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[[Category:Pre-state history of New Jersey]]
[[Category:Pre-state history of New Jersey]]
[[Category:Pre-state history of New York]]
[[Category:Pre-state history of New York]]
[[Category:Historic trails and roads in the United States]]
[[Category:Historic trails and roads in New Jersey]]
[[Category:Historic trails and roads in New York]]
[[Category:History of Orange County, New York]]
[[Category:History of Orange County, New York]]
[[Category:History of Ulster County, New York]]
[[Category:History of Ulster County, New York]]

Revision as of 05:35, 20 July 2010

Old Mine Road is a road in New Jersey and New York said by many to be the oldest continuously-used road in the United States of America. At a length of 104 miles, it stretches from Kittatinny Point in the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area to the vicinity of Kingston, New York.

Among the many theories regarding the early history of the road, it is traditionally believed that Dutch miners began construction of the road in the 1600s in order to transport copper ore from mines along the Delaware River in Pahaquarry Township, New Jersey to Esopus, New York along the Hudson River in Dutch colony of New Amsterdam. Many historians, though, discount much of this tradition. Starting in the late 1600s, Dutch settlement began along the course of the road, which follows roughly the course of the later Delaware and Hudson Canal for its northern half, and the Delaware River in its southern half through the western edge of Sussex County and northern Warren County in northwestern New Jersey.

The road exists today, and although much of its length in New York has been modernized, widened and incorporated into US 209, its length in New Jersey as the "Old Mine Road" is largely undeveloped as it travels through the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area, it still retains much of its historical and rural charm. Historic sites in both states assert the area's Dutch colonial heritage through the preservation of many homes, farms and churches.

History

Paleo Indians and Native Americans

After the Wisconsin Glacier melted around 13,000BC, the area slowly warmed. The area was first tundra with grasses growing. Later as warming occurred, a tiaga/boreal forest came into existance. Big game moved into the area.

Paleo Indians were the first inhabitants to the area . Several sites along the Delaware River have been found north of the Gap and south of Port Jervis. Carbon dating of the oldest site is at 8900 BC. just north of the Gap on the Pennsylvania side. However, Paleo Indian camps are probably older than this but have not been found, as the surface level at that time was many feet below the present surface. Also, they traveled in small groups and did not stay in any one place long due to the fact that they were hunter gatherers. They had to keep moving in search of game and plant foods. Therefore Paleo Indians could have been here as early as 10500 BC.

The Lenape Native Americans settled the area several thousand years ago. They were hunter gatherers. They moved in search of food, but their moving of camps was more seasonal. One large village was at Minisink Island. They had trails and family villages along the Delaware River. A trail went though Culver's Gap that lead though Augusta and then south, east of Newton to Parsippany.

Theories of the roads origins

The road was probably started as a Paleo Indian trail thousands of years ago, around 10,000 BC. Later the trail was used by the Lenape Native Americans. The trail was used to migrate, and travel to hunting and fishing areas.

There were three wars during the middle of the 1600s. Governor Kiefts War, the Esopus War and the Peach War. With such hostilities with the Dutch and Native Americans, such a road could not have been built.

Dutch populations were not very high in the 1600s. They had forts along the Hudson River from Manhatten Island to slightly north of Albany. They did not have the man power to build a road through a wilderness. The trees back then were huge and the terraine was rugged. It would have required many men using axes to cut trees and brush to clear a path for such a road. Other men would had to hunt game in Native American territory when there was hostilities. The Native Americans would have not wanted men to cut trees in their territory.

No archealogical diggings were ever found of Dutch camps along the "Old Mine" road, that would have built such a road. And no camps were ever found at the Paraquarry Mine area.

According to many maps drawn in the 1700s including William Faddens map of 1778 shows no road that goes south of Walpack Bend along the eastern side of the Delaware River to Paraquarry. In 1830 a road was made through the Delaware Water Gap along the New Jersey side and then the road went on the eastern side of the Delaware to Paraquarry. There was a road on Faddens map that went from Port Jervis to Minisink Island where the road then split three ways. One road went though Culvers Gap. The second crossed the Delaware at Minisink Island and went south along the western side of the river. The third road went to Walpack Bend where it crossed the River and went south along the western side of the Delaware. These were Native American trails that the Europeans used when Europeans arrived in the area.

The copper ore was only two to three percent, and hauling so much ore of very low quality on rugged roads using wooden carts would have been very difficult and not economically feasible.

If the Dutch had made the mine at Paraquarry, the mining operation would have been extremely difficult and back breaking. The area is in the Silurian High Falls formation. This is a sandstone rock which is extremely hard. Given the technology of the 1600s in which iron hammers and chisels would have been used, mining the low quality ore in extremely hard rock would have been a very difficult undertaking.

The Dutch had all the copper they needed, as they bought it from Sweden.

Given all the above facts, the Dutch did not build Old Mine Road or mine the low grade copper ore at Paraquarry.

New Albion and Lord Plowden, slowly following settler populations.

Early settlement

The first early settlement was near Port Jervis NY which was then New Jersey. A blacksmith bought land from the Lenape in 1698 near Port Jervis. They valued his metal making skills as no Native American was working with metal then. After that the English bought land from the Native Americans such as the (Minisink Patent, Wawayanda Patent, NY-NJ Border War, Minisink settlement, Esopus, etc.)

Frontier Fortifications

During the French and Indian Wars, eight fortified houses were made along the Delaware River from Phillipsburg to Port Jervis. The first fort was near Belvidere and they were about 8 miles apart. The next house was Col. Van Camps house near Walpack . The trail lead through the Kittatinny Mountain northwest of Blairstown, and followed along the eastern side of the Delaware River. At no time did the trail go though the Gap and through Paraquarry. The last fortified house was west of Port Jervis.

Tocks Island

Today

See also

Notes and references

Citations

Books

  • Decker, Amelia Stickney. That Ancient Trail. (Trenton, New Jersey: Privately printed, 1942). NO ISBN (Pre-1964).
  • Hine, Charles Gilbert. The Old Mine Road. (New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press, 1908). ISBN 0-8135-0426-0
  • Kraft, Herbert C. The Dutch, the Indians & the Quest for Copper: Pahaquarry & the Old Mine Road. (West Orange, New Jersey: Seton Hall University Museum, 1996). ISBN 978-0935137026
  • Snell, James P. History of Sussex and Warren Counties, New Jersey, With Illustrations and Biographical Sketches of Its Prominent Men and Pioneers. (Philadelphia: Everts & Peck, 1881). NO ISBN (Pre-1964).

Articles