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Deep in the heart of southern New Jersey lies an area of some 96,000 acres of sprawling wilderness. It is the famous Wharton Tract which the state of New Jersey purchased in 1954 for a watershed, game preserve, and park. Many people know and love these wooded acres. Each year, people by the thousands visit Batsto Village, once the center of the iron industry that thrived on the tract more than a century ago. With warmth and accuracy, Arthur D. Pierce tells the story of the years when iron was king, and around it rose a rustic feudal economy. There were glass factories, paper mills, cotton mills, and brickmaking establishments. Here, too, were men who made those years exciting: Benedict Arnold and his first step toward treason; Charles Read, who dreamed of an empire and died in exile; Revolutionary heroes and heroines, privateers, and rogues. The author's vivid pictures of day-to-day life in the old iron communities are based upon careful research. This book proves that the human drama of documented history belies any notion that fiction is stranger than truth.
Foreword1. The "Wharton Estate"2. The Furnaces in the Forest3. Empire in Iron: The Story of Charles Read4. Atsion5. Quaker Bridge to Washington6. Ruins by a River: Harrisville7. Martha Furnace8. The Martha Furnace Diary9. Batsto10. Etna Furnace and Medford Lakes11. Pleasant Mills12. The Hundred YearsAppendix IAppendix IIAppendix IIIAppendix IVChapter ReferencesBibliographyIndex
The book is full of surprises. One is surprised that so much activity could have centered in a region now seemingly so desolate and lonely....A local history...told with the pen of an artist. (Pennsylvania Magazine of History)