OCEAN TOWNSHIP
WARETOWN, OCEAN COUNTY NEW JERSEY

The First Settlers

In 1609, Henry Hudson, an Englishman employed by the Dutch to start colonizing America, anchored in what is now known as Barnegat Inlet. According to a log of the "Half Moon", his ship, was the remark "This is a good land to fall in with, and a pleasant land to see." He reported a large lake or "drowned land" which of course was Barnegat Bay. The Dutch named the Inlet as Barendegat, meaning in Dutch, Inlet of Breakers.

Abraham Waier

Over its first one hundred years Waretown, had several spellings from Waier Creek and Waier Mills in 1762; Wiretown in 1802; Waretown, 1809; Weartown, 1828; Wiretown Branch, 1839; Waretown Mill, 1866; to Waretown P.O. 1872. This information was unearthed by Vivian Zinkin for her "A Study of Place Names in Ocean County".

It appears the village developed from a Mill; that of Abraham Waier's, an early settler and a member of the Rogerines (sometimes called Quaker Baptists) who came here in 1739 after being expelled from Connecticut because of their hostilities to the Puritan Sabbath laws of New England. The Rogerines expressed their opposition in several ways, including whittling axe and hoe handles, knitting and sewing at religious services. Their methods of marrying themselves and their belief that since Christ, all days are holy alike and publicly contradicting the preachers, made them peculiar to our early settlers. However, they left after eleven years, but Abraham Waier stayed and built a mill to replace one he had lost in a storm elsewhere and was "generally esteemed". He died March 24, 1768 at eighty-five years.

Our History in Stone

Waretown has two old cemeteries, the resting places of many of our settlers. The largest is Cedar Grove on Bay Street which was founded in 1861, but included an ancient graveyard. It consists of some 500 graves and is still being used (along with a recent one on Route 532).

The other, The Old Presbyterian Graveyard (also called Union) lies between Route 9 and Main Street. It included a small church until the 1930's. There are over 250 readable headstones there. Some stones are so very old that all traces of lettering are gone forever while some others are beautiful monuments. They tell the story that in these hallowed grounds are buried men who were lost in the wars and epidemics in the early days. There are memorials to men lost at sea and, by information from books, we know also that many mariners who lost their lives in shipwrecks off our Coast, are interred here.

At one time there was a small graveyard across the street from the Presbyterian Graveyard, where Abraham Waier and others were buried but there is no trace of it today. Abraham Waier's gravestone was taken and used as a mooring anchor for a boat by some of the local boys in the early 1950's.

Waretown During The Early War Years

It has been said that New Jersey was the center of the turmoil of the Revolutionary War, and the shore villages were no exceptions to the involvement. Even our town's settlers were hampered in their efforts to ship their lumber, an important industry, to New York and other markets where it was in demand. British cruisers patrolled Barnegat Inlet, keeping watch for the whaleboats, schooners and other boats that our local men had loaded with cargo, and which were hidden in the coves and rivers; the Privateers were keeping close watch for a chance to sneak out. If they escaped the watchful eye of the enemy and had a successful trip, the profit would well be worth while. But if they were captured, which they so often were, it meant loss of boats and cargo, usually by fire, and the possible capture of captains and crews. Another bone of contention was the salt works; salt was indispensable in those days as a preservative for meat and fish as well as a gun powder ingredient. There was a salt works near Soper's Landing (located between Barnegat Beach and Pebble Beach) where the Colonists derived salt from the bay water by evaporation. It was one of the orders of the "Refugees" to destroy the salt works.

Joseph Soper and his son Reuben and their families lived near Soper's meadows. They were Patriots under the command of Capt. Reuben Randolph of Manahawkin and were the subjects of harassment by Capt. John Bacon of the Refugees. The Soper men often slept in the swamps adjacent to Lochiel Creek. On one occasion the notorious Bacon plundered the Soper home during a robbery expedition and stole a shirt, which later became his "winding sheet". He was killed wearing it between West Creek and Tuckerton (Clam Town), but not before he had led the attack on Long Beach and during that terrible massacre Reuben Soper and others were killed as they slept.

Another dreaded Refugee leader was Davenport. Although his usual stomping grounds were the Toms River areas he frequently came this way. In 1782 he helped with the attack on Toms River that left the town in burnt ruins. A few months later he led two barges filled with eighty picaroons down Barnegat Bay to Forked River. They went ashore and helped themselves to supplies from a farm, then destroyed the salt works of a patriot, Samuel Brown, who barely escaped capture by hiding in the swamp. The barges then separated, one going up coast, and Davenport and his barge headed toward Waretown with the intention of destroying Newlin's works and maybe some at Barnegat. As their barge approached Oyster Creek they saw an American boat coming toward them. Davenport would not heed his men's pleas to turn back saying they were more in number and would make short work of the Americans. He could not have known of the swivel cannon in the American boat, but as he stood up to urge his rowers on, he was struck and killed by a ball. The boat capsized in a few feet of water and the picaroons scattered to the shore where they begged food of the Quakers, hid until nightfall, then left the area.

A couple of miles back from the bayshore and running parallel to it, was the King's Highway, a stagecoach trail. There is a house nearby that was built in 1735 and a story that has been passed down through the years how one night six men of the Continental Army, being pursued by the British, stopped at that house. The soldiers were hidden and the six horses slept in the dining room. At the time the house belonged to a Camburn.

The War of 1812 found its way to our shores also. Commodore Hardy in his 74 gun flag-ship, the "Ramillies", patrolled the inlet blockading the coast. As before the Privateers tried to make successful trips to other ports with cargos of lumber and other goods. Several of our Captains - Birdsalls, Sopers and others were caught and the area's schooners, "President", "Greyhound" and others were captured and burned. As in the earlier war, Waretowners witnessed many exciting scenes from the shore, shipwrecks of war and contests between the British and Americans to capture crews and cargoes.

1876 - Centennial Year of the U.S.A.

In Waretown, on April 13th, in 1876 the Township of Ocean was formed. The 1876 Poll book was signed by Edwin Salter, Clerk of the election held at the Tavern Post Office. There were three elected to the Ocean Township Committee in 1876, one being Chairman Samuel Bennett Predmore.

The following March one hundred and ten ballots were cast, which consisted of the whole number of names on the poll, for candidates to various offices and commissions. Names of candidates on the ballot equalled a quarter of the poll list. Voted for was one hundred fifty dollars for road money, two hundred dollars for pauper money and for incidentals, three hundred dollars.

Early Schools in Waretown

According to Salter's writings, the earliest school in Waretown was built prior to 1750, since the Rogerines who came here in 1739 and continued here for eleven years worshiped in the school house. All else we know is that it stood near a grove of oak trees just off Main Street, parents paid their children's tuition, and it continued well into the 1800's.

Originally the schoolhouse constructed in 1875 had but one room. It had a vestibule with cloakrooms on the front which rose to a high belfry tower. The school had wooden benches that were placed in rows on either side of the big pot bellied stove and separated the girls from the boys. In very cold weather the children hovered near the stove. Two students were sent daily for the drinking water from the mill dam, "We didn't always come right back either!" The water bucket was kept on a shelf with a dipper for all to use. The Old Mill Pond was a favorite place for the children to play. One teacher rang the bell early enough for the children to have time to return from skating or wading, depending on the season.

A primary room was added in 1890 and the early 1900's saw many changes. Single desks were placed on one side of the room for the boys and double desks on the other side for the girls. The school was also remodeled and windows were installed that met State regulations. The vestibule tower was removed and the belfry set atop the building. Students who finished eighth grade could attend high school in Lakewood via a 6:00 A.M. train. Later they attended Toms River High and in 1911 five Waretown students were enrolled in ninth and tenth grades at Barnegat.

Early Religions in Waretown

The first recorded religious society to settle in Waretown was the Rogerines who came here in 1737. This peculiar sect founded by John Rogers in Connecticut, came to New Jersey because of its tolerance to religious beliefs and customs. One of their peculiarities was that of working at hand tasks while attending their services, which Salter records was in a schoolhouse. They stayed eleven years and one of their members, Abraham Waier, became so esteemed that the town was named for him.

There were many Quakers among our early settlers who attended the Friends Meeting House in Barnegat built in 1767.

The Old Mill

The few rotted boards, broken stones and cement, is all that is left of the old mill adjacent to what was once Pond Street, and now is Birdsall Street. Across the street is another beautiful example of a Birdsall house. The street, when entering it from Route 9, takes a sudden turn to the left to avoid the mill site. If one were to continue straight on, this would have been the loading platform from the grain wagon to the mill. Where there now is a small pond on the west side of Route 9, there was once a large pond, which was part of Waretown Creek. This was dammed up with what is more properly called a weir from whence ran a gated sluice to the top of the mill's water wheel. It then skirted the mill house and ran right across the Old Shore Road in the earlier days to form a ford, or unbridged stream. Wagons, people and stagecoaches went through it, with shallow water and a sandy bottom. Sometimes there was a small plank bridge for travellers. In the winter when the pond was iced over and water could not flow over the wheel, the men cut ice and stored it in the mill and the icehouse nearby. Sheep were taken to the stream for washing before shearing. It is believed the mill originally belonged to Abraham Waier. The gristmill grindstones and old millstone are being cared by Thomas Ackerman, and are in fine shape.

Our Coast

We will start to the north of Oyster Creek, which in 1763 was known as Oster (Eastern) Creek, and at another time was known as McCoy's Creek. During the charcoal days there was a wooden railroad along its banks. At the mouth, and turning south in the bay, we pass Sands Point Harbor which shore and inland was once called Owltown. We pass the lagoon inlet at Holiday Beach to the one at Skippers Cove, then we come to Shipyard Point at North Harbor, which is the exit of Waretown Creek and the site of the old shipyard. Shortly after, we come to the foot of Bay Road and the site of the old stone jetty, now scattered from a century of storms. Next is Waretown Fishing Station with a wooden pier. The water was at one time much deeper in the bay and there is an old print showing a four masted schooner tied up at the end of this pier, also showing the old Bayview Hotel in the distance. In later days this area is where a brisk business was done in renting rowboats for crabbing and fishing. Today, power boats hold sway. We then come to South Harbor. All this area including Liberty Harbor is devoted to big marinas. There had been marinas near the entrance to Oyster Creek, but they are no longer in operation as the power company bought their land.

Just south of South Harbor is a curving bay where you will see a row of cedars. For over 100 yards or so, there was, some 70-95 years ago, a very beautiful bathing beach, with a boardwalk, gazebo and a bath house. All this is gone now, the water has risen considerably in that time. Going to the southern end of this little curved bay, we come to the site of the eastern terminus of the Old Pancoast Road and also the site of Newlin's Salt Works. A lane goes up towards the Old Birdsall-Westcott Farmhouse. Next, we come to Cox's Point, which is now the entrance to two lagoons in Barnegat Beach, which, due to much erosion in the past, was bulkheaded. Next comes a lagoon used by the Lighthouse Camp. About half way to Locheil Creek, is where Soper's Landing and Jerusalem were. Locheil Creek was named after the Lord Neill Campbell's estate of that name in Scotland. The natives called it Lawhill, (actually the "ch" in Locheil is sounded like a soft "k", so that it comes out more like Lockeil). A part of the Pebble Beach of today was known as Picketts Field. Speaking of Newlin's Salt Works, during the latter part of the Revolutionary War with England, we were in need of salt. Some of the salt had been coming from St. Martens in the Netherlands Antilles by our schooners, but now that the British were blockading us we had to make our own salt the slow, hard way from the sea. Salt works were erected up and down the coast, mostly in the bays, for several reasons such as, some protection from rough weather at sea and for better control of the water. While today we only get a tide rise and fall of six to twelve inches, we measured it in feet in those days. They could trap the water in trenches during very high tides and dam it off, let the water evaporate until it became brine, and then boil it down in big iron pots and trays. Some used pumps to raise the waters, sometimes powered by a windmill as it was at Brown's in Forked River and possibly here. Huge quantities of cordwood were often used to boil the salt down. Mosquitoes were a great hindrance to the operators, storms and rain would also give a lot of trouble. When the brine was reduced to a sludge, it was placed in wicker baskets and allowed to drain. It was then thrown in pairs over the backs of draught animals and transported to the arsenal.

Boundaries and Landmarks

Before we venture farther afield, perhaps we should define out boundaries, remembering that Brookville is a part of Ocean Township, as is Wells Mills. They are about eight miles west of Waretown. On our east, of course, we are bounded by the Barnegat Inlet, while to the south Locheil Creek separates us from Barnegat Township. Our southern boundary line goes across the bay, around Barnegat Light and out the center of the Inlet, thus the name "Ocean Township". Our northern boundary line goes to Island Beach and out the north jetty. On the north Oyster Creek separates us from Lacey Township (Forked River). The latter two streams converge inland on each other in a general sense to form a rough wedge in the vicinity of Brookville and Wells Mills. The actual search may be found in Salters History. It was approved on April 13, 1876.

Waretown is loosely divided into sections. Starting to the north is Sands Point, south of which is Holiday Beach followed by Skippers Cove then Bay Haven, Barnegat Beach and Pebble Beach, while to the west of Route 9, is Railroad Avenue, and what is known as Dogtown. Waretown has several creeks, streams and streamlets, Oyster Creek and near the center of town, Waretown Creek, then Toh's Creek. West of the central area, the ground rises into a long hill going north and south, as will be seen on Wells Mills Road, which was once named Pancake Road.

Brookville

Brookville, eight miles to our west, is part of Ocean Township. There were perhaps 50 or 60 homes in the early days, especially in the days of lumbering, together with Wells Mills. In 1892 it was called Millville, but there was another, bigger Milville. The Post Office changed it to Brookville. It was noted for lumber, charcoal and sphagnum moss. They had a lot of pigs which they let run in the woods in the spring, and in the late fall their owners would go out with a pocket full of corn, find the sow and drop corn in the front of her as she headed for home, and the little ones would follow her.

Moses Headley once owned Brookville all the way to the sea; he owned 2,300 feet on the bay and 17 acres in Brookville.

Wells Mills

Off Route 532, one would find a serenely beautiful lake, seemingly as the Indians left it. It is a part of Oyster Creek and was the millpond for Wells Mills. There is a stone strip at the outlet where the mill used to be and the old and unusual millwheel is sinking deeper and deeper into the mud.

The Wells came from Chatsworth and at one time were joint owners of the area with Damien Thibault. However, it is the Estlows whom most remember as its former owners. They were the sons of Christopher Estlow whose ancestor came to this country from Holland, the year of the "Mayflower". Francis Robiniau Estlow and his brothers Jessie and Godfrey ran the first Estlow Mill. Francis invented the turbine type millwheel and it was made at "Old Martha's" furnace near Pasadena, New Jersey. As a matter of fact the Estlows were an inventive family and had a loft full of unpatented inventions such as boating and farming "time savers". They had a form of "telephone" with wires to other houses and a kind of coded ring, so many bells for help, etc.

The Estlows lived in the house the Wells had lived in on the north side of the lake, building on to suit their needs. There were three or four houses on the rise overlooking the lake. The one Gertrude Estlow Burke (cousin of Tilden) lived in is still standing but going to ruin. The homestead and its location must have been very beautiful once.

Today Wells Mills is owned by Ocean County and preserved as a nature park.

Pebble Beach

We will now start at Locheil Creek and going north visit what is now Pebble Beach, Barnegat Beach, Bay Haven, Skippers Cove, Holiday Beach and Sands Point Harbor, also that portion of Waretown that lies immediately west of Route 9.

The north side of Locheil Creek was a beach and woodland on the "Ridge" as you approach Route 9. This was known as Jerusalem, where years ago they used to have fishing parties. Weak fish were said to favor this area. Most of what is now called Pebble Beach was known as Indianola, as there had been small Indian camps along there about half way from there to Barnegat Beach. On the bay was once Soper's Landing and north of that reaching up and partly into Barnegat Beach was Soper's Meadows. The lower and central portion of Indianola became a small development first known as Indian Surf Beach, later Barnegat Lagoons and now Pebble Beach. It was somewhere in the center of Indianola that the first residents of Waretown lived. To quote from Salter's History, "The first settler on the Soper Place, between Waretown and Barnegat, according to the late Jeramiah Spragg, an aged citizen of Barnegat, was John Perkins whose daughter married James Spragg, father of Jeramiah. Mr. Perkins came from England during the old French Wars and located near Sopers Landing and subsequently sold out to Joseph Soper ancestor of the numerous Soper families in this vicinity and elsewhere."

Barnegat Beach

That which is now known as Barnegat Beach included the present development and woods to the north of Barnegat Beach Drive as far as Main Street and the vicinity of Westcott Avenue that extends down to the bay. In 1952 the Barnegat Beach Civic Association Inc. was formed. The Clubhouse was built by enthusiastic volunteers and promissory notes. A beach pavilion and a kiddie park was installed on the beach. There are two lagoons with a Marina at the inner end of each. Historically, it contains the old Headley Farm and the Birdsall - Westcott Farm, the end of Pancoast Road and Newlin's Salt Works, and as Hudson said, "A pleasant place to see."

Holiday Beach

Most of the land now known as Holiday Beach, was once a thriving farm.

Sands Point Harbor

About 200 acres of the northeast corner must have been an ancient Indian campsite, as many artifacts have been recovered from there several feet under the surface at the site of little knolls. There is a section of about seven lagoons with nautical names and a section with names of trees.

Skippers Cove

Town Meadow was the name of a semi-public meadowland reaching almost from the bay to the railroad in the early days. The old Atlantic City Road went through it. There was a knoll near the center of it and one large house stood on the old road with a tower for watching ships at sea; this was the house of Birdsall-Conover. Cows grazing and children picking flowers were a familiar site and then one day in 1955 the bulldozers tore it up for what was to be Skippers Cove. Mr. Henry Mellon started the project, but sold it to Suburban Propane Company in February, 1958. The first house was completed in 1960, soon there were 237 homes with both water and sewerage. It was the first of its type on the bay. A nice development of upland character to encourage athletics and boating.

Bay Haven

Bay Haven is centrally located and on the bay, from Bay Avenue to Pennsylvania Avenue. There are some homes here but there are two large Marinas and other small lagoons. A thriving slip rental and boat business is in operation there. It was once a busy place at the site of the old Bayview Hotel and the Waretown Fishing Station where, in the old days one could rent a row boat and go crabbing or fishing.

Dogtown

A small section at the far end of Railroad Avenue, west of Route 9 and near Route 532, or what was once called the Pancake Road. Dogtown was so named because an early resident, Ray Peterson, they say trained dogs here. At the junction of this and Railroad Avenue are the Town Hall, Firehouse and the Police Station. Waretown's Elementary School is on Railroad Avenue. The Ocean Township Elementary School is located on the same property facing Route 532.

Industry

From the years 1700 to 1900, Waretown was quite a shipbuilding center. The place was Waretown Creek, which harbor was larger than of today. It lay between Skippers Cove, of today, and Pennsylvania Avenue, on the south the estuary was known as Shipyard Point. This gave employment to a variety of tradesmen, such as lumbermen, (sometimes known as Woodjins) cutting oak, cedar and other woods for the ships. As steamboats became more popular, the delivery of cordwood, cheaply, was needed and Waretown became an extremely busy place. Carpenters, shipbuilders, fitters, ironworkers, blacksmiths, caulkers, sailmakers and all specialists in the art of shipbuilding were needed. Then came the captain apprentices, officers of various ranks, pilots and ordinary seamen. A stone jetty a half mile long was built out in the bay at the foot of Bay Road, so the late Leon Stackhouse told us, with a width at its end large enough to turn around a six mule team and a wagon. We asked Leon where they got all the stones as we had never seen any natural ones in this area. He replied that we were no sailors and had we not heard of ballast, which had been brought back on boats returning from New York and other ports. Oxen, mules and horses were used to bring the cordwood to the shallow draught schooners at the deeper water at the end of the pier. Some lumber was floated down Oyster Creek as far as brackish water and then barged to the ships waiting at the pier or riding at anchor outside. Barques, barquentines, sloops, coasters, schooners, bay boats, whaleboats down to row boats and sneakboxes were built at the shipyard. Large ships would be built beside the water and rolled in to launch it. Small boats would be built in a low trough, and when finished, the watergate would be opened and the water let in to float it. Some cordwood would be carted in on the Pancoast Road to Sopers Landing between Barnegat and Waretown. The old sea captains had some beautiful homes built, naturally, near the Bay. Most of them were built on the Old Shore Road (now Main Street). The old Headley Farm was built on a knoll (as most of them were) on the old Pancoast Road. Another, the Camburn-Borsum House, was built on Oyster Creek. It must have been a very interesting sight to see the seamen and the Woodjins, as well as many various artificers, mingle on their way around town on a weekend in Waretown in those days. The builders of these fine ships were very skillful men; keel, ribs, masts, stem and stern, all experts, a truly complex business. The Builders and Captains were most fastidious, and as the saying went, each owner and operator wanted their vessel to "fly like the wind against the wave". Captain Billy Burden was an expert sailmaker as well as Sea Captain. The Burdens and the Homes were shipbuilders, as Earl Warran explained to us. So was Captain (and Doctor) Newberry. Captain John Warren operated the "Edith Olcott", a four masted schooner used in coastal charcoal and lumber. Captain Rulon built many ships, lived across the Shore Road opposite Captain Newberry. Captain Birdsall built the "Emelia E. Birdsall" in 1864, sold it to Captain Homes in 1874 for $1,800.00. Birdsall owned the schooner "Ezekiel Birdsall" in 1840. Captain George Birdsall, Sr., and Captain George Jr., were sailing in the 1920's. The peak of big ships was in 1790. Sea Captains were three Amos Birdsalls, Sam Birdsall, A.C. Fiedler, Chas. Benton Bowker, Chambers, Camburn, Predmore, Bunnell, Wilkins, Chas. Reid, Ridgeway, John Warren, Asay, Rulon, and Soper. The biggest ship built here was the "Magellon". Others were the Schooners "Lydia Middleton", "Eva Homes", "Marie Pearson" and many others of course. After many years the big sails disappeared from our bay, the ensuing storms finally broke up the big rock pile and scattered the rocks along the shore. When you see them, remember that over 100 years ago, someone put it in a boat somewhere else like New York, Philadelphia or anywhere up and down the coast or in the Caribbean Islands and later threw them into the bay. For those that fish along the shore near Waretown, there are a couple of those rock piles where one may find the fishing good at times. Remember, the whole character of the bay has changed greatly since those times. Cranberry Inlet opposite Toms River was closed by a storm in 1812, and the whole bay is many inches higher water today than in 1915.

Charcoal

In the 1830's, competition between the steamboats was very keen, it was found that cordwood was taking too much space on deck, especially on long voyages it displaced cargo. The demand for charcoal, in the absence of coal, grew in popularity and for a few years was operated full blast. Men had to be trained into the skills of making charcoal, and acquainted with its deadly fumes. Charcoal burning entailed heat by very slow burning with a minimum quantity of air so that the burning of the cordwood must be very even and very slow. The following method was used around here according to Steve Hardeski who worked at this job out toward the Forked River mountains when he was a teenager in the 1930's. They cut down and piled eight foot logs in a conical circle by tiers so they tapered off near the top. This was topped off, but a small core in the lower center was left open. The whole pile, which looked like an igloo was covered by sod with small holes left that could be controlled and regulated to intensify heat at certain spots.

The men would build several of these piles at an area set apart and keep tearing down and setting up new ones as the charcoal was accomplished. And eight cord pile took eight days and eight nights and there was no sleeping "on watch" for if it burned too fast - no charcoal! The charcoal burners lived on the job. (Steve's boss gave them a junk car to sleep in).

Some of the charcoal workers were able to produce old time necessities and nostrums such as pitch, tar, axelgrease, turpentine, ship caulking, gum, lamp black and pine cough syrup by using the proper wood and temperature and position of an inserted hollow log. This was a precise and required skill.

Shellfish in the Bay

Oysters prior to 1920 were plentiful. William Reid had a small bed along the shore of what is now Holiday Beach. In the late forties the winter crabbers found a bed of oysters off Cedar Creek and caught hundreds of bushels. There was a good market and the price was fair. I remember when there were quite a few in Oyster Creek. There were sedge Oysters around the Islands just for the taking. We caught what we wanted for our own use. Long since, they have been caught up and died. In the thirties the bay was covered with eel grass and clamming was good, an average haul of 1000 to 1500 was a good day. Later in the thirties the eel grass died and the bay bottom became very hard. We had about twenty years of good clamming, a growth of small clams that was very good for the market, in the early part of the forties, clams sold 100 for $.35, but you could catch anywhere from 2000 to 3500 in eight hours. In the beginning we used an ordinary garden rake to catch clams with until commercial rakes were made, and they were the best. After the grass got thick and the bottom softened, we treaded clams catching from 2000 to 5000. After the fifties, the scallops came back into the bay. Thousands of bushels were caught. Some sold in the shell to commercial dealers, others opened their own and sold them by the quarts and pints as people wanted.

Cranberrying

Seth and Rebecca Corliss moved from Brookville to Waretown in 1884. In 1916 their sons, Arthur and Stogton bought a cranberry bog from the Birdsalls. It was in bearing condition and ready for harvest and shipping. It was known as the "lower bog". In 1925, Arthur and son, LeRoy started to build what was to be the "upper bog" with a horse and wagon and later a truck. It was hard work clearing trees and brush and cutting ditches for irrigation. Cranberries were set out four inches long and four inches apart. There was a four year wait. Cranberries had to be picked before frost. Scoops with metal fingers were used to pull them from the vines. Local help was used to put them into barrels and stored where they were then sorted and shipped. The cranberry house burned and Arthur Corliss built a new and bigger one near his home on Route 9. Electricity made things easier and faster. Cranberries were dumped into a hopper. At two conveyer belts 10 inches wide by 8 feet long, three or four people picked bad and white berries out and then boxed them. Later the berries were taken to Bordentown, where the Eatmore Cranberries were sorted and shipped west for the holidays. After the harvest, the bog was flooded, the berries floated and were gathered with a net and dried on a coarse screen, sorted and shipped as before. The bog was then drained, the vines pruned to stop tangling, and the ditches clear of blocks. The floodgates on each end were closed, to put water in the reservoir before it reached the bogs. If it turned cold early, the bogs were then flooded, partly so that they could be worked in boots. It was a hard and tedious job but paid quite well. The only thing was, you had to wait a year before having any money for the year's crop. After Stogton died, his son Eugene took over and built his own cranberry house. An old familiar sight in town was seeing Gene Corliss drive his early vintage Ford to the bogs. (It was later sold to Tom Ackerman). Arthur and LeRoy also owned the "little bog" in Union Township and three small bogs of 532, "The Morey Place".

Mossing

The name of the local company was "The American Moss and Peat Co., Corliss Brothers Proprietors" (Arthur and Stogton). Sphagnum moss grows in the cedar swamps, it must be gathered with a long toothed tool known as a moss drag and carried in a basket to a truck at the edge of the swamp, it is then taken to a clearing known as a moss landing for drying. In a day or two the sun dries the top of the moss. It then must be turned over. When it is dry it is raked up, packed and wired around in a moss press and covered with burlap in preparation for shipping. Corliss Brothers had a place built to store the moss they bought from other "mossers" in the area. Some of the people they bought from were: Tilton Estlow, Oscar Couch, Clarence and Fred Camburn, Will and Billy Gray, Fred Cranmer, to name a few. Sphagnum moss was usually ordered in the early spring by florists and asparagus and strawberry growers and the like. It has a tremendous capacity for holding water. This was a thriving business many years ago.

Hunting and Fishing

Grover Cleveland and Babe Ruth were among those who liked to hunt and fish at Waretown. Some of the finest duck hunting areas in New Jersey was Barnegat Bay in Ocean Township waters. During the 1920's, market gunners hunting from anchored locations in Barnegat Bay used 8 gauge shotguns to kill thousands of ducks. The daily kills were shipped to the New York market in iced down railway cars. The Sedge Islands catered to corporate executives who hunted from custom blinds and were served lunch in the blinds by white coated butlers.

Volunteer Services

Waretown Volunteer Fire Department was incorporated in November, 1939. Prior to this, Barnegat Fire Company answered Waretown's calls and were appropriated a few hundred dollars in the township budget. During the war most of the eligible men were in the service so the Fire Company was inactive. It reorganized in 1944 and the rules were amended to allow sixteen to eighteen year old boys to join. The first fire truck was a 1935 Ford and it had a round tank that they boxed in. The second one was a 1946 forest fire truck with a tank and a small motor for a pump on the side, bought from the state for $300.00.