Fun fact, the name of the ruins Fries Mill is a shibboleth. The actual pronunciation is "Frees Mill", with Fries Mill Road (a road in modern use) being where most people would here it referenced. Love seeing a presence of NJ on youtube- this state has so much more than what people think!
Honestly, I really love these exploring videos. The reason I really enjoy this content right now is because I’m going through a lot of serious health issues and I can’t walk right now or really do anything. So kind of able to get out and explore vicariously through your videos.
I grew up in Cherry Hill, NJ and I always heard stories about Fries Mill and the families that lived there. It's amazing the amount of history in this highly disregarded state...
@@betterbee1304 I can't remember it being called Wheaton Villager. But my memory is fuzzy about that time. I just remember my cabin won a contest we got to go on a night hike! It was cool.
I remember reading a book about The Pine Barrens by Tom Wolf as a teenager back in the late '70s. It peaked my interest in natural places, that I drove up to Alaska and never left...42 years later, I'm still here ✌️
Love it! My dad used to bring me to the Pine Barrens. We'd visit Batsto and we canoed the Batsto River. Later, a friend and I went mountain bike riding there.
Thanks for this video man. I'm from Vineland, but have been living in China for 6-7 years and because of the pandemic I wasn't able to come home this year. This video was a nice substitute to being back home in the pines. Thank you for this video and the history lesson. Happy New Year man!
I had a postdoc deep inside the Pine Barrens, at the Marucci Blueberry and Cranberry Research Center. It's near Chatsworth. I collected insects all over the barrens. It is carpeted with an incredible and rich endemic fauna. Those are fond memories that will never flee from me. That is until I get dementia.
Southern New Jersey is home to many ruins similar to this, it would be interesting for the group to explore some more similar to these as shown within the video.
My cousin lived in Little Egg Harbor Township in part of the Pine Barrens near Tuckerton. I only got to visit a couple of times, but it really looked interesting. However, even by the time I visited the first time, I was too disabled to explore more than just the edge of his backyard. This getting old stuff is tough. Now it is sometimes hard to just get the mail...
You are the only channel that I have ever watched and never felt disappointed after watching each video. One day I hope to go to the US and see some of the places you have talked about.
Wow...one of the best 'documentary' style videos I've watched on the Pine Barrens. Telling the history was a great plus! And, love when maps are used! Thank you!! Look forward to your other adventures!
This is basically right around where I grew up. There are so many old foundations out in the Pine Barrens. A great easy day to find them is look for something other than pine trees, apple, oak, etcetera. You'd be surprised how quick you get a eye for different trees. I appreciate seeing people exploring the old Pine Barrens but there's better & creepier ruins.
Thank you so much for doing something on the Pine Barrens! No one ever does anything on them and there are so many spooky and great stories about them!!
I was checking out your videos in the American West and was very excited to see some videos from my home state of New Jersey! Very cool stuff the Pinelands are full of interesting ruins and history. I just subscribed, keep it up!
18:35 we called it a cup elevator at were i work before, its the prehistoric version of a felxowell transporter belt that is modern these days, but the cup elevator at my pervious worksite has been running almost none stop since the early 70s so one could argue its a stable design.
Thanks, Tom, for filming this. I'd tried to show my wife, in the past, videos about the Pine Barrens, but the pickings on UA-cam were, well, kind of barren. I enjoy your videos about the history of the MidAtlantic region, especially by exploring on foot. Recollections of your father are also nice. Your film background is obvious, such as when you superimpose images of ruins with your sketches. Not flashy, but very effective.
I used to hike the tracks at Lakehurst in the barrens. So unique and good creatures and plants. I saw old telegraph poles and ruins but not much in the way of buildings. Lots of ATV's around those blue sand ponds which kind of ruins the experience
I was absolutely loving your channel, I have watched a few different docu-videos now, but when you said "...and anyone else who shops at Spencers Gifts", I knew I had come home, you are true kindred Spirit, I cannot tell you how well said that was. God speed! And, by the way, I absolutely love your videos and channel, very enjoyable and extremely interesting.
I am a fisherman in SE Pennsylvania and I’m always looking for new lakes to fish at. I’ve seen this spot on google earth many times but never actually knew what it was. Thanks for sharing this, it was very interesting.
Super cool history about an area I've only heard of, but not details about. As for loot in chimney, frequently it is in the forms of hornets, snakes, or irate racoons.
❤ you travel in the footsteps of all my ancestors! It’s super cool! I will probably never get to travel to all of these places so it’s great I have found your channel.
I came across this after searching for Pine Barrens hikes/kayaking (we're planning to do some local paddling this coming weekend) and something just seemed oddly familiar once I heard the voice...... then I remembered that I watched the 2020 Titanic Live Stream this year and am a fan of T:HaG. Subscribed! Stay safe.
So sad. It was once a lovely warm place where people , lived and loved and had dreams for. Then this, happened and that happened and all was lost. Very sad.
Thank you for this interesting video & for bringing history back to our generation. “I wonder what happened here” was a question I often asked myself while exploring the woods of my home state North Carolina. It’s cool to see others exploring the past. At-least part-time, anyway.
Awesome video! Poor Matt, lol. That's what it's all about; taking your time, enjoying your time outside and with friends...then losing your friend, then finding them again, lol. But, seriously...very well put together video! Thumbs up!!!
Hopefully you get a chance to go back and survey the town center. I'd love to see how much of the remains are still there compared to the old map that you had on screen
Lol I allegedly have swam in that exact “lagoon” (we call them blue holes). Don’t swim out too far and especially on a windy day. They can be very dangerous…. Gorgeous to look at though. One time we had to do the long hike back to our cars for something and left all our stuff (backpacks, chairs, football, towels, speakers etc.) and when we came back the football and one of the chairs was missing. 🙃
I thought they were natural lagoons at first and the state didn't want people to not ruin them but nope. Most of those Blue Holes were former sand mines and they where filled with water and had mining equipment dumped into them when they were abandoned. They also have strong currents and freezing temperatures and multiple people had drowned in those lagoons. so yea there's a good reason why its illegal to swim in them.
In Elizabeth Pa. there is a sight along the Yough rail trail called deadmans hollow. Have been there several times. It has ruins of an old clay pipe mill and brick company. Seems like it is right up your alley. If you don't have time or inclination, my son and I have talked about doing an exploration of it and filming and posting it on UA-cam. let me know what you think.
Hi, Tom and Emma, I'm a very recent subscriber and am sort of binge watching your videos. I think that tower that had recently collapsed may have been the smoke stack for a power plant (just a guess). It can get quite interesting , letting your imagination run wild as to just what many artifacts could have been used for. God Bless and stay safe.
One note on line has the first use of a cinder block in America was @1880…. love the video. Those sand cups said Budd manufacturing probably made at Budd plant in north Philly
An excellent video, had my attention 100%!! Also those abandoned RR tracks were still in great shape. You could ride a custom self propelled vehicle down its length.
I just subscribed to your channel last night and I just love that you give history on these places. Some people go in knowing nothing and I'd rather watch a video that I will at least glean some history knowledge etc. of a place. I never realized there were so many ruins in the Pine Barrens. I'm originally from NJ and never got a chance to explore it. I've only driven through it. Bigfoot central. Just FYI concrete is WAY older than you think. It was first used in Egypt in 6500 B.C. But many concrete blocks were used during the 1800's. Just trying to help. If you go to Historic aerials and go to that area they have photos that go back as far as 1937.
Ok first of all the Maurice River is locally pronounced Morris as in the cat.If you say it any other way you will be taken as a Shooby.Secondly Potters Cabin and Fries Mill Tavern are one and the same.The Cabin sat in front of the more northerly of the double chimneys.It was burned down by kids in the early 90's.Potter lived in it mid 1900's,40's and 50';s I believe.It was a tavern in the 1800';s.The cabin had a piano in it and was still livable in the 70's when i first seen it as a kid,it was abandoned though.I got some wrold war two era readers digests out of it still in mint condition that were in the cellar hole where the pump still is,the roof was still good then.The town itself you wandered through on the way to find Matt.You missed the Mill foundations.The brisk house remains just north of the village with prickly pear all around it was a house that lasted into the early 80,s but abandoned long ago.The evil man who runs people off you spoke of is a retired cop named Garrison,those were his Dobermans you no doubt heard.He is very protective of the area though he doesn't own any land that side of the creek.You were on nature conservancy not state land but it definitely is not his. He will try to give you the third degree like he did me but when I informed him he did not own the land and that I was obviously not hurting anything he backed off and became quite friendly. He hates bikers,partiers and anyone who would trash the woods,once he realizes your not an A Hole he is quite nice.The lagoon you refer to is locally called either a sand wash or a blue hole and the sand plant ruins you were in were abandoned late 80,s so you guess correctly.camp Hollbrook an old YMCA camp I went to as a kid in early 70's is across creek from Fries Mill;,Garrison owns north half of the camp on north side of Fries Mill rd where the girls huts were,boys were south of the road and there were no Trans genders back then at least not at camp.I could show you the old outdoor chapel we had sermons at and the actual pads now buried bu a couple inches of dirt_(you have to poke the ground till you hit concrete) that we camped in.I learned to swim in the crik by the bridge when I was seven. Potter was rumored to haunt the cabin (nonsense) but they took us out there at night to scare the bejjebers out of us.Thats how I found the place and have went back ever since. It was a cedar log cabin with a cedar shake roof.Yo can still see some of the logs laying in front of the chimney go in november,the persimmons are great! Nice video
Oh and the bird was a Fish Crow,one of two species here.They only live along the coast and have a shorter two syllable call then the American crow which is pretty much nation wide.
I legitimately want to tag along on one of your nj adventures, you seem like such a chill guy, I already met you at the Woodbridge train disaster showing but would love to do it again. You should do another nj event!
I grew up in nj, and many of my ancestors have been there since the 1700s. Im enjoying this series so much! My sister currently lives off ofIndian Cabin Road and we’ve gone hiking on it numerous times through the protected forests. So much neat stuff! Theres an old boy’s school ruins near her place as well. Youll find the Ione Shaler grave nearbythe trail-people say it was a woman killed by indians with her 3 young children, but my BIL dug into it more and he believes it was more likely it was something like Typhus Fever. Oh! That concrete platform looks like the old boys school (for the “feebleminded” i believe) but in a different location than the one near Egg Harbor City Lake & indian cabin road. I wonder if it was a similar school? Or another similar “build as fast as you can” instituitional govt type building. There was many of those in south jersey at one point. Theres another one that was an offshoot of a mental instituition, but they turned it into a community type of living situation. Im not sure if that one was closer to the Millville area you where hiking or further north closer to Sweetwater. Hard to keep them all straight!
More viral-focused youtubers would make the title something like "friend lost deep in the woods," or something like that. It's nice to see that isn't the case here; the actual exploration is what is important.
Third video ive seen from newly found (for me) PTE, all excellent, will be viewing a bunch more...huge jump up from the ones ive been viewing the past years
That may not have been "too exciting" as far as your goal went, but I found it very interesting. I'm Canadian, and now in my 7th decade so my traveling is mostly the armchair variety. I like seeing different parts of our great subcontinent, and hearing its history, especially the "little" pieces of history, vs the large parts, eg, the Revolutionary War, which you did reference. All the big parts of history are made up of the little pieces. I also like seeing the land. I'd also love to know what bird that was, birds being one of my joys (though I'm not a real birder). Thank you for an enjoyable trek through that part of the country. Also glad you found Matt. LOL.
Well you've certainly captivated my attention with your interesting videos, but that little out of nowhere nod to Red Dead Redemption pretty much sealed the deal for me. You have my subscription sir (and of course my like). Good on ya and I know I'm looking forward to whatever you might have coming up next.
For anyone wondering why you can't swim in the Blue hole, Weird NJ did a great article about it. Basically it is a surprisingly deep, steep hole freezing cold filled with whirlpools and the bottom is quicksand. Most water is stained brown from the tannins in the peat moss, but not the hole, leading people to believe its filled with pure glacial groundwater.
I grew up and still have family living on RT49 next to the entrance to the Sandplant. The owner was a family friend so my brother and I were back there all the time, was a playground for us. We even had a set of Tonka toys, trucks, payloaders, bulldozers, to play on the sand piles. The large concrete foundations there supported the buildings to process the sand. They held grinding mills to grind the sand to certain size. The equipment to bag the sand in the different size bags. Washers and dryers to clean the sand before delivery. Shame to know what was there at that time and what has become of it. But nature will take it all back and that's a good thing
Fun fact, the name of the ruins Fries Mill is a shibboleth. The actual pronunciation is "Frees Mill", with Fries Mill Road (a road in modern use) being where most people would here it referenced. Love seeing a presence of NJ on youtube- this state has so much more than what people think!
Yes, Like “Frees”. Some settled near us in Franklinville (Janvier).
It's pronounced 'freeze', I married one. The river is said Marce not Mareece
@@aliasmoneypenny My 91 year old father went to school with some of the family :)
And I laughed at Siri when she pronounced it “Frees Mill” 😮
(We lived in Clayton and are now in Winslow Twp. So much history in this area. Willingboro also)
Honestly, I really love these exploring videos. The reason I really enjoy this content right now is because I’m going through a lot of serious health issues and I can’t walk right now or really do anything. So kind of able to get out and explore vicariously through your videos.
The real treasure was the friends you lost along the way.
Depends on why you lost them. Spoken from experience sadly.
wait, what did they do to Matt?!
@@lockedon8953 Footage of Matt was found on his camera which was all that they ever found of him.
Seriously?
I grew up in Cherry Hill, NJ and I always heard stories about Fries Mill and the families that lived there. It's amazing the amount of history in this highly disregarded state...
I grew up in Cherry Hill too. When we were in 6th grade we went to Mt.Misery for a week...and I remember ruins out there. A glass factory maybe?
@@cyme5 wasn't it called Wheaton village or something? Oh I remember that glass factory! And we went to Mt. Misery for a week too! 😂 This is amazing!
@@betterbee1304 I can't remember it being called Wheaton Villager. But my memory is fuzzy about that time. I just remember my cabin won a contest we got to go on a night hike! It was cool.
Have to say I've had my preconceived notion of the Pine Barrens as the most haunted place in the world shattered. It's freaking gorgeous!
Very scary if you go off trail. Birth place of the jersey devil 🤘❤️ and the mobs dumping ground
Ya, just ask chrissy & paulie walnuts
@@Brandi6666 My sainted late Aunt Mary told me as a kid that was all movie stuff...
Lived, loved and buried in Hammonton.
RIP "
@@barbaracriss3614 maybe a fabled tale of the JD, but it is no secret about the pines/ jersey mob🤫
Oh Darlin..Sarcasm runs strong through the women in our family... @@Brandi6666
This area has basically been my playground for the last 33 years. I find new and interesting things each time I visit. Great stuff.
Are there fish in there?
I remember reading a book about The Pine Barrens by Tom Wolf as a teenager back in the late '70s. It peaked my interest in natural places, that I drove up to Alaska and never left...42 years later, I'm still here ✌️
Love it!
My dad used to bring me to the Pine Barrens. We'd visit Batsto and we canoed the Batsto River.
Later, a friend and I went mountain bike riding there.
My Family had a big picnic every Memorial Day holiday at Batsto Village every year when I was growing up.
Thanks for this video man. I'm from Vineland, but have been living in China for 6-7 years and because of the pandemic I wasn't able to come home this year. This video was a nice substitute to being back home in the pines. Thank you for this video and the history lesson. Happy New Year man!
I love how you document everything. I'm a historical archeologist. I'd be very interested at doing some exploring with you guys.
“Guy was an interior decorator.”
“His house looked like shit!”
First thing I thought of 🤣
Been scrolling down thinking surely there must be someone else - can’t just be me that thinks of that as soon as I hear someone say Pine Barrens!
Came here to find this comment lol
Hahaha yesssss. Like the others, I hear Pine Barrens and all I can think of is Paulie RIP and Christopher lost in the woods.
This was fun to watch and I personally appreciate how well you documented this and edited this video from our pleasure. Thank you for sharing.
I had a postdoc deep inside the Pine Barrens, at the Marucci Blueberry and Cranberry Research Center. It's near Chatsworth. I collected insects all over the barrens. It is carpeted with an incredible and rich endemic fauna. Those are fond memories that will never flee from me. That is until I get dementia.
As a life time NJ resident, I found this video fascinating. Not to many UA-camrs from NJ 👍 good work! Stellar!
ditto ,, i had to sub to him lol
Southern New Jersey is home to many ruins similar to this, it would be interesting for the group to explore some more similar to these as shown within the video.
My cousin lived in Little Egg Harbor Township in part of the Pine Barrens near Tuckerton. I only got to visit a couple of times, but it really looked interesting. However, even by the time I visited the first time, I was too disabled to explore more than just the edge of his backyard. This getting old stuff is tough. Now it is sometimes hard to just get the mail...
I grew up in South Jersey on a farm along a railroad tracks just like this. I loved exploring the woods as a child.
You are the only channel that I have ever watched and never felt disappointed after watching each video. One day I hope to go to the US and see some of the places you have talked about.
Wow...one of the best 'documentary' style videos I've watched on the Pine Barrens. Telling the history was a great plus! And, love when maps are used! Thank you!! Look forward to your other adventures!
This is basically right around where I grew up. There are so many old foundations out in the Pine Barrens. A great easy day to find them is look for something other than pine trees, apple, oak, etcetera. You'd be surprised how quick you get a eye for different trees. I appreciate seeing people exploring the old Pine Barrens but there's better & creepier ruins.
Thank you so much for doing something on the Pine Barrens! No one ever does anything on them and there are so many spooky and great stories about them!!
This channel is a gem, glad to have stumbeled across it :)
I was checking out your videos in the American West and was very excited to see some videos from my home state of New Jersey! Very cool stuff the Pinelands are full of interesting ruins and history. I just subscribed, keep it up!
Thanks Tom for the videos you make. I enjoy watching them all the way from Australia.
Looks like a nice trek. Don't forget to check for ticks after!
We had too many to count!
18:35 we called it a cup elevator at were i work before, its the prehistoric version of a felxowell transporter belt that is modern these days, but the cup elevator at my pervious worksite has been running almost none stop since the early 70s so one could argue its a stable design.
Thanks, Tom, for filming this. I'd tried to show my wife, in the past, videos about the Pine Barrens, but the pickings on UA-cam were, well, kind of barren. I enjoy your videos about the history of the MidAtlantic region, especially by exploring on foot. Recollections of your father are also nice. Your film background is obvious, such as when you superimpose images of ruins with your sketches. Not flashy, but very effective.
I live right down the road from there not even a 5 min drive .been there many of times. A nice place to go for a bit of a hike and clear your mind!
I used to hike the tracks at Lakehurst in the barrens. So unique and good creatures and plants. I saw old telegraph poles and ruins but not much in the way of buildings. Lots of ATV's around those blue sand ponds which kind of ruins the experience
I was absolutely loving your channel, I have watched a few different docu-videos now, but when you said "...and anyone else who shops at Spencers Gifts", I knew I had come home, you are true kindred Spirit, I cannot tell you how well said that was. God speed! And, by the way, I absolutely love your videos and channel, very enjoyable and extremely interesting.
I am a fisherman in SE Pennsylvania and I’m always looking for new lakes to fish at. I’ve seen this spot on google earth many times but never actually knew what it was. Thanks for sharing this, it was very interesting.
Super cool history about an area I've only heard of, but not details about.
As for loot in chimney, frequently it is in the forms of hornets, snakes, or irate racoons.
True that on the "chimney loot".
❤ you travel in the footsteps of all my ancestors! It’s super cool! I will probably never get to travel to all of these places so it’s great I have found your channel.
After watching the Sopranos, I'd never have guessed this was a real place. Czechoslovakian interior decorators should be proud.
His house looked like shit.
I came across this after searching for Pine Barrens hikes/kayaking (we're planning to do some local paddling this coming weekend) and something just seemed oddly familiar once I heard the voice...... then I remembered that I watched the 2020 Titanic Live Stream this year and am a fan of T:HaG. Subscribed! Stay safe.
Your explorations are fun! A neat change from liner things.
I live about an hour away and never knew all of this awesome history. Going to plan a weekend of camping and hunting out the ruins! 🎉
I'm so happy I found this channel, great work bud.
So sad. It was once a lovely warm place where people , lived and loved and had dreams for. Then this, happened and that happened and all was lost. Very sad.
Thank you for this interesting video & for bringing history back to our generation. “I wonder what happened here” was a question I often asked myself while exploring the woods of my home state North Carolina. It’s cool to see others exploring the past. At-least part-time, anyway.
I've enjoyed watching this adventure. Seeing you guys packed in a cast iron frying pan and guitar made me laugh!
"...hopefully this video was interesting, getting to see some neat ruins in the middle of a forest..." and you 3 living your best life! Heck yeah! 💯💗
Awesome video! Poor Matt, lol.
That's what it's all about; taking your time, enjoying your time outside and with friends...then losing your friend, then finding them again, lol. But, seriously...very well put together video!
Thumbs up!!!
Hopefully you get a chance to go back and survey the town center. I'd love to see how much of the remains are still there compared to the old map that you had on screen
Lol I allegedly have swam in that exact “lagoon” (we call them blue holes). Don’t swim out too far and especially on a windy day. They can be very dangerous…. Gorgeous to look at though. One time we had to do the long hike back to our cars for something and left all our stuff (backpacks, chairs, football, towels, speakers etc.) and when we came back the football and one of the chairs was missing. 🙃
I thought they were natural lagoons at first and the state didn't want people to not ruin them but nope. Most of those Blue Holes were former sand mines and they where filled with water and had mining equipment dumped into them when they were abandoned. They also have strong currents and freezing temperatures and multiple people had drowned in those lagoons. so yea there's a good reason why its illegal to swim in them.
In Elizabeth Pa. there is a sight along the Yough rail trail called deadmans hollow. Have been there several times. It has ruins of an old clay pipe mill and brick company. Seems like it is right up your alley. If you don't have time or inclination, my son and I have talked about doing an exploration of it and filming and posting it on UA-cam. let me know what you think.
Enjoy your content watching in KW region of Ontario. As a kid walked the tracks to the old Brick yards in Chatham along the river.🇨🇦
always wanted to explore the pine barrens love driving through them on the way to the beach
get to drive through them tomorrow on the way to cape may
Wonderful - heading to Cape May in a couple weeks!
@@PartTimeExplorer sick have fun
@@butth3ad Uh whoa I bet! Mays shorts.. uh heh heh heh .. He said drive though Mays shorts.. uh uh uh heh heh
I really enjoyed this video (as I do all of your work!). I’ve always wanted to know more about the NJPB. Great job!
Hi, Tom and Emma, I'm a very recent subscriber and am sort of binge watching your videos. I think that tower that had recently collapsed may have been the smoke stack for a power plant (just a guess). It can get quite interesting , letting your imagination run wild as to just what many artifacts could have been used for. God Bless and stay safe.
These ruins were pretty cool to see, Keep up with your amazing content!!
There’s similar ruins in Franklin township up above Vineland and Millville. They’re not too far from Fries mill road and coles mill road.
Best season in the Pine Barrens is the Fall, lots of spooky history there & the Jersey Devil of course!
Your such a humble nice guy and do a great job God.bless you and your lady and friend
Hi from New Zealand!🇳🇿I am really loving your U Tube videos. They are great!
Thanks so much!
There are quite a few glass factories in South Jersey because of the abundant sand. One such abandoned glass mill is in Estelle Manor, in the Park.
Fantastic!
That sand pit shocked me!
One note on line has the first use of a cinder block in America was @1880…. love the video. Those sand cups said Budd manufacturing probably made at Budd plant in north Philly
Very interesting. Loved it!, so beautiful! Thank you.
Just discovered your channel and love it. Loved seeing something from my own back yard.
Anyone else out there pronounce it “Morris River” (like I do)?
Yep. That's the RIGHT pronunciation!
Thanks for sharing your exploits
An excellent video, had my attention 100%!! Also those abandoned RR tracks were still in great shape. You could ride a custom self propelled vehicle down its length.
I just subscribed to your channel last night and I just love that you give history on these places. Some people go in knowing nothing and I'd rather watch a video that I will at least glean some history knowledge etc. of a place. I never realized there were so many ruins in the Pine Barrens. I'm originally from NJ and never got a chance to explore it. I've only driven through it. Bigfoot central. Just FYI concrete is WAY older than you think. It was first used in Egypt in 6500 B.C. But many concrete blocks were used during the 1800's. Just trying to help. If you go to Historic aerials and go to that area they have photos that go back as far as 1937.
Love seeing Pine Barrens videos!
From NJ… pine barrens and Jersey Devil legendary.
Christofer and Paulie Walnuts lost in Pine Barrens too!
Rip Tony Sirico.
Cool Man. Oh , and I'm glad You found Matt .
Ok first of all the Maurice River is locally pronounced Morris as in the cat.If you say it any other way you will be taken as a Shooby.Secondly Potters Cabin and Fries Mill Tavern are one and the same.The Cabin sat in front of the more northerly of the double chimneys.It was burned down by kids in the early 90's.Potter lived in it mid 1900's,40's and 50';s I believe.It was a tavern in the 1800';s.The cabin had a piano in it and was still livable in the 70's when i first seen it as a kid,it was abandoned though.I got some wrold war two era readers digests out of it still in mint condition that were in the cellar hole where the pump still is,the roof was still good then.The town itself you wandered through on the way to find Matt.You missed the Mill foundations.The brisk house remains just north of the village with prickly pear all around it was a house that lasted into the early 80,s but abandoned long ago.The evil man who runs people off you spoke of is a retired cop named Garrison,those were his Dobermans you no doubt heard.He is very protective of the area though he doesn't own any land that side of the creek.You were on nature conservancy not state land but it definitely is not his. He will try to give you the third degree like he did me but when I informed him he did not own the land and that I was obviously not hurting anything he backed off and became quite friendly. He hates bikers,partiers and anyone who would trash the woods,once he realizes your not an A Hole he is quite nice.The lagoon you refer to is locally called either a sand wash or a blue hole and the sand plant ruins you were in were abandoned late 80,s so you guess correctly.camp Hollbrook an old YMCA camp I went to as a kid in early 70's is across creek from Fries Mill;,Garrison owns north half of the camp on north side of Fries Mill rd where the girls huts were,boys were south of the road and there were no Trans genders back then at least not at camp.I could show you the old outdoor chapel we had sermons at and the actual pads now buried bu a couple inches of dirt_(you have to poke the ground till you hit concrete) that we camped in.I learned to swim in the crik by the bridge when I was seven. Potter was rumored to haunt the cabin (nonsense) but they took us out there at night to scare the bejjebers out of us.Thats how I found the place and have went back ever since. It was a cedar log cabin with a cedar shake roof.Yo can still see some of the logs laying in front of the chimney go in november,the persimmons are great! Nice video
Oh and the bird was a Fish Crow,one of two species here.They only live along the coast and have a shorter two syllable call then the American crow which is pretty much nation wide.
This is great .Very interesting thanks for posting this.
Go to Bass River State Forest. Chips Folly was a campground there. And there are cedar lakes. People love to camp there. I went many times growing up.
I legitimately want to tag along on one of your nj adventures, you seem like such a chill guy, I already met you at the Woodbridge train disaster showing but would love to do it again. You should do another nj event!
The noise after the red dead reference is so funny I’m dying 😂😂😂
I got a good laugh being a gamer and you bringing up RDR 🤣 always loot in the chimney!
Actually I was surprised at how clean and smooth the inner surface of that chimney is.
I grew up in nj, and many of my ancestors have been there since the 1700s. Im enjoying this series so much! My sister currently lives off ofIndian Cabin Road and we’ve gone hiking on it numerous times through the protected forests. So much neat stuff! Theres an old boy’s school ruins near her place as well. Youll find the Ione Shaler grave nearbythe trail-people say it was a woman killed by indians with her 3 young children, but my BIL dug into it more and he believes it was more likely it was something like Typhus Fever.
Oh! That concrete platform looks like the old boys school (for the “feebleminded” i believe) but in a different location than the one near Egg Harbor City Lake & indian cabin road. I wonder if it was a similar school? Or another similar “build as fast as you can” instituitional govt type building. There was many of those in south jersey at one point. Theres another one that was an offshoot of a mental instituition, but they turned it into a community type of living situation. Im not sure if that one was closer to the Millville area you where hiking or further north closer to Sweetwater. Hard to keep them all straight!
More viral-focused youtubers would make the title something like "friend lost deep in the woods," or something like that. It's nice to see that isn't the case here; the actual exploration is what is important.
I can't say I didn't consider it :P
Third video ive seen from newly found (for me) PTE, all excellent, will be viewing a bunch more...huge jump up from the ones ive been viewing the past years
Love those pine barren crows!
Loving this content
That may not have been "too exciting" as far as your goal went, but I found it very interesting. I'm Canadian, and now in my 7th decade so my traveling is mostly the armchair variety. I like seeing different parts of our great subcontinent, and hearing its history, especially the "little" pieces of history, vs the large parts, eg, the Revolutionary War, which you did reference. All the big parts of history are made up of the little pieces. I also like seeing the land. I'd also love to know what bird that was, birds being one of my joys (though I'm not a real birder). Thank you for an enjoyable trek through that part of the country. Also glad you found Matt. LOL.
13:49 “GESU” I see his tags down my way in cape may county too lol. Cool video man!
This looks like so much fun.
I believe that cellar that you say is caving in could be a well. There is a similar one near my parents house and it was built round the 1940’s -50’s
Love the rare on-camera appearance by Emma!!
That funny little chuckle after looting the chimney xD love it. Good old red dead
Well you've certainly captivated my attention with your interesting videos, but that little out of nowhere nod to Red Dead Redemption pretty much sealed the deal for me. You have my subscription sir (and of course my like). Good on ya and I know I'm looking forward to whatever you might have coming up next.
I’m a little late but this is great content
You should check out Lauzanne in PA. I went there last summer and it’s a cool hike
For anyone wondering why you can't swim in the Blue hole, Weird NJ did a great article about it. Basically it is a surprisingly deep, steep hole freezing cold filled with whirlpools and the bottom is quicksand. Most water is stained brown from the tannins in the peat moss, but not the hole, leading people to believe its filled with pure glacial groundwater.
I love this channel
Glad you found your friend. :)
I always thought the Pine Barrens were in Ocean County but this was interesting. I love the Village of Allaire in Ocean/Monmouth County.
Very nice video!
Fine Work !
That lunch looked YUM!🦀
I grew up and still have family living on RT49 next to the entrance to the Sandplant. The owner was a family friend so my brother and I were back there all the time, was a playground for us. We even had a set of Tonka toys, trucks, payloaders, bulldozers, to play on the sand piles. The large concrete foundations there supported the buildings to process the sand. They held grinding mills to grind the sand to certain size. The equipment to bag the sand in the different size bags. Washers and dryers to clean the sand before delivery. Shame to know what was there at that time and what has become of it. But nature will take it all back and that's a good thing
Jersey born and raised. I lived in the north in Jersey City. My brother, however, lives in Whiting not far from the old Pine Barrons.
Thanks man! As someone from New Jersey it’s awesome to see this history. You guys from the area?
8:00 I used the "Merlin" app on my phone and it told me that bird is a Fish Crow.
My back yard lots of history back there.
Great adventure hiking vid-love it.👌🏻
I love this kind of history
found your channel and enjoying it