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Camp
Pahaquarra History
Kraft, Herbert C. 1996
The Dutch, the Indians, and the Quest for Copper: Pahaquarry and the Old Mine Road
Seton Hall Univ. Museum South Orange, NJ ISBN: 0-935137-02-5
Herbert
C. Kraft documented legends and facts in his book on Pahaquarry and the
Old Mine Road. This is an
excellent book and well worth reading.
He noted:
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Repeated
assertions that Dutch miners were actively engaged in copper mining at
Pahaquarry in the 1650s are based on misinterpretations.
Even though, to this day, "naturalists associated with the
Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area delight in recounting the
story of the legendary mid-seventeenth-century Dutch miners who
burdensomely extracted copper from the Pahaquarry mine shafts, and
then laboriously cut a 104-mile-long road through Indian-infested
virgin wilderness in order to transport the ore-laden rock to waiting
Dutch ships." There
are indications of the possible existence of a mine at Pahaquarry as
early as 1740
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John
Reading, Jr. (Governor of NJ, 1757-1758) began prospecting for ore in
1753 on a tract of land on the northeastern side of Mine Brook
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In
1848, the Pahaquarry Mining Company was incorporated
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In
1861, renewed interest in developing the mine began but the quality of
ore was so poor that the mine was again closed in 1862
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In
1901, more ore was extracted but the copper-bearing rock did not
measure up to expectations
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In
1902, the Montgomery Gold Leaf Mining Company purchased 1,568.5 acres
of the Pahaquarry tract. This
company constructed impressive new buildings in a cleared area at the
mouth of Mine Brook. Despite these efforts, the copper continued to be
of low grade.
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In
1904, the Gold Leave Mining Company was reorganized under the name:
Pahaquarry Copper Company and new state-of-the-art machinery was
brought to the tract. This
included a double track tramway, storage bins and crushing equipment.

Map of Pahaquarry mine area during
period of last mining activity

Mining facilities at the Pahaquarry tract
(circa 1910)
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By
1913, the company went bankrupt and was ordered to sell the property
to the Delaware Valley Exploration Company
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On
May 20, 1925, the Pahaquarry Mine property was sold to the Trenton
Council of the Boy Scouts of America. The machinery, including boilers, gas-powered dynamos,
crushers, crushers, mining machinery, ore cars and tracks, was sold to
a Newark scrap dealer.
Larry Gering
Camp Pahaquarra
1969-1971
Sanhican Lodge Chief 1974
PhD in Forest Biometrics 1985
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Text and Images Copyright © 2000 by Scott Kuzma. For profit use is prohibited. This includes use by sites charging a membership fee.
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