
Articles
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1 day ago |
thesandpaper.net | Anita Josephson |Thomas P. Farner
To mark the centennial of Ship Bottom’s becoming an independent municipality, I am looking back at the stories that helped create the town’s identity. In January 1903, several events took place on Long Beach Island that helped to inspire a series of stories and a book that would create much of what is known as “the lure of Long Beach.”Winter on the Island was a time of quiet. The hotels in Beach Haven and Barnegat Light were closed, and even avid outdoorsmen stayed home.
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2 weeks ago |
thesandpaper.net | Anita Josephson |Thomas P. Farner
When the town you grew up in celebrates its centennial, it’s always fun to look back on its founding. The story of how Ship Bottom got its name is well known; how it became a town is not. Long Beach Island historian John Bailey Lloyd in his book Six Miles at Sea explained, “Until 1900 parts of the island and its southern extension of Tucker’s Beach had no separate political identity. Each section of the island fell within the jurisdiction of the closest township across the bay on the mainland.
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3 weeks ago |
thesandpaper.net | Anita Josephson |Thomas P. Farner
The events that took place during the spring of 1775 helped shape the future of America. This question arises: Were they the result of the action of the famous icons of history or forgotten common citizens? On May 10, colonial representatives met at the Pennsylvania statehouse (today Independence Hall, in Philadelphia) to open the Second Continental Congress. New Jersey’s five delegates arrived there to await an answer to the petition sent to London the previous October.
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4 weeks ago |
thesandpaper.net | Anita Josephson |Thomas P. Farner
If you’re a reader of this column, you probably are a student of history. You know the 250th anniversary of American independence is approaching. If asked to name five people associated with the colonial cause, you could do it in the blink of an eye. It might take a little longer if the challenge was raised to 10, but most likely you could accomplish it. Now, think of that list and decide how many on it were from New Jersey.
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1 month ago |
thesandpaper.net | Anita Josephson |Thomas P. Farner
This is the sixth in a series. This is the last in a series of articles attempting to present what happened at Lexington and Concord in April 1775 in the order that the public was informed. The Colonial version was disseminated in the weeks after the events by a system known as the Committees of Correspondence. This unofficial underground social group was able to get the story out almost a month before any official British version reached the press.
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