Category: VisitingaMuseum.com

Mount Tabor Historical Society              Richardson History House                                      32 Trinity Place                                                 Mount Tabor, NJ 07878

Mount Tabor Historical Society Richardson History House 32 Trinity Place Mount Tabor, NJ 07878

Mount Tabor Historical Society

Richardson History House

32 Trinity Place

Mount Tabor, NJ 07878

973-975-0001

https://www.facebook.com/mounttaborhistoricalsociety/

Open: Sundays 1:00pm-4:00pm/Monday-Saturday Closed

Admission: Free but donations accepted and recommended to help the museum operate.

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g46652-d28537558-r971784929-Mount_Tabor_Historical_Society_Museum-Mount_Tabor_Morris_County_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

The Mount Tabor Historical Society at 32 Trinity Place

The Historical Society and the gardens

I went on the Mount Tabor House and garden walking tour in late September on a rather gloomy Saturday and I had a wonderful time. It may have been gloomy out but the museum could not have been more interesting and the people who opened their homes could not have been nicer.

The tickets were $35.00 at the door which I thought was very fair for this fundraiser. They had transportation from the elementary school to the site and back that ran on a continuous basis from 11:00am to 4:30pm when the tour was over.

The sign by the bus tour stop

The first stop where we bought the tickets was the old Mount Tabor Fire House

When we arrived in the historic Mount Tabor neighborhood, this had once been a summer Methodist Camp. The planned community still has the original layout of the tent community and plots of land that the houses had been built on since old camp closed.

The center of the community was Trinity Park, a beautifully landscaped park

My first stop on the tour was the old Tabernacle, the original gathering place and hall where the religious services took place.

The inside of the Tabernacle, now being used for the quilt show for the tour

The Quilts were displayed on all the pews

The quilts were all handmade, some really colorful and beautifully stitched. It was a really impressive show of artistry.

The beautiful quilts on display

The colorful quilts on display

After I left the Tabernacle display, I headed up to the Mount Tabor Historical Society Museum for a tour of the museum and gardens. It was located on Trinity Park.

The Mount Tabor Historical Society on the eastern side of Trinity Park

The museum is part of triplex with a private home in the two other former homes. They are undergoing a renovation right now

The J. Smith Richardson History House (1873): A Camp Meeting Cottage Museum

(from the museum website)

The Mount Tabor Historical Society is privileged to share our historic community, founded as a post-Civil War permanent Camp Meeting ground, and the Richardson History House – a Camp Meeting Cottage Museum. The 1873 History House invites visitors to travel back to another era and see what it was like to spend a summer “camp meeting style” in the cottage of J. Smith and Lydia Richardson.

The parlor area in the home of Mr. Richardson

The home on the furthest to the left of the building is the museum, once home to the Richardson family, who were part of this Methodist retreat.

Mr. Richardson’s portrait hangs proudly on the wall overlooking the parlor of the home

The homes pipe organ that was used to entertain the family

The table was formally set with period China in the Dining Room that was shared with the parlor area. The tour guide told me that the family kept meticulous records of everything and on the table was the wedding menu of Mr. Richardson’s daughter’s wedding.

The Dining Room table set for dinner

The beautiful Victorian China

The bride’s Wedding menu. You can tell they ate well that afternoon

The brides wedding was pretty elaborate for the time and you could tell by the menu they ate pretty well that afternoon.

The bride’s Wedding photo hangs proudly in the parlor

The family heirloom, the bureau, sits proudly in the corner of the room

The family did not leave much behind but this bureau is the one piece of furniture that the family owned. It now holds serving pieces and dinner items. The kitchen is small but has all the modern convenes of the time including a range coal stove and an ice box, which were pretty elaborate for the time.

The kitchen of this small summer home

The shelves with all the cooking and storage materials

There are all sorts of baking materials, cooking utensils and items to cook full meals for the household.

Baking and measuring items

Items for baking

The historic map of the Mount Tabor Camp Ground was hung in the kitchen

Off the kitchen door was a beautiful garden and a landscaped walkway

Some vintage clothing was on display in the parlor

Vintage women’s clothing on display in the front parlor

I took a trip up the narrow stairs to the upstairs bedrooms and bathroom. I discovered that the house was much bigger than I thought. There was a nice size bathroom at the top of the steps.

For a small house, the bathroom was nice sized

The main bedroom was nice in size and also had a nice breeze from the window

The rooms were decorated with period furniture and bric a brac of the period. On the bed, lay funeral clothing of a family member in morning.

The clothing of someone in morning

The family bedroom set also returned to the house when donated back from the Richardson family

This gorgeous dollhouse was to the side of this bedroom with its tiny furniture and miniature decorations

The other bedroom was a little smaller but again was nicely furnished.

The view from the upstairs bedroom of the garden below

The second bedroom was a bit smaller and contained vintage clothes and toys

Family heirlooms, clothing and toys

The doll carriage for some lucky child

A sewing kit not too dissimilar from my grandmother’s

Baby dolls asleep on the second floor bedroom

The view from the parlor overlooking the Tabernacle

The Trinity Garden in the middle of historic district

The History of the Mount Tabor Methodist Camp:

(from the Society website)

Mt. Tabor, New Jersey, is a fine example of a 19th century community. Established in 1869 as a Methodist summer camp meeting ground, Mt. Tabor is now a full-time residential community.

While walking through Mt. Tabor, one can see Victorian cottages, complete with gingerbread, and several historic community buildings. Trinity Park is still a busy and central focus of the community. In addition to residences surrounding the park are three octagon structures. The Mt. Tabor branch of the Parsippany library occupies one of them, once known as the Ebenezer Pavilion. The Bethel, a pavilion erected in 1873 and enclosed in 1886, is used as a community meeting hall. Historic displays are featured in the Bethel the day of the annual house tour. The Tabernacle, built in 1885, is used to host large community events, including concerts. The fountain in Trinity Park is a close replica of the original fountain erected in 1875.

Throughout the 1870s and 1880s, private cottages were built at a rapid rate, while some summer residents stayed in tents. By the turn of the 20th century, more than 200 cottages were built, making Mt. Tabor a lively summer resort. The Depression and World War II brought some changes to Mt. Tabor: during these times when families could no longer afford two houses, the cottages were turned into year-round dwellings.

Mt. Tabor is still a special community. Its historic heritage is being preserved and its community is full of good will and participation. There are many events each year, including Children’s Day, an annual Holiday Craft Fair, House Tour, and concerts. The many active committees in town include the Garden Club, Historical Society, and Children’s Day Committee. Mt. Tabor also has a golf course and country club.

In 2001 we celebrated the reconstruction of a decorative iron arch at the entrance to Mt. Tabor closest to Dickerson Rd. at Rt. 53. The original arch was in place around the turn of the 20th century, and the reproduction was a project of the Mount Tabor Historical Society and the Beautification Committee of the Camp Meeting Association. It was completed in June of 2001, and helps one to visualize how Mt. Tabor appeared to people arriving by train, as many did. This project was made possible by contributions from individuals, from the Camp Meeting Association, and from money the Mt. Tabor Historical Society raises from events such as the annual House Tour.

Taking the Walking tour sponsored by the Society:

After the tour of the museum, I started my tour of the houses and gardens of the historic district. In the gloomy weather, I walked all the streets in the neighborhood visiting as many stops as I could.

As the rain subsided, I was able to walk around the neighborhood without juggling an umbrella. I wanted to see the gardens and parks first while the weather nice.

I loved walking around the neighborhood and admiring the homes

I walked up Strowbridge Avenue to make my first stop to see this whimsical front garden of this beautiful Victorian house.

The garden in front of 6 Strowbridge Avenue

The figures and small structures of this magical garden. I thought I would see ferries and elf’s walking around the yard.

The details of the front of 6 Strowbridge Avenue

The next house garden I visited 11 Sommerfield Avenue and this yard was hidden from the road to see its many surprises.

The front garden of 11 Sommerfield Avenue

The creative detail of the on just one side of the house

As you enter the garden, its theme was the Fall and Halloween

The water features and fountains of their background

The background fountains, water features and patio that make this backyard enjoyable

The new cottage home of 33 Embury Place

I walked down Embury Place to visit a last minute addition. I was surprised when the owner told me that six people once lived in the house. I saw the loft space and bunk beds that made this house work as a family home.

The elegance of 33 Embury Place

I walked down Morris Avenue, which is the heart of the complex and then walked up the “golden stairs” to West Park Place to next set of gardens and parks. The gardens in front of 12 West Park Place may not have been as elaborate as other homes but was nicely landscaped which complimented Mother Nature.

The gardens in front of 12 West Park Place

The gardens in front of 12 West Park Place

Across from these creative gardens is St. James Park, which sits in the middle of the complex. The park was gloomy with the rain drizzle so I really could not appreciate it. Still I could see how engaging the park must be in nice weather.

St. James Park

The Labyrinth in St. James Park

I made my way back down the stairs and made a walk down Morris Avenue to visit more homes. I noticed that time was running out and I only had an hour to visit this part of the neighborhood.

Trinity Park in full bloom when the rain stopped

Looking down the street down Whitfield Place during the tour of homes

A stuffed bear on display at 60 East Morris Street

The family who opened their home at 60 East Morris Street had a beautiful home. They invited us into their home, had a fire going on their patio and served us homemade cookies and apple cider which I thought was a nice touch. I saw this whimsical bear in one of the bedrooms.

71 Morris Avenue is the home of artist Gabriella D’Italia and her family

The artist’s work on the walls and her collection of puppets

The last set of gardens that I visited were at 36 Boehm Avenue. The rain had stopped and I was able to visit the gardens and not feel rushed.

The yard at 36 Boehm Avenue.

The yard at 36 Boehm Avenue where gold fish I thought were a nice touch

I saw this point of creativity at 26 Whitfield Place

When I finished the tour, I explored the area around Trinity Park. I walked around the park around the Pollinator Garden and admired the foliage.

The gardens at the start of the Fall

The map of the historical sign of the complex

The historic marker of the complex

The historic buildings around Trinity Park

The Gazebo in the park

The Methodist church on Simpson Avenue

The old Firehouse where we checked in

The old Camp office

It really was a wonderful walking tour and I learned a lot about the old Mount Tabor site. This was an eye opener of how a former Methodist camp becomes a desirable historical neighborhood that everyone wants to live in. The museum was an interesting look on how people lived in the past here and the walking tour showed how modern times living here that not much has changed. People still making these small charming houses home. This walking tour in Mount Tabor, NJ is every September.

After the tour for lunch:

After the tour was over, I stopped into Downtown Denville, NJ right down the road, which is right off Route 46 and Route 80 for a late lunch. Denville has a very nice downtown with lots of restaurants and stores. Even on a gloomy afternoon, most everything was open. I checked out by Advantage Dining site and found Second Half on Main at 5 East Main Street. This contemporary bar/pub had all the TV’s going for the football game and a packed bar. I ate in the dining room section of the restaurant and was able to stretch out in one of the booths.

The Second Half of Main Street Street at 5 East Main Street in Downtown Denville, NJ

https://www.secondhalfonmain.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g46392-d2386465-Reviews-Second_Half_on_Main-Denville_Morris_County_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

The restaurant is a lively place and the bar area was busy. The menu has a nice selection of salads, burgers, pastas and large entrees with a nice beer listing. It got cold and miserable outside and it was the perfect burger day. I chose the Texas Burger with Bacon, BBQ sauce and sharp Cheddar Cheese and that hit the spot. What I liked about Second Half on Main is the prices are very fair. The burgers will run you around $15.00 and they include the French Fries, something you do not see in the Hudson River Valley or Bergen County anymore. They pull the a la Carte routine since COVID.

The Dining Room area at Second Half on Main

The burgers here are excellent. Perfectly cooked, stacked with ingredients and are juicy. The fries were also perfectly cooked. On a cool gloomy day, the burger hit the spot. If you are touring in the area, I highly recommend the restaurant. After lunch if the weather is nice, check out Downtown Denville.

The Texas Burger and French Fries at Second Half on Main

The Texas Burger and Fries is the perfect meal on a cool day

Yum!

Millville Army Air Field Museum                              1 Leddon Street Millville Airport                      Millville, NJ 08832

Millville Army Air Field Museum 1 Leddon Street Millville Airport Millville, NJ 08832

Millville Army Air Field Museum

1 Leddon Street

Millville Airport

Millville, NJ 08832

(856) 327-2347

Open: Sunday 10:00am-4:00pm/Monday By Appointment Only/Tuesday-Saturday 10:00am-4:00pm

Admission: Donation Suggested Adults $10.00/Children 5.00

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g46627-d2647289-r971146426-Millville_Army_Airfield_Museum-Millville_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

The Millville Army Air Field Museum at 1 Leddon Street

The entrance to the museum

The history of the Millville Army Field Museum:

(from the museum website)

The roots of the Millville Army Air Field Museum go back to the early 1970s. Millville Airport manager Lewis B. Finch had just completed eliminating the last apartments in former base buildings and looked forward to major industrial development at the airport. Most people in the community were aware the airport had been an army base, but knew no details of its history. This was Millville Airport when teenager Michael T. Stowe learned of some underground bunkers just south of the airport.

Museum founder, Michael T. Stowe and Frances Burt, examine her father’s leather “A-2” flying jacket. Her father, Second Lieutenant Lee L. Pryor Jr, died in an P-47 accident near Cedarville on May 2, 1945.

Stowe explored those bunkers and surrounding areas and later began to find related artifacts. For nearly ten years, he continued to collect artifacts and information, and in 1983 he approached city officials about a permanent place at the Millville Airport to display his collection. Stowe’s original collection of artifacts and airfield data remains the cornerstone of the Millville Army Air Field Museum (museum website).

The museum’s collection has grown through donations of time, effort, and artifacts from surrounding community and the community of veterans who served at the Millville Army Air Field. Today, both the museum and Millville Airport continue to grow and prosper through the Delaware River & Bay Authority’s management of the airport and the museum gaining recognition as a leader in World War II and post war aviation history.

The main gallery of the front part of the museum

Models of all the aircraft during the wars

The fire department brigade that protected the airport

Uniform gallery and objects from modern warfare

Artifacts from the beginning of WWII

Navajo Code Talkers: no one could break the code during WWII

The Radio Headquarters during WWII

The Philadelphia Seaplane Base/U.S. Army Signal Corps. Display

Artifacts from the Philadelphia Seaplane Base

Uniforms and plane display

The second gallery was broken down into themes and each display told its own story.

The 9/11 display dedicated to the events on September 11th, 2001 in New York City

This display also contains artifacts from the Towers on that tragic day.

The displays contain propaganda and spoils of war from both the Japanese and the Germans. These donations remind us of a time not too long ago when our now Allies were our enemies.

Display on German memorabilia during WWII

Display of Japanese memorabilia during WWII

The back gallery on Veterans backgrounds and personal life

The POW display

War Marriages displays

During and after the WWII, the number of marriages that took place started the “Baby Boom” Men and women waited for one another. The family unit was tight because emotions still rung high after the war years. People were eager to start their families.

The War Marriages

Toys of the war years

The last gallery was dedicated to each of the wars after WWII from Korea, to Vietnam, to Desert Storm, to Middle East Crisis each having their own display and artifacts showing that the tactics of war may change as well as the equipment.

The gallery dedicated to those who have served in the various wars

Women pilots

Behind the scenes and in front of them women played a big role in the war effort as pilots, engineers, teachers, factory workers, nurses and doctors and in all aspects of business for making the system work. This is their story.

Communications in the war

Military nurses display

Every war effort has been given a display in the museum with artifacts and spoils of war to represent that time. In each display, it tells another story in the protection of the country. We thank all those military personal, men and women, who helped in the war efforts to protect our country.

History of the wars

Army display

Vietnam War display

The Iraq War/Middle East conflict

Desert Storm Conflict

Vietnam War

Gunning/Sharp shooter display

The museum continues outside with all sorts of interest equipment on display. Take time walk around the property and look at the displays.

The Creation of the museum:

(from the Millville Army Air Field Museum website):

The Millville Airport was dedicated “America’s First Defense Airport” on August 2, 1941 by local, state, and federal officials. In less than a year, construction of military base facilities began, and in January 1943, the Millville Army Air Field opened as a gunnery school for fighter pilots. Gunnery training began with Curtiss P-40F “Warhawk” aircraft, but after a few weeks, the P-40s were gone, and the Republic P-47 “Thunderbolt” ruled the skies over Cumberland County. During its three year existence, thousands of soldiers and civilians served here, with about 1,500 pilots receiving advanced fighter training in the Thunderbolt.

Following the War, the airfield was declared excess to the governments needs, and returned to the City of Millville. Most of the airport buildings were converted to apartments for the many veterans returning from the war. The last of the apartments vanished in the early 1970s, and the airport soon became a hub of industry and aviation for Southern New Jersey (from the museum website).

Military equipment on display

Military equipment on display

The outside of the museum

Potter’s Tavern                                                                             49-51 West Broad Street                                                        Bridgetown, NJ 08302

Potter’s Tavern 49-51 West Broad Street Bridgetown, NJ 08302

Potter’s Tavern

49-51 West Broad Street

Bridgeton, NJ 08302

(856) 453-2175

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potter%27s_Tavern

https://revolutionarynj.org/sites/potters-tavern/

https://explorecumberlandnj.com/cumberland-historic-sites/potters-tavern/

Open: Sunday 1:00pm-4:00pm/Monday-Saturday Closed-Seasonal please check the website

Admission: Free but donations are accepted

My review on TripAdvisor:

The Potter’s Tavern in Downtown Bridgeton, NJ

The historic sign that welcomes you

The Greeting Room at the entrance of the tavern

I finally got into the Potter’s Tavern Historical site one weekend that I was in South Jersey and it is a fascinating look at how a building and its location and purpose changed the outlook of the Revolutionary War and how we almost loss it to neglect.

The Tavern tour leads into several rooms. When you enter the building, you enter the Greeting Room or the main foyer where guests would arrive at the Tavern for the evening. To the right of the room is the main tavern where the bar was located, where issues of the day would have been debated.

The Tavern area by the main entrance

Down the stairs leads to the kitchen and to where the hearth for cooking would have been done. This was the interesting part of the tour as this had been covered up when this became a home. The hearth really shows the efforts that were made in cooking during the period.

The upstairs rooms had been decorated for overnight stays. I am not sure if they would have been this nicely decorated but Bridgeton was in an isolated area at the time and coming here by carriage must have taken several days by carriage or stage coach, so spending the night was a good idea.

The tour did not take that long as the building is small but its ties to the American Revolution is what makes it so fascinating. Its role in the war and as a meeting place that may have turned the tides of the war is what makes such a interesting place to visit.

Artifacts on the second floor

A Map of Old Bridgeton, NJ

A map of the City of Bridgeton, NJ

The History of Potter’s Tavern:

(From the Cumberland County Website)

Cohansey Bridge, the village which would become Bridgetown in 1765 and eventually Bridgeton, was a small community of less than 150 residents in the early 1700s. Cohansey Bridge was home to several taverns, which back then were places for more than food and drink. They were the social hotspots of town, the place where residents could learn about the latest local news and where travelers would pass on news from other communities. Matthew Potter, born in 1734 in Ireland, moved to Connecticut in 1740 with his mother, father and two brothers. The family soon moved to Philadelphia and not long thereafter, Matthew and his brother David moved to Cohansey Bridge where Matthew set up a blacksmith shop and tavern.

The Potter family tree in the museum

Matthew Potter’s tavern, which also served as his home, was built around 1767 and located on the north side of Broad Street. Constructed in a “salt box” design, with two stories in the front and only one in the rear with a long sloping rear roof, the tavern catered to mostly young gentlemen doing business at the courthouse, which was directly across the street.

The ‘Salt Box’ designed Potter’s Tavern

In December 1775 a weekly hand-written newspaper started appearing in Potter’s Tavern which included articles critical of British rule and supportive of independence. The Revolutionary War had begun earlier in the year, and this hand-written newspaper, known as the “Plain Dealer,” called for open revolution months before the Declaration of Independence was drafted in Philadelphia.

The inside of the Greeting Room as you walk inside the tavern

Despite efforts by local British Loyalists to identify and prosecute the contributors to the “Plain Dealer,” none of the writers, who were anonymous, were ever discovered or arrested. Writings such as those found in the “Plain Dealer” were considered treasonous and those who wrote them could be punished with public execution.

The Potter family sword collection

At least thirteen editions of the “Plain Dealer” were produced, and today scholars attribute a portion of the success of the American Revolution to the creation of powerful communication among colonists through newspapers and leaflets like the “Plain Dealer.” By reaching out to one another, colonists built bonds of sympathy and unified and by reading about local acts of resistance and stories of suffering under British rule the colonists came to realize they were fighting for each other.

The Dubois Family Portraits of Adrian and Eleanor Dubois Burroughs Ogden

After the Revolutionary War concluded several of the writers of the “Plain Dealer” came forward and became leaders in the new nation of the United States of America. These included Joseph Bloomfield and Richard Howell, who served as governors of New Jersey.

The Tavern’s Kitchen and Hearth

Potter’s Tavern remained a tavern until around 1788 when it was converted into a two-family dwelling. It then is abandoned and nearly collapsed before being purchased by the City of Bridgeton in 1958. In the 1970’s it was placed on the State and National Registers of Historic Places and is now owned by the County of Cumberland and leased to the Cumberland County Historical Society. It is open on July 4th and other special occasions and by reservation. The only known surviving copies of the “Plain Dealer” are held in the Rare Book Collection of Rutgers University Library.

The Beehive oven in the kitchen

Forgotten Warriors Vietnam Museum                        Cape May Airport                                                                       529 Forrestal Road                                                 Rio Grande, NJ 08204

Forgotten Warriors Vietnam Museum Cape May Airport 529 Forrestal Road Rio Grande, NJ 08204

Forgotten Warriors Vietnam Museum

Cape May Airport

529 Forrestal Road

Rio Grande, NJ 08204

(609) 374-2987

https://forgottenwarriorsvietnammuseum.com/

Admission: Free but Donations are accepted

Open: Please see website as the museum is closing for the season. By Appointment

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g46775-d1170025-r971025114-Forgotten_Warriors-Rio_Grande_Cape_May_County_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

The front of the Forgotten Warriors Vietnam Museum at 529 Forrestal Road

The entrance to the museum

The Vietnam Veterans Memorial outside the museum has the names of those who fought in the war

The museum’s Chapel dedicated to the Veterans

The Chapel is dedicated to those who lost their lives in the Vietnam War and is a very emotional display of the value of a soldier during the war years.

The History of the museum:

The museum was created in 2008 by the late Vietnam Veteran Thomas E. Collins. His committed passion for over 15 years to create a unique, realistic, educational experience to live on the memory of the men and women who fought in the war.

The museum honors and protects the thousands of men and women’s legacies and artifacts on the museum that will not be forgotten. The museum continues to preserve and welcome home veterans, their families and educate future generations.

This one room museum is packed with information and memorabilia from the war years.

The display in honor of Thomas R. Collins

The main gallery of the museum

In Memory of Thomas E. Collins

Very touching memory to the founder of the museum, Thomas E . Collins.

The map of North and South Vietnam at the time of the war

The equipment and artifacts from the Vietnam War

One of the small tanks inside the museum

The outfits warn in Vietnam during the war by the natives and the nurses

Various weapons and uniforms on display

Array of uniforms that had been used in the war

The gift shop by the entrance of the museum has some interesting gift items.

This museum is a very touching memorial to all those who have served during the war in Vietnam and some fascinating items in the collection to see and observe.