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NJ Pine Barrens Maritime-Culture-Landscape 1 1 2024

Pine Barrens forests, striking waterways, narrow lakes, bogs, ghost towns, furnaces and more. NJ Pinelands National Reserve landscape tells the tale of a time when glaciers covered this land, when ship-building towns ruled, when Ben Franklin spoke of preserving the one million acres of the Pine Barrens, when pirates sailed and where NJ sets the standard of heritage. This 500 page presentation of the Pinelands National Reserve maritime cultural landscapes, shows a great expanse of time. It includes six major Pinelands National Reserve watersheds: Rancocas Creek, Toms River, Mullica River, Great Egg Harbor River, Maurice River, Cohansey River. Explore, discover, enjoy a peek into the Pinelands National Reserve fascinating maritime landscapes, more often forgotten than remembered. A step back in time, a step forward to the future.

Pine Barrens forests, striking waterways, narrow lakes, bogs, ghost towns, furnaces and more.
NJ Pinelands National Reserve landscape tells the tale of a time when glaciers covered this land, when ship-building towns ruled, when Ben Franklin spoke of preserving the one million acres of the Pine Barrens, when pirates sailed and where NJ sets the standard of heritage. This 500 page presentation of the Pinelands National Reserve maritime cultural landscapes, shows a great expanse of time. It includes six major Pinelands National Reserve watersheds: Rancocas Creek, Toms River, Mullica River, Great Egg Harbor River, Maurice River, Cohansey River. Explore, discover, enjoy a peek into the Pinelands National Reserve fascinating maritime landscapes, more often forgotten than remembered. A step back in time, a step forward to the future.

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Townbank-Whaling<br />

• Historic Townbank (aka New England Town, Portsmouth Town, and Falmouth) was the first settlement in New Jersey founded by Long Island and New<br />

England whalers around the year 1632, they settled on the sandy bluffs along the Delaware Bay shore. Among these settlers were Joseph Whilden &<br />

his wife Hannah Gorham, grandchild of John Howland, of the Mayflower Pilgrim. This location is now called Townbank, <strong>NJ</strong>.<br />

• Legend has it that, in the 17th century, it also was one of the most successful whaling communities in the New World. In March 1633, Dutch fur trader,<br />

David DeYries, wrote in his journal, “Our people have caught seven whales, we could have done more if we had good harpoons, for they had struck<br />

seventeen fish and only saved seven.” Fifty years later, in a letter to the Commissioners of the Free Society of Traders, William Penn wrote, “Mighty<br />

whales roll upon the coast, near the mouth of the Bay of Delaware; eleven caught and worked into oil one season. We justly hope a considerable profit<br />

by whalers, they being so numerous and the shore so suitable.” Two years later, in 1685, the Burlington Court record noted that a Cape May Native<br />

American sold a whale to settlers.<br />

• The English court physician, Dr. Daniel Coxe, left written accounts about his establishment of a whaling enterprise in Townbank in the mid- 1600s. “I<br />

have at the Expense of above three thousand pounds settled a Towne and established a fishing for Whales which are very numerous about Cape May<br />

both within the Bay and without all along the sea coast which I am assured if well managed will bring in above 4000E per Annum all charges<br />

Defrayed.”. Whale oil was refined to produce a crude oil used for light and lubrication, while whale baleen was used for corset stays, carriage springs,<br />

umbrella ribs, buggy whips, shoelaces, hat brims, collar stays and skirt hoops.<br />

• Whaling continued through most of the 18th century, with whalers rowing up and down the coast from mid-winter to early spring. However, by the<br />

start of the American Revolution in 1776, few whales were found in the region. In the following decades, whaling interests moved to other trades such<br />

as all types of fishing & land farming, building, import of retail goods, & tourist industry to name a few.<br />

Rancocas Pathways 401

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