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Harrisville,_New_Jersey Latitude and Longitude:

39°39′41″N 74°31′19″W / 39.66139°N 74.52194°W / 39.66139; -74.52194
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Harrisville, New Jersey
Harrisville is located in Burlington County, New Jersey
Harrisville
Harrisville
Location in Burlington County (Inset: Burlington County in New Jersey)
Harrisville is located in New Jersey
Harrisville
Harrisville
Harrisville (New Jersey)
Harrisville is located in the United States
Harrisville
Harrisville
Harrisville (the United States)
Coordinates: 39°39′41″N 74°31′19″W / 39.66139°N 74.52194°W / 39.66139; -74.52194
Country  United States
State  New Jersey
County Burlington
Township Bass River
Established1795
Destroyed1914 [1]
Named forJohn and Richard Harris [1]
Elevation16 ft (5 m)
Time zone UTC−05:00 ( Eastern (EST))
 • Summer ( DST) UTC−04:00 (EDT)
GNIS feature ID876972 [2]

Harrisville (also called Harrisia or McCartyville [1]) is an unincorporated community and ghost town located about 6 miles (9.7 km) northwest of New Gretna within Bass River Township in Burlington County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey, in the New Jersey Pine Barrens. [2] [3]

The first industry at the site of Harrisville appears to have been a sawmill built by Evi Belangee no later than 1760. Near the mouth of the Oswego River, where its floodplain narrowed, he built a dam with 5 or 6 feet of head to run his mill. [4]: 1918  The dam was enlarged in 1795, when a slitting mill, for cutting iron sheet into strips for nailmaking, was built at the site by Isaac Potts. [4]: 1918  [5]: 71  Potts had recently built Martha Furnace upstream, and when he sold the latter in 1796, he noted that its pig iron would have a natural market at the slitting mill. [5]: 85  This business was not very successful, and about 1815 it was converted to a paper plant, [1] powered by water brought by a canal from a dam on the Oswego, [5] a tributary of the Wading River. The town which was built around the factory was originally called McCartyville after the factory owner; when the Harris family bought the factory in 1855, the name was changed to Harrisville. Under the Harris family, Harrisville was a company town, with a grist mill, post office, company store, and free tenant homes for the workers of the paper mill. In 1914, a fire started in Harrisville and destroyed the entire town, leaving only ruins. Only the decayed ruins of this town exist today. [1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Beck, Henry Charlton (1961) [first published 1936 by E. P. Dutton]. Forgotten Towns of Southern New Jersey (2 ed.). Rutgers University Press. Chapter 23.
  2. ^ a b c U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Harrisville
  3. ^ Locality Search, State of New Jersey. Accessed December 28, 2014.
  4. ^ a b Braddock-Rogers, K. (1931). "Fragments of early industries in South Jersey". Journal of Chemical Education. 8 (10): 1914–1823. doi: 10.1021/ed008p1914.
  5. ^ a b c Pierce, Arthur D. (1957). Iron in the pines: The story of New Jersey's ghost towns and bog iron. Rutgers University Press. p. 67–83. ISBN  9780813505145.

Further reading

  • Dellomo, Angelo. Harrisville. Angelo Publishing Company, 1977