登陆注册
38546500000037

第37章 Planters And Traders Of Southern Jersey (2)

This condition of material and social self-sufficiency lasted in places long after the Revolution.It was a curious little aristocracy--a very faint and faded one, lacking the robustness of the far southern type, and lacking indeed the real essential of an aristocracy, namely political power.Moreover, although there were slaves in New Jersey, there were not enough of them to exalt the Jersey gentlemen farmers into such self-sufficient lords and masters as the Virginian and Carolinian planters became.

To search out the remains of this stage of American history, however, takes one up many pleasant streams flowing out of the forest tract to the Delaware on one side or to the ocean on the other.This topographical formation of a central ridge or watershed of forest and swamp was a repetition of the same formation in the Delaware peninsula, which like southern Jersey had originally been a shoal and then an island.The Jersey watershed, with its streams abounding in wood duck and all manner of wild life, must have been in its primeval days as fascinating as some of the streams of the Florida cypress swamps.Toward the ocean, Wading River, the Mullica, the Tuckahoe, Great Egg; and on the Delaware side the Maurice, Cohansey, Salem Creek, Oldman's, Raccoon, Mantua, Woodberry, Timber, and the Rancocas, still possess attraction.Some of them, on opposite sides of the divide, are not far apart at their sources in the old forest tract; so that a canoe can be transported over the few miles and thus traverse the State.One of these trips up Timber Creek from the Delaware and across only eight miles of land to the headwaters of Great Egg Harbor River and thence down to the ocean, thus cutting South Jersey in half, is a particularly romantic one.The heavy woods and swamps of this secluded route along these forest shadowed streams are apparently very much as they were three hundred years ago.

The water in all these streams, particularly in their upper parts, owing to the sandy soil, is very clean and clear and is often stained by the cedar roots in the swamps a clear brown, sometimes almost an amber color.One of the streams, the Rancocas, with its many windings to Mount Holly and then far inland to Brown's Mills, seems to be the favorite with canoemen and is probably without an equal in its way for those who love the Indian's gift that brings us so close to nature.

The spread of the Quaker settlements along Delaware Bay to Cape May was checked by the Maurice River and its marshes and by the Great Cedar Swamp which crossed the country from Delaware Bay to the ocean and thus made of the Cape May region a sort of island.

The Cape May region, it is true, was settled by Quakers, but most of them came from Long Island rather than from the settlements on the Delaware.They had followed whale fishing on Long Island and in pursuit of that occupation some of them had migrated to Cape May where whales were numerous not far off shore.

The leading early families of Cape May, the Townsends, Stillwells, Corsons, Leamings, Ludlams, Spicers, and Cresses, many of whose descendants still live there, were Quakers of the Long Island strain.The ancestor of the Townsend family came to Cape May because he had been imprisoned and fined and threatened with worse under the New York government for assisting his fellow Quakers to hold meetings.Probably the occasional severity of the administration of the New York laws against Quakers, which were the same as those of England, had as much to do as had the whales with the migration to Cape May.This Quaker civilization extended from Cape May up as far as Great Egg Harbor where the Great Cedar Swamp joined the seashore.Quaker meeting houses were built at Cape May, Galloway, Tuckahoe, and Great Egg.All have been abandoned and the buildings themselves have disappeared, except that of the Cape May meeting, called the Old Cedar Meeting, at Seaville; and it has no congregation.The building is kept in repair by members of the Society from other places.

Besides the Quakers, Cape May included a number of New Haven people, the first of whom came there as early as 1640 under the leadership of George Lamberton and Captain Turner, seeking profit in whale fishing.They were not driven out by the Dutch and Swedes, as happened to their companions who attempted to settle higher up the river at Salem and the Schuylkill.About one-fifth of the old family names of Cape May and New Haven are similar, and there is supposed to be not a little New England blood not only in Cape May but in the neighboring counties of Cumberland and Salem.While the first New Haven whalers came to Cape May in 1640, it is probable that for a long time they only sheltered their vessels there, and none of them became permanent settlers until about 1685.

Scandinavians contributed another element to the population of the Cape May region.Very little is definitely known about this settlement, but the Swedish names in Cape May and Cumberland counties seem to indicate a migration of Scandinavians from Wilmington and Tinicum.

Great Egg Harbor, which formed the northern part of the Cape May settlement, was named from the immense numbers of wild fowl, swans, ducks, and water birds that formerly nested there every summer and have now been driven to Canada or beyond.Little Egg Harbor farther up the coast was named for the same reason as well as Egg Island, of three hundred acres in Delaware Bay, since then eaten away by the tide.The people of the district had excellent living from the eggs as well as from the plentiful fowl, fish, and oysters.

同类推荐
  • Herland

    Herland

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 南窗纪谈

    南窗纪谈

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 叙净土往生传

    叙净土往生传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 艺苑卮言

    艺苑卮言

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 梦观集

    梦观集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 大狂魔

    大狂魔

    我若不傲,如何超越轮回;我若不狂,怎敢破碎虚空!藏一颗狂魔心,落日斩月恩仇泯;听一首狂魔曲,天涯何处觅知音。一代狂魔驾临异界,附身于传说中天绝死脉的善良懦弱少年,从此龙跃九渊,风云席卷
  • 人鱼公主的王子

    人鱼公主的王子

    人鱼公主不小心丢了珍珠,跑上岸去寻回珍珠,却错遇一个冤大头和她的未婚夫,她该么办,那珍珠呢?
  • 阿狄随笔

    阿狄随笔

    一部记录本人在创作网文的过程中,经历过的矛盾、迷茫、醒悟等各种感受的随笔文体。
  • 小和尚在江湖

    小和尚在江湖

    在中土神州的江湖上,有一个装着现代少年灵魂的小和尚!
  • 穿有千年的爱恋

    穿有千年的爱恋

    讲述了一个关于主人公林夕在一场人魔大战中,由于双方的功力的达到了一个极点,造成了时空裂缝,时空裂缝将林夕带到了千年之前的夏商时代,在那里,他遇到了同样被时空裂缝吸进去的前女友,他们两个一起努力,最终回到现实世界的故事。
  • 精灵之御宠师

    精灵之御宠师

    一觉醒来,自己竟然变成了一个小孩,还来到了神奇宝贝世界。虽然很开心,但为啥会在荒岛呢?这是要异界荒野求生的节奏啊!唉!那是啥?洛奇亚?……商界大佬夏木一觉醒来到了异界,天生霸道的他又将掀起怎样的惊天骇浪呢?
  • 暖夏迟暮

    暖夏迟暮

    四年前,他拥着女伴,连余光都不愿施舍给她,面对她的质问,只有一句“你觉得我会真的喜欢你吗?”四年后,作为顶尖设计师,她风光无限,面对他的步步紧逼,她朱唇轻启:“你凭什么觉得我还喜欢你?”
  • 假仙

    假仙

    因为一次多管闲事,白曼被神当做实验品丢入了奇怪的世界。阴阳颠倒?母系氏族?女尊男卑?更重要的是男人生子?!……还好,不用钻男人肚子,只是从花里养出来。她不想死,如果只有修仙才能活下去,那就努力把假仙修炼成真仙吧。顺便为了眼睛着想,办个化妆培训班,开个形象设计中心,将男人从小培养起,来相公养成?【女尊,婴儿穿,慢热】
  • 魔君的宠妻法则

    魔君的宠妻法则

    渣男来袭,她避无可避,只能迎上;父亲偏心,她忍无可忍,只能奋起反抗;外族欺凌,忍不得,避不了,那么就一起毁灭吧!可是,谁来告诉她,这个霸道男人哪里来的,不过意外偷了他一件衣服,用得着这样逼迫吗,强迫她成长也就够了,这还不够,他竟然要让她用一生偿还。
  • 南来北往

    南来北往

    描写是二二世纪九十年代初,以李明浩为代表的一群农村青年的打工经历和创业历程,为了实现自己的理想和人生价值,李明浩及同村的人,先后离开家乡,来到广东打工,在经历一段艰辛和曲折的人生之路后,他们有的堕落了,有的成长了,有的迷失了,有的回到自己家乡,开始了改变家乡的创业生活。