Pine Barrens (New Jersey)
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"Pine Barrens" redirects here. For other Pine Barrens, see List of pine barrens; for a discussion of the ecotype, see pine barrens.
The Pine Barrens, also known as the Pinelands, are a heavily forested area covering 1.1 million acres (4,500 km²) of coastal plain across southern and central New Jersey. The name "pine barrens" refers to the area's sandy, acidic, nutrient-poor soil, which didn't take well to the crops originally imported by European settlers. However, these uncommon conditions led the Pine Barrens to develop a unique and diverse spectrum of plant life, especially orchids and carnivorous plants. The area is also notable for its populations of rare pygmy Pitch Pines and other plant species that depend on fire to reproduce (fire is very frequent in the Pine Barrens). The highly organic sandy silt that composes much of the area's soil is referred to by the locals as sugar sand.
Despite being near metropolitan areas such as New York City, Philadelphia, and Atlantic City, and the fact that the Garden State Parkway and Atlantic City Expressway run directly through it, the Pine Barrens remains largely rural and undeveloped. In fact, the area has the unique distinction of being the largest piece of open space between Boston, Massachusetts and Richmond, Virginia. The Pine Barrens also helps recharge the 17-trillion gallon Kirkwood-Cohansey aquifer containing some of the purest water in the United States. As a result of all these factors, the area was designated the Pinelands National Reserve (the nation's first National Reserve) in 1978, and it was designated a United Nations International Biosphere Reserve in 1983. Development in the Pine Barrens is strictly controlled by an independent state/federal agency called the New Jersey Pinelands Commission. The Pinelands Reserve contains Wharton State Forest, Brendan T. Byrne State Forest (formerly Lebanon State Forest) and Bass River State Forest.
John McPhee wrote one of his earlier books on the Pine Barrens on this history and ecology of the region in 1967.
The Pine Barrens are mentioned in War of the Worlds as the site of a battle between the National Guard and alien forces.
Pine Barrens is also the name and location of an episode of the HBO show The Sopranos, in which characters from the show get lost in the dense forest while trying to kill a Russian gangster.
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[edit] History
During colonial times, the Pine Barrens was home to various industries. Bog iron was mined from bogs, streams, and waterways, and was worked in furnaces at Batsto, Atsion, Ferrago, Hanover Furnace, and several other locations. Iron from these early furnaces was instrumental in supplying the American military with weapons and camp tools during the American Revolution and the War of 1812. The bog iron industry fell off in the mid-1800s when cheaper iron could be found in Pennsylvania. Other industries such as paper mills, sawmills, and gristmills rose and fell throughout the years. Smaller industries such as charcoal making and glassmaking also were attempted and met with varying degrees of success. Over time, however, the forest reclaimed almost all traces of the Pine Barrens' industrial past. Ghost towns — remnants of these industries — can still be seen at various locations, and one, Batsto Village, has been restored to its mid-19th century state.
The Pine Barrens were home to the Kallikaks, a poor, backwoods family which was held up as a case study in genetic inferiority by eugenicists in the early 20th century. Today, it is understood that the facts in the Kallikaks case study were misrepresented [1]. For years, residents of the area were called "Pineys" by outsiders, as a derogatory term; today, many Pinelands residents are proud of both the name and the land on which they live.
The Pine Barrens gave rise to the legend of the Jersey Devil, said to have been born to a local woman named Mrs. Leeds in an area known as "Leeds Point" sometime during the 1700s. Most sightings of the Devil have occurred in or near the Pine Barrens.
[edit] The Pine Barrens today
The only industries that still thrive in the Pine Barrens are related to agriculture and tourism. The Pine Barrens are the reason New Jersey grows the third-highest number of cranberries in the country. The first-ever cultivated blueberries were developed in the Pine Barrens in 1916 through the hard work of Elizabeth White of Whitesbog, and blueberry farms are now almost as common as cranberry bogs.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- New Jersey Pinelands Commission
- NJ Pinelands and Down Jersey
- Birds of the Pine Barrens
- Plants of the Pine Parrens
- NJPineBarrens.com - Exploring the Ghost Towns of Southern New Jersey
- Photos of Colliers Mills WMA
- Forked River Mountain Coalition
- Pinelands Preservation Alliance
- Piney Power.com
- Batona Trail
- Pine Barrens Education Page
- National Park Service: Partnership Wild & Scenic Rivers
- American Revolutionary War actions in the Pinelands area
- South Jersey Tourism Corporation
State of New Jersey
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Capital | Trenton |
Regions | Central Jersey | Delaware Valley | Jersey Shore | Meadowlands | North Jersey | Pine Barrens | South Jersey | New York metro area | Tri-State Region |
Cities | Atlantic City | Bayonne | Camden | Clifton | East Orange | Elizabeth | Hackensack | Hoboken | Jersey City | Linden | Long Branch | New Brunswick | Newark | Passaic | Paterson | Perth Amboy | Plainfield | Princeton | Toms River | Union City | Vineland | In addition to the major cities listed, All Municipalities (by Population) |
Counties | Atlantic | Bergen | Burlington | Camden | Cape May | Cumberland | Essex | Gloucester | Hudson | Hunterdon | Mercer | Middlesex | Monmouth | Morris | Ocean | Passaic | Salem | Somerset | Sussex | Union | Warren |