective with thy blog that you and
only you can produce.
2. Thou shalt carve with lexis that common folk can twig (translation: You will write using words that real people can understand).
3. Thou shalt not tear someone else down with thy blog. If you have an issue with that person, go to them to work it out.
4. Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor with thy blog.
5. Thou shalt not pluck quotes from thy neighbor's blog without giving him credit.
6. Thou shalt not steal content from thy neighbor's blog and portray it as thine own.
7. Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's blog, but will be happy with thine own.
8. Thou shalt not spend more time blogging, reading blogs and/or commenting on blogs (let alone with any other type of social media) than with thy wife, kids and pet.
9. Thou shalt take time for rest and relaxation from blogging at consistent intervals. Go outside and smell the roses.
10. Thou shalt not make an idol out of blogging. Thy life consists of much more than that.
2. Thou shalt carve with lexis that common folk can twig (translation: You will write using words that real people can understand).
3. Thou shalt not tear someone else down with thy blog. If you have an issue with that person, go to them to work it out.
4. Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor with thy blog.
5. Thou shalt not pluck quotes from thy neighbor's blog without giving him credit.
6. Thou shalt not steal content from thy neighbor's blog and portray it as thine own.
7. Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's blog, but will be happy with thine own.
8. Thou shalt not spend more time blogging, reading blogs and/or commenting on blogs (let alone with any other type of social media) than with thy wife, kids and pet.
9. Thou shalt take time for rest and relaxation from blogging at consistent intervals. Go outside and smell the roses.
10. Thou shalt not make an idol out of blogging. Thy life consists of much more than that.
Thursday, August 15, 2013
Andrew Stanton, the writer/director of Finding Nemo (my favorite Pixar movie) did a seminar which (for a portion) talked about pitching your story. It's available on Youtube if you want to watch the entire thing, but the gist of it is listed below, summarized by a Youtube patron named boxiness (thanks for the summary). I've included the summary here, in case you don't have time to watch the video.
Also, feel free to look up Emma Coates (Pixar) formula for story formats Pixar style.
- Sense of wonder
Also, feel free to look up Emma Coates (Pixar) formula for story formats Pixar style.
- A story should start
off with a well-told "promise", like a hook or sales pitch
- A story should give the
audience the "2+2", not the "4"
- Characters should have
"spines" & itches they're always trying to scratch
- Change is fundamental;
life is never static
- "Drama is
anticipation mingled with uncertainty"
- Know your rules and
know when to break them
- Strong unifying theme
Saturday, August 3, 2013
Prospertown: then and now
Chances are you’ve passed this particular forgotten
town as it sits in the shadows of
Kingda-Ka as you head out to spend the day at
Great Adventure. This town’s proximity
to one of the
largest theme parks in North America might be enough to make the
name Prospertown seem familiar
to
you. In the first Forgotten Towns book Beck visits Prospertown in a three city set
along with
Archer’s Corner and Collier’s Mill, two other small towns in
Southern Jersey. Looking at
Prospertown
through Beck’s eyes there is a vision of a town who’s legacy is long since
passed; a
town that houses only a single hotel, a small cluster of homes, and a
gristmill. The homes were only
painted
on one side (the front I assume), and to Beck Prospertown was a place of:
“neglect,
loneliness, and desolation”.
Surrender? We don’t know the
meaning of the word!
One of the lines Beck writes in reference to
Prospertown is that it was (at the time he wrote it) “pursuing their memories
of prosperous times”. Considering during
his visit that the town was in a tailspin toward nonexistence it seems that it
is still in hot pursuit of those prosperous times. For starters the Six Flags franchise has
expanded from their park’s location in Jackson into Prospertown housing their
employment center and administration building there. The residents of Prospertown, through the
decades since Beck’s book, have not given up on their prosperous pursuits, at
the very least keeping their town alive.
Quaint, if you can find it
Prospertown’s life in Kingda-Ka’s shadow is a
double-edge sword in the sense that (1) it may draw more attention because of
its’ proximity to Six Flags, but (2) might also dip more into obscurity because
“Six Flags” is all most people think about being in this corner of Ocean
County. Truthfully most of the people
who frequent small Prospertown are a select group of anglers, and you know how
secretive that lot is about their fishing spots!
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
Characters wanted: apply within; bring detailed dossier
The greatest of stories on the fiction shelf, whichever book
that may be to you, is great for multiple reasons: a well-developed plot, an impactful theme,
realistic descriptions of setting, etc.
However all of it means nothing if there is no one in the story to move
the plot forward, realize the lesson of the story, or describe the idyllic
scene . A character drives the plot and
makes the book what it is. A character
is what helps the reader connect to the story and implant the experience of
reading the book in their minds as if what they just read actually happened to
them. So how does an author develop
such great characters? With imagination,
experience, and a few tricks of the trade.
Begin at the
beginning, and when you reach the end—Stop!
Most
characters are born out a single thought.
This thought can be founded on a certain article of clothing, a
personality trait, an experience, or simply from physical trait that stands out
in your mind. Often times, whatever the
original inspiration was, a character will pop into your mind. You see this person standing before, perhaps
even in a specific location. You must
ask yourself the first crucial question:
Why is this person there?
I was
tempted to write ‘who is this person, and why are they there’, but thought
better of it. You see, why they are
there is more important than who they are.
Who is important, and comes soon after, but understanding why that
character is in that location is what drives the plot forward. Are they there to rob a bank or stop a
robbery? Are they meeting someone? Did that person show up, or stand them
up? After ‘why’ comes the reaction: how
are they feeling about that? It’s
possible to ponder these questions too much, of course, which is why we need to
eventually stop designing our character at some point and begin to write the story. In the development of the character, however,
you need to have your bases covered.
Building Blocks
Conflict
builds character. It’s true in real life
and in your story. The plot, as you
write out the details of the book, will produce a need for your character to
have a certain skill set, personality trait, fear, weakness, strength, physical
characteristic, or hobby. Whatever need
arises, the more you have planned out before you start to write the better.
Some
authors will have a very short description of their character. It may consist of a paragraph or two and
cover the basics. Some might even keep
it as short as a Tweet; reducing your character description to 140 characters
or less does force you to focus on the most important elements of your
characters dossier. It’s the little
things, I think you’ll find, whether in your story or another, that make the
character seem realistic. The more you
have on them, the better you know them, the better you can write their life.
Building
a character can be tricky, which is why there are certain helps out there to
jumpstart creativity such as the character generator websites that are listed
below. Using something like this is a
good foundation for a character if you need a visual to help you shape that character. I want to tell you, though, don’t rely on
these. It’s just a beginning to a
character profile that you need to build on.
The more complex your character the better; just don’t spend so much
time on character development that you forget about the book!
Don’t I know you from
somewhere?
If
character generators aren’t for you, here’s an alternate suggestion—one that
comes with a warning: be careful when using this technique! Too little development will cause you some
trouble, and probably some broken relationships.
I’m a
naturally curious person, one who is not shy in asking questions to understand
another person. I think we sometimes
forget that the people who pop in and out of our lives (grocery store clerk
while on vacation, person waiting at the doctor’s office the same time as us)
are just as complex as we are ourselves.
Learning about people through communicating and connecting with them can
build relationships, but also reveal good character spots for stories.
Once my
wife and I went to a restaurant up state; the waitress there had her arm in a
temporary cast. Being the curious (and
potentially rude person I am) I asked her about it. To some people “she must have broken her arm
is enough. Not for me, though. I’m weird like that. Turns out this particular waitress was
working through medical school, but on the side she participates in roller
derby and was knocked down by an opposing teammate; she sprained her arm when
she fell. Now roller-derby playing
medical school students who waitress at restaurants don’t come along every day,
and I may never use this person in a story.
However, having that type of real world example might make one of my
characters seem more realistic. We just
have to be careful not to go too over the top or the character will seem too
unrealistic and you will lose your reader’s interest.
These
days most of us are into our techno-gadgets.
Everywhere you go you see people either immersed in them, carrying them,
using them for a quick “emergency”; some people even get so engrossed in using
them they are not aware of what’s going on around them. Still, moments in real life can capture your
attention and give you a jumpstart on your character. In other words, one of the best ways to make
your character seem realistic is to start with a real person. You can use relatives, acquaintances,
friends, whomever! The only proviso I
have for this: when you place them into your
novel keep the character traits that you fell will move your plot forward, but
don’t make an exact copy of them. Some
people will get offended by your “interpretation” of them, even if you captured
their real essence.
Some of
you may be thinking: isn’t that a bit on the creepy side? Yes, if you stalk them, dig through their
trash, try to hack into their email to see what they discuss with family and
friends—that’s creepy. Someone who
catches your eye because of their physical characteristics, someone who has an
interesting speech pattern you want to duplicate; these are things that you can
jot down in a notebook or on scrap paper and flush out the idea later when you
are ready to write.
Back to
the techno-gadgets for a moment: cell phones are everywhere. People have gotten so used to using them
anywhere they go that most people don’t think about the others around them and
just start talking. These can be great
moments for character research. The
other day, for example, I was sitting in my local library when a young man came
in and proceeded to talk on the phone to a friend about his life, his job, what
it was like to work there, how the routine of the job went, how the manager
kept everyone focused using a gift card reward system, etc. Now I didn’t ask this guy any questions about
his job he just sat down and began speaking loud enough for everyone to hear
his business. What he talked about in
reference to his job was intriguing to me.
I could’ve read a book on his particular line of work, but here was a
real life example of insider information—something I may not be able to have
captured from a book.
Characterization
is the back bone of your story. Without
it, all other parts of the book are static.
There is nothing to support the story, nothing to drive it forward. Don’t skimp on this because you have a great
plot or theme. All great things in life
are best enjoyed when you they are happening to someone.
Character Generators:
Note: A good resource
on further character development is Dynamic
Characters by Nancy Kress. It’s one
of my steady standby reads on all things writing.
Friday, July 26, 2013
The Original Atlantic County Casino town
On the border of Burlington and Atlantic County Beck and his
buddies found themselves travelling one day near a small town surrounded by
towns of greater notoriety. The town was
known as Sweetwater, NJ. When Beck was
there the brush scratching the body of the car was very abundant. The name of the town was Pleasant Mills for a
bit of time, but has since changed back to Sweetwater, which it is known by
today.
Family Business is a dangerous
business to be in
After a
bitter family feud in early 1700s Scotland several families found themselves exiled
and sought refuge in the Pine Barrens.
After completing a rude log cabin chapel and a few makeshift cottages
form local materials the families settle din to their hometown.
The
town was further developed a few decades later by a man named Reid, who had a
very attractive daughter every man was pining for, and every woman jealous
of. Her name, Honoria Reid, was changed
to Kate Aylesford, as she was used in a story written by an author surnamed
Peterson. While fame and fortune came to
his daughter Reid continued to watch his little town grow. A new stage coach road was added connecting
with the bigger highways which led into Hammonton. Families, buildings, businesses, and churches
soon came along and Sweetwater became filled with religious activity. When Methodists rolled into town they would
set up grand tent meetings held outside with audiences that the small houses of
Sweetwater could not have contained.
Dropping Names like
lead balloons
Sweetwater citizens of notoriety are worthy of
their own section today! Many fine folks
have come from the small town, but some that New Jersey history fans might be familiar
with are listed below:
Joseph Fralinger – glass blower from Atlantic City, and one
of the earliest baseball promoters
Gen. St. Clair Mulholland – whose family battled at Bunker
Hill also originated in Sweetwater, NJ
Captain Jack van Dyke – American Privateer (of sorts) who
was proficient in profanity and in capturing British Merchant vessels in the
early days of our nation’s history.
Gone, baby, Gone
In more
recent times the big claim to fame for Sweetwater was the Sweetwater Casino Bar
and Restaurant. A huge hangout for
bikers and weekend road warriors the Casino had a long history of existence,
and several signature dishes. Even
people who’ve never heard of the surround hamlets of Sweetwater Casino knew of
the Casino itself. While there was no
gambling going on it was still called a Casino, as the original meaning of this
word means a club, as in a place to hang out.
Having
lived up there for a few years myself I had frequented the Casino on more than
one occasion. My favorite food
item: Sweetwater Casino cheese, a dip
cheese with a secret recipe, was a coveted prize at many parties I attended
just a few short years ago. Sadly, the
Casino was lost to a raging fire which consumed the bar, restaurant, and
surrounding stores. There has been no
attempt to rebuild to this day.
Deepwater: last exit before toll
For a
lot of New Jerseyeans crossing the Delaware Bridge is old hat. Most people work on that side of the bridge,
but heading for the Christiana Mall, a Blue Rocks game, or any one of a dozen
recreational reasons is not unheard of.
By quick glance it seems the last exit before crossing the bridge into
Delaware is Pennsville, but in fact there is a small unincorporated community nestled
on the very edge of Salem County—the last town in New Jersey before crossing
into Delaware.
Deep waters run still. Wait, that’s not right, is it?
Deepwater, New Jersey has
quite a claim to fame being the last
sign of New Jersey before plunging into the Delaware. Being in Deepwater is the closest you can get
to Delaware as it sits right on the tip of the big, fat belly of the
state. Unfortunately sales tax is still
required. Despite being a small town
with a population not even breaking 400 by the last U.S. Census report there’s
a lot of character to Deepwater. Chances
are you know someone who has either lived there at one point, or worked there,
most likely at DuPont’s Jersey side facility.
Who turned off the
lights?
Like
many coastal towns Deepwater had a lighthouse.
Actually, it had two. Both of
these lighthouse were completed in 1876.
They stood where the Delaware Bridge currently stands. Unlike most lighthouses in Southern New
Jersey these two didn’t make the preservation list. Despite years of faithful service both
lighthouses were decommissioned and demolished.
The
first of the two lighthouses, known as the Front Range stood in Deepwater to
the north of the Salem Canal. Both
ranges were controlled by a lighthouse keeper until becoming automated in
1937. The front range lasted longer than
the rear range lighthouse as the latter was torn down not long after being
automated. DuPont Chemical Company
bought up the land in surrounding the front range after its being
decommissioned in 1952. In its place is
the DuPont factory. The rear range was
torn down to make way for the Delaware Bridge.
Don’t I know you from
somewhere?
Sadly,
this part of New Jersey history has been lost for good. Despite a couple photos and some scant
information on file at the New Jersey Historical Society little is known about
the lighthouses of Deepwater, New Jersey. However, if you wish, and have the time to
take the field trip, head on out to Pennsville near Fort Mott to check out the
Finns Point Rear Range Lighthouse. Now
on the national register of historic places, thanks to an enthusiastic Save the
Lighthouse committee during the ‘70s, this structure is identical to that of
the Deepwater rear range lighthouse which is no longer there. The Finns Point front range lighthouse has
been demolished, but parts of it can still be seen, namely the oil house and
some shingles from the original roof.
Some history is better than none at all I suppose.
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
Ocean City's Forgotten Landmarks
Ocean City, NJ is not a forgotten town, but a bustling seashore town that is open all year
round. It has beaches, homes, grocery
stores and charming bed and breakfasts.
All these things were made and established as time went past. However, the charm of this island town has
been around longer than any of its current residence can remember, and some of its history has been completely forgotten by most of its residents.
The original
purpose of the town lies with the foundings of towns such as: Ocean Grove, Sea
Grove at Cape May Point, Island Heights and Seaside Park which were founded as
Christian communities with two main purposes: to free those enslaved to the
addictions of promiscuous sex and rampant drinking and help them get their
lives back together, and to save the statewide community from being dominated
by these unhealthy lifestyles. A land
surveyor named William Lake told his cousins, all three of them Reverends,
about the open property known as Peck’s Beach.
The Reverends had been to Ocean Grove and were amazed by the success of
the town and the way that it was run.
They felt called of God to do the same, but were unsure of where to
locate their town. The three brothers:
James, Wesley and Ezra and their colleague and friend William Burrell rowed out
to Peck’s Beach in 1879.
The first
lost landmark began when these four gentlemen examined the land at length from
atop a high hill that overlooked much of the island. After thought and discussion, they knelt near
a cedar tree and prayed, seeking God’s guidance and direction in the
matter. Feeling sure that this is where
God wanted them to be, they set about buying the land. Today, the cedar tree they knelt under
(though it is dead) can be seen standing at the corner of 6th and
Asbury Avenue with a plaque commemorating the founding of the company and the
town inside the Ocean City Tabernacle Lobby.
The three brothers with William Burrell, and later two other
ministers, named the town “New Brighton” only to change it one month later to “Ocean
City” to associate it with Ocean Grove, the town which partially inspired them
to seek out this project. To ensure
their town would be setting off on the right foot, the new town owners agreed
to sell the owners back their land (who would be allowed to keep their land),
provided they follow the terms of the new deed: temperance and Sunday
observance, which would become the fundamental principles of Ocean City which
still exist today.
As homes,
businesses and hotels moved into town, families began settling just as the
founders had hoped they would. With the
coming families to Ocean City, the first school was built in 1881 between 8th
and 9th street on Central Avenue. The building no longer stands, another lost
landmark, but was on the spot where the Public Safety headquarters is currently
located. In 1906, the elementary school
was replaced with Ocean City’s first high school (which in now Public Safety
HQ). The island’s first bridge, built in
1883, brought more families to this resort that fell in love with it and made
it their home. The elementary school,
previously held in the high school was relocated in 1913 to sit between 4th
and 5th Street, but became a car park until 1988.
People all
over New Jersey became interested in this family-style resort. In 1903 Steamboat Wharf was opened to shuttle
people in from the mainland. Steamboats
ran from: Longport, Avalon, Wildwood and Somers Point. In 1907, the flood of visitors to Ocean City
created a necessity for the resort island’s first trolley line, Shore Fast
Trolley Line that ran from Steamboat Wharf on 2nd Street and Bay
and could take you all over Ocean City.
Trolley Tracks ran down Atlantic Wesley and Central Avenue all the way
to 59th Street. Passengers
could even ride from Atlantic City all the way to the Ocean City Boardwalk (a
one hour ride at that time). With the
invention of the automobile and the opening of bridges into Ocean City the
trolley company dwindled in income going out of business in the early
1940s. All trolley bridges were removed
in 1946.
Ocean City
was growing rapidly and had stores and hotels going up, more and more every
year. One of the grandest hotels built
was the Flanders Hotel. A group of New
Jersey businessmen got together with the intent of building a grand, first
class hotel that could compete with the best hotels in the rest of the
continental United States. The Ocean
Front Hotel Corporation met at the Atlantic Country Club in Northfield for
its first meeting and hired famed designer and Ocean City native Vivian Smith
to design the hotel. Smith is also
credited with the Ocean City Music Pier, Ocean City Hall and Ocean City High
School. The Flanders Hotel, though not
completely finished, had its grand opening on July 28th, 1923. The hotel survived fires, terrible storms and
the Stock Market crash of 1929, was purchased by James M. Dwyer in 1996 and
still stands today.
Ocean City
has had its fair share of famous and noteworthy residents. Some of particular note that had an impact on
either the community and/or the world at large deserve special mention. Some not-so-often-heard-of residents are: T.
John Carey, a coach at OCHS and a pioneer of East Coast surfing, Marcia V.
Smith who was the first female physician in Ocean City and has a memorial
dedicated to her (1960) for her assistance in the creation of the nation of
Israel, Hobo the town’s mascot, who has his own fountain erected to him in 1936
and is now located at the OC Historical Seashore Cottage at 12th
Avenue and Wesley Avenue, and of course, Ocean City’s most famous resident
Grace Kelly, star of stage and screen.
Grace Kelly’s family had a summer home in Ocean City (which still
stands), and which she even frequented after becoming Princess Grace of Monaco.
Other
landmarks, like the Revolutionary War Cannon taken off a sunken British ship in
1779, were stolen (the cannon in the 60s), never to be recovered. Even the famous saltwater pools of the
Flanders Hotel were removed back in the late 70s after having been around for
decades.
By the
1940s, though much of Ocean City had changed, having gone from “a rugged sandy
clump of earth jutting out into the Atlantic, overgrown with bayberry, Cedar
trees and shrubs, and hosting wild cattle and hogs” to a bustling Ocean resort
town founded on religious principles; some things stayed the same. Ocean City and its citizens were
survivors. They hadn’t let anything ruin
them. Over the decades they’d survived
floods, torrential downpours, hurricanes and fires, all of which laid waste to
stores, the Boardwalk, homes, cars and bridges.
Still people were drawn to this small seaside town. Not even two World Wars could keep away the
tourists or chase off the residents.
During World War II, Ocean City took a very active part in the war
effort. Many of Ocean City’s women
served with the Cape May County branch of the American Red Cross. Local men collected paper and scrap metal to
be used for various necessities of the military, a Ford truck was driven around
town carrying a liberty bell and people on it were selling war bonds. Even the historical buildings themselves were
used in the war effort: the Music Pier
held a “spotter’s tower” atop its roof where regular watch was kept to warn of
air and sea attacks. And during the war,
at the Music Pier, flag raising was a daily event attended by many. Ocean City also became one of the first towns
to raise a World War II memorial, which was done by 1944.
The 1950s
were a high time for Ocean City. With
World War II long over, large families in abundance and the economy being
relatively stable, parents were looking for a solid family resort to spend the
summer at with the kids. Ocean City
offered many family attractions by this time.
Playland Amusement Pier, located at 6th Street and Boardwalk
was popular with children and grownups alike, offering: a skating rink, bowling
and other wonderful attractions. Gillian’s
Fun Deck had opened (c. 1950), but the popular attraction to top them all was
Captain Chris’ Seafood Restaurant. The
restaurant, that was so much more, was owned by Christ Montagna, husband of Dr.
Marcia V. Smith (who helped found the nation of Israel). At the height of its popularity this
restaurant and fish market developed into Ocean City’s most popular tourist
attraction. Chris Montagna was a modern
day John Young. Everyday at his
restaurant you’d get the finest seafood, you could watch them cook big fish,
crabs, shrimp and lobster. There was a
fish aquarium (by the 1960s) and Captain Chris built speedboats for people to
ride on daily out into the Atlantic Ocean.
There were four boats to choose from:
The Flying Cloud, took 50 people out for fishing, but the ride to the
fishing spot was a quick one clocked at 75 mph.
The Flying Cloud left at 10:30, returned at 3:30, and it only
took fifteen minutes to get where you wanted to go. The Flying Pony was a slower, smaller
boat for those tourists not wanting a fast ride. There was also Sweetheart, named for
his wife: a 62-foot auxiliary sailboat that took tourists on a 2-hour ride
around the Atlantic Ocean. Captain Chris’
pride and joy, however, was a converted WW II patrol boat that he piloted
personally. Flying Saucer was
clocked at 90 mph and could hold 125 passengers.
Whereas the
50s were good to Ocean City, the 60s took their toll on the family seaside
resort. In 1961, one of the town’s
biggest attractions Playland (where Wonderland Pier is now located on
the Boardwalk) was completely destroyed by fire costing an estimated 3 million dollars
in damage.
Ocean City has adapted and changed over
the years, but still remains a strong seaside resort geared toward
families. It still has a reminiscence of
the religious principles upon which it was founded. It’s still a big draw for sun-bathing
tourists, but even more so than all of these, Ocean City holds a charm and
quaint, not too outstanding historical past that gives it the feel of a good
old fashioned American hometown. To
South Jersey residents enamored by Ocean City (of which I am one), not even the
chills of February can keep them away. This Christian resort, settled on one of the
most beautiful stretches of land in New Jersey, is rich with memories, history,
culture and an undying sense of self that is unique to it only. A community of
which it can be truly said, as the saying goes about Ocean City, “Once you get
sand in your shoes, you are destined to return”.
Monday, July 22, 2013
Leeds Point and the
First Author South of New York
I like
to think that, as a librarian, I have a lot of books in my own personal
collection. Don’t get me wrong: my house
is not a private library with thousands of copies (just hundreds). Lots of people have more than I do, but most
of the books we collect these days have been printed within our lifetime. Only collectors who have a permanent seat at
Sotheby’s collect really old books, right?
Well, maybe not.
Daniel’s trip to the
New World
One of
the oldest books on record here in the United States is an almanac written by
Englishman Daniel Leeds in 1687. He
wrote it right here in New Jersey. The
Leeds family have been Jerseyeans since the late 1670s, sailing in on The Shield[1],
a full century before the American Revolution.
Daniel Leeds quickly became an important man in Burlington County as a
member of the Assembly, a British representative body in New Jersey, and later
on he became an advisor on Lord Cornbury’s Council in 1704. When Leeds settled he actually owned quite a
bit of land. His property extended from
a strip of land adjacent to present-day Smithville all the way to Lower Island
(which you and I now call Atlantic City).
Bill, Ben, and Dan
Daniel
Leeds, founder of Leeds Point, was originally the first Surveyor General of
West New Jersey. Leeds used his land
surveying details to piece together an Almanac, the first edition coming out in
1687, but editions continuing until 1716.
The editions continued on but under the watchful eyes of his sons Felix
and Titan. Daniel Leeds almanacs were
published by William Bradford (the American Revolutionary leader, not the
Plymouth Rock Pilgrim leader).
Interestingly enough the almanac was most likely one of Bradford’s first
printings. Ben Franklin, in Poor Richard’s Almanac, also makes
mention of Leeds bestowing upon the title of “First Author South of New York”.
The Old Homestead
When
Beck visited Leeds point back in 1963 he stated that: “The Leeds Point of today
reveals nothing of this colorful past”.
I thought this was a fascinating statement, one that shows why he chose
this city for his book. It got me
wondering how Leeds point would compare to today. Outside of Jimmie Leeds Road on the road to
Stockton College I’d never even heard the name Leeds before. These days the houses aren’t as rundown as
when Beck visited, and there is a Senior Living residence or two, but is mostly
a small Pine Barrens town, quaint and quiet as most of them tend to be. Leeds Point is currently not listed as an
unincorporated community, and to be honest, probably wasn’t when Beck wrote the
book, but the reason he chose to write about it is that a part of its history
had been forgotten. Though information
about Daniel Leeds and family may be prominent on certain parts of the Internet
his history is not as easy to come by on Jersey history sites as it should be.
Saturday, July 20, 2013
Finding yourself in the stacks: how to use the library for all its worth
Authors
and Writers are two different people who do a lot of the same things. An author is usually someone who has written
a work of fiction, something to be entertaining for a group of readers. Writers also entertain readers, but
simultaneously they inform. So what I’m
blogging about today is most likely not going to be anything earth-shattering
for nonfiction writers. Instead they
would be inclined to agree with me (or at least they should in this case). Authors on the other hand, of which I am
closer to being labeled as) tend to avoid and ignore this advice—unless of
course they want to be a good one.
Is this where they
keep all the books?
Authors,
and I include my past self in this statement, tend to rely largely upon
imagination and personal experience to weave their tale from start to
finish. These two components are
definitely major spokes on the wheel, but a good relationship with your local
library needs to be a spoke as well.
Authors and writers alike who don’t spend a lot of time in their local
library are like tourists who book the flight with no fore-planning, and no
travel agent. Honestly, we just don’t
want to look like we have no idea what we are doing. Unfortunately, this particular vanity can be
dangerous to your book, article, short story, and writing career.
Know the tools in your
toolbox
These
days everyone has access to a world full of information from the comfort of the
tablet, home computer, and television.
The chances that your readers are educated on whichever subject you may
be discussing in your narrative or nonfiction piece is pretty likely. That means if you’re wrong, confused or
misinformed on something they’ll probably call you on it! Thus, using your local library to its fullest
potential is an absolute must!
With a
bit of research and professional assistance you can sound like the smartest
person on the planet! You can sound like
a Nobel Laureate for Advanced Physics, a first-hand eyewitness of the
Hindenburg disaster, like a teacher of the geography of Glovania! So what are these tools that can impart to
you the wisdom of the ages? Let’s take a
quick look.
In addition to the catalog
available in the library itself, there is the Reference Librarian. If you’re looking for a book or source of
information this is a good place to start.
For those like myself who prefer the old fashioned way of doing things
talking to a real-live person is just the ticket. This may be a bit slower than the
instantaneous barrage of information available via the Internet, but the
quality of information will be more accurate and more compact. Another good place for information is the
OCLC – this is the online computer library center, a collection of information
from thousands of different libraries in North America.
Another good source is your local
libraries ILL feature. This is not
borrowing books from other local libraries.
This is a separate source which looks for books on your subject from
everywhere in the United States, and then lists them so you can order them (for
a small fee) and have them sent to your local library. Just be sure to ask about how long you’re
allowed to keep that particular periodical.
The sending library may not have the same borrowing rules you’re used
to.
Databases, diaries,
and digital media…oh my!
While there are many good
resources available to us this day and age sometimes the best source of
information can come straight from the horse’s mouth. Interviewing is a skill that takes
pre-planning and practice. Once you get
good at it, though, a whole world of information, history, and background
details open up to you. But what to do
if you are looking for a piece of information old enough to where the
first-hand eyewitnesses are deceased but not old or popular enough to be found
in the 900s of the nonfiction section?
My suggestion is to go ask your librarian what microfiche is. If they don’t know try the local libraries at
your colleges and universities.
Did you get yourself a
card?
Accuracy
leads to believability, and isn’t that what all writers and authors are
striving for? We want to create for our
readers the illusion of being somewhere they have never been, doing something
they have never done, and being able to relive those moments from our piece like
the cherished memories they’ve built up in their own lives. If all it takes to give them that is humbling
ourselves enough to get help from the local librarian and do a bit of research
offline and online, than in my opinion it’s totally worth it.
Friday, July 19, 2013
Beesley’s Point: Less travelled, but not forgotten
Dear Shore Runners:
Like most of us here in South
Jersey I’ve driven down to the shore more times than I can count. I usually head down to Ocean City, my
favorite shore town, and each time I pass a sign that I’ve always been curious
about:
I admit I have never taken this
route anyway, like so many others who are forced to u-turn at the bridge
entrance, so I did my homework about the history behind this sign and found a
great contestant for Forgotten Towns 2.0!
Beesley’s point has a great history, one that would’ve intrigued Beck if
this had been going on during his time.
On Goldin’s Pond
When
William Goldin settled on a strip of land on the Great Egg Harbor Bay he
started the momentum that would rise like a roller coaster, and eventually the
descent that would change a once popular beach community. Founded in mid to late 1600s by the Goldin
family Beesley’s point changed names over the years eventually naming this
unincorporated town after one of the early owners of the Tuckahoe Inn. For a long time it connected Cape May to the
rest of the country via ferry until 1927 when the local auto club petitioned to
put in a toll bridge.
Roar to the Shore
With
The Beesley Point Bridge in place the small shore town turned into a thriving
summer shore town! However, as the sign
above indicates, the bridge is closed.
In fact it has been since 2004 when one of the concrete support pillars
collapsed. The estimated cost of the
repairs was more than the revenue the bridge was bringing in. The bridge was demolished earlier this year
(2013) despite efforts by certain interest groups to save it. Beesley’s Point is now NJ’s largest cul-de-sac.
The Survival-Spirit!
Town citizens and officials have mixed
feelings about the now missing bridge.
Some think that it’s a benefit that the bridge is gone as it will free
up available wetlands area. Others, like
the local anglers and the Tuckahoe Inn, who benefited from the bridge’s
existence, are feeling the loss of the bridge, not to mention those in town who
now have to drive a few extra miles to get to Somers Point. Nonetheless,
the neighbors along Route 9 who used to have motorcycles and cars rushing past
their house are content with the quietness they now have on their street. As for the Tuckahoe Inn and other local
businesses, they are staying afloat financially even those business might isn’t
as strong as it was a decade ago.
Beesley’s Point is still one of the flagship towns on Upper Township
because of the old homes, including the still standing residence of the town’s
namesake. For visitors there are antique
shops, restaurants, and a beach that stretches only half as wide as other
nearby shore towns, but still enough to enjoy the ocean and soak up some sun!
Next Post: Writer’s Junction Rest Stop!
Thursday, July 18, 2013
Marshallville--an identity lost
Dear Ramblers and Readers:
Beck’s
journey into the cobweb-coated corners of Southern New Jersey took him on trips
where stories abounded. I trust that you
as well are finding great stories to share on your journeys through the
southern half of the Garden State. Often
times the stories Beck found were funny, or thought provoking, but once in a
while he ran across a tragedy. The story
of Marshallville, New Jersey is one of those stories.
From Top to Bottom
Marshallville was a city
Beck found on an old yellowed map, one that showed cities that were no longer
there. These missing towns gave Beck
itchy feet, and off he went!
Marshallville, however, showed on both the yellowed map and the maps of
Beck’s day and age. The only difference
was that Marshallville, once part of Cumberland County, was now part of Cape
May County. This forming booming
industry town was, as Beck found it, a shadow of its former self. Marshallville industry was concentrated in
the glass works and the shipyards pulling in roughly 100, 000 dollars per
year. Enough ships went out to fill a
fleet averaging fourteen ships a day.
Sinking fast
As the shipbuilding industry grew
the demand for smaller ships decreased.
As the river went unused it quickly turned into a marsh and the
shipbuilding industry of Marshallville dried up. No one, not even in Beck’s time, knew why the
glass-making industry stopped. Most
likely it was a correlation of the town losing half its business, several
families had to move away to find work elsewhere, and the rest was a domino
effect.
Left in the dust,
sadly
History marches on, and
often the wounded fall behind. The world
can push forward into greater and greater efforts of progress and never look
back at those who might need a helping hand.
As society changed around Marshallville no one bothered to help them
weather the storm, not even themselves.
When Beck arrived the town showed little evidence of having once been a
capital of industry. The world changed
around Marshallville, and as it changed it did not take Marshallville with it,
instead leaving it behind to be forgotten.
Marshallville these
days…
Marshallville as a town
still exists, though it is made up of a dozen houses (down from 40) with only
remnants left of its industry days. Many
of the areas of Marshallville have been placed on the Historic Preservation
list, and while a few families still reside it is another forgotten town
absorbed into a much larger township.
As we
travel these places together I keep thinking:
which cities, alive with industry and people now will become the
forgotten towns of tomorrow? Is there
anything that can be done now to save them, or is merely part of history that
these things happen?
Next Post: Beesley’s Point: Less travelled, but not forgotten
Wednesday, July 17, 2013
Weekstown: hidden in the pines
Dear Fellow Trekkers:
I’m rarely accused of being a Mensa candidate; I’d even go so far as to say many of you are smarter than I am. Until recently I didn’t really know the definition for the word “unincorporated” when it makes reference to a city or town. At first I thought it was based on the population of the town and I had a vague idea that it might be some sort of licensing issue. Turns out I was close to almost being kind of right, in a roundabout way. The only criteria for your town to be unincorporated is for it to: “exists only by tradition and does not have elected officials at the town level”[1]. So I got to thinking about this definition and decided that this would be a good criteria to guide, but not decide, which towns would be best to classify as “Forgotten towns.”
Here’s the problem...
Beck was searching for forgotten towns, places where no one lived anymore because the town had dried up, dissolved, and at best been absorbed into another city or township. While this may still happen these days, I want to expand the definition of a “forgotten town” to one that may still exist, but few people have heard of. So, dear reader, I have decided to include these hidden gems of Southern New Jersey in our search. While it may not be the original intention of what a forgotten town should be (he outlines this in the foreword of his second book) Beck had in mind the idea to get New Jerseyeans excited about their states culture and history. Guiding you to these places honors the spirit of all Beck’s journeys.
And to begin…
One town that is a good example of this idea of mine is Weekstown, NJ. I had the privilege of living in Weekstown for five years during the very early part of this century. I’ve always described it as a blink-and-miss-it town. Weekstown completely fits the definition of an unincorporated town: they have no direct elected officials, as they are part of Mullica Township, and have no official charter from the state of New Jersey, which means the only reason Weekstown exists is because the people of Weekstown, by tradition, says it exists.
You know what we need?
Weekstown was founded by a family named Weeks. It’s largely a collection of a few houses, a firehall, a church almost as old as the town itself, and cranberry bog run by a nice couple but owned by Ocean Spray. The church, pretty much the original landmark of Weekstown, was built as a result of one of those “uphill both ways” kind of stories. The original settlers were attending church in Green Bank which required them to ride or walk to the local river, cross it, then ride or walk some more until they reached the church in Green Bank. Well it didn’t take long before someone decided they should just build their own church and hire their own preacher, a church building which still stands today, and is a source of pride for the members of the founding family.
Quaint and Calm:
Weekstown is one of those quiet towns with an interesting history that
makes travelling their worth the trip.
Chances are, if you’re the type to stop and talk with the locals, you’ll
find someone willing to share. Weekstown
if a hidden gem of a South Jersey town full of related neighboring families
deep in the pine barrens. It’s biggest
claim to fame is found down a dirt road just half a mile up from the
church. Down the lane, back amongst the
trees, and past the church parsonage hidden back there lies the cranberry bogs
where my kids and I spent many a day during the five years that we lived in
Weekstown. The stories the locals can
tell about what’s gone on in their town is a trip truly worthy of following
Beck’s quest for forgotten towns.
Next Post: Beck’s trip to Marshallville from “More Forgotten towns of Southern New Jersey”
Below: Weekstown Cranberry Bogs
Tuesday, July 16, 2013
Ong's Hat: Fact or Fiction?
Dear Road Warriors:
What better place to begin following Beck around South Jersey than to head to the same town where the legacy of Forgotten Towns started? The town that started a newspaper reporter off on a quest that would later spawn a piece of cultural history has a classic South Jersey name. What makes a classic South Jersey name, you ask? It has to be either: (1) named after someone [Hammonton, Pemberton Township], (2) named something natural [Cherry Hill, Mount Laurel], (3) or has a name that describes a key physical feature of the town [Bridgeton, Millville]. Today we're looking at "Ong' Hat, N.J."
A journey of a thousand miles...
Beck's journey into the forgotten towns that fill our state began with a simple question: "Who would name a town 'Ong's Hat'?" Setting out to write an article for his Camden newspaper Beck took off to locate the small town and interview its inhabitants. With the founders, long since dead, no one knew the entire story of the town's origin. Many versions of the same story are told, but which one is accurate remains a mystery. Beck had the benefit of speaking with citizens of Ong's Hat--people no longer alive for us to speak to, unfortunately. Citizens of Ong's hat have vanished along with the town--now nothing more than a ramshackle shed and a name on a sign. Though Ong's Hat was found on a map in 2006, finding it at all these days can be tricky. Mapquest will get you close using Route 206, as you get off at Southhampton Township, N.J, but the town is easy to miss!
Where'd everybody go?
Though Ong' Hat has faded into the past the history remains alive through Beck's words and the historical accounts read and re-read by students each year. Through talking with the locals Beck records the following story as the origin of the town's name.
One of the original settlers, Jacob Ong, was known for his silk hats, a common site in town which was a bit of a party town (dances and bootlegging were two fixtures in the town). One man, the attention Jacob Ong was getting from the ladies, grabbed the silk hat he was wearing and stomped on it. Frustrated, Ong flung his hat on a high branch of a tree, where it remained for years. Later Beck would state that further research indicated that the town's name was a misprinting of the phrase "Ong's Hut" and that the town was really a stop over for a farmer travelling from Little Egg Harbor.
Forgotten towns 2.0
Reading Beck's account of Ong's Hat, NJ made me wonder if there a modern day example of Ong's Hat here in 21st century Southern New Jersey. The point of Beck's book is that a once prominent or busy town has fallen on hard times and all but vanished from sight. Considering the economy, the shifting of industry from here to overseas, it's conceivable that at least one town (most likely more) would have fallen on hard times. How does this town comparre to those in Beck's book? What towns would Beck, if he were writing this book today, include? I encourage you, Weekend Road Warriors, to go out and find Ong's Hat, and to follow Beck as we see where he might head nowadays.
Next Post: Weekstown—hidden among the Pines
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