- Oct 3, 2007
- 1,539
It's going to be a long week as I'm counting the days/hours until Saturday morning when I'll be heading up to the Kittattinny Mountains for a weekend of camping with some old friends I haven't seen in quite a while. For those of you who aren't familiar, the Delaware Water Gap is located in the northwest corner of the state where the Delaware River slowly cut a through an Appalachian ridge over the course of 450 million years. The Gap is a 72,000 acre National Recreation Area run by the National Park Service on both sides of the river. On the New Jersey side it's bordered by an additional 40,000 acres of public land, so it's one of the least populated and most wild parts of the state. The interesting thing about the region its also one of the longest settled parts of the state. The Dutch made their way out to the Water Gap area in the early 1600s in search of copper, among other things, and ended up building the Old Mine Road (said to be one of the oldest established roads in America), paralleling the Delaware north to New York. Over the years various plans had been made to dam the Delaware for flood control and water supply reasons, with a growing New York City, Philadelphia, and Northern NJ region all vying for water in the late 1800s to 1930s. This finally culminated in the proposed Tocks Island Dam project, which was authorized by Congress in 1962. The dam was never built for a variety of reasons, and the project died, but not before thousands were forced off of land and family farms that had been in the same hands for generations, and whole towns (Parhaquarra, NJ and Walpack, NJ and towns on the PA side) had been moved out.
After the project died because of environmental concerns, public outcry over government land grabs, the lack of funds due to the Vietnam War raging, and questions surrounding the suitability of the geology of the area supporting a huge dam holding back a 12,500 acre lake 30 miles long and 1/2 a mile wide, the Army Corps of Engineers/National Park Service was left with 72,000 acres of land with vacant homes and farmsteads dotting the hills and valleys. They eventually turned the entire area into a park, preserving the land forever and keeping the Delaware one of the longest undammed rivers in the U.S., but, there's still quite a bit of bitterness by locals living in the surrounding area who were forced from their homes. Still, it's a beautiful place and there's nothing else like it in NJ. We'll be doing some exploring of old farmsteads, a complex of lakes which was once a collection of vacation camps, as well as the abandoned town of Walpack in between catching up and having a few cold ones around the fire. Pictures and trip report to follow!
After the project died because of environmental concerns, public outcry over government land grabs, the lack of funds due to the Vietnam War raging, and questions surrounding the suitability of the geology of the area supporting a huge dam holding back a 12,500 acre lake 30 miles long and 1/2 a mile wide, the Army Corps of Engineers/National Park Service was left with 72,000 acres of land with vacant homes and farmsteads dotting the hills and valleys. They eventually turned the entire area into a park, preserving the land forever and keeping the Delaware one of the longest undammed rivers in the U.S., but, there's still quite a bit of bitterness by locals living in the surrounding area who were forced from their homes. Still, it's a beautiful place and there's nothing else like it in NJ. We'll be doing some exploring of old farmsteads, a complex of lakes which was once a collection of vacation camps, as well as the abandoned town of Walpack in between catching up and having a few cold ones around the fire. Pictures and trip report to follow!