Ong's Hat, New Jersey

Ong's Hat, New Jersey

Ong's Hat, New Jersey, is a location of what has been called a ghost town in Southampton Township, Burlington County, New Jersey. It is located on New Jersey Route 72 west of its intersection with New Jersey Route 70.[1]

Although it was never more than one hut ("Ong's Hut") it still appeared on some maps as of 2006.[2] A road in the area is named Ong's Hat Road. It is also called the Buddtown-Ong's Hat Road. It was completed in 1929, replacing an earlier dirt path.[3]

Contents

Name

The origin of the name is unknown, but a well-known folk story attributes it to local man who was a fixture at local dances, wooing women with his suave attire, especially his silk hat. The surname Ong was common among early Pine Barrens settlers, and one of the earliest settlers was named Jacob Ong. At once such dance, a jealous lover stomped on his hat, ruining it, and in frustration Ong tossed it in the air, where it caught on high branch of a pine tree. The hat remained there for many years, serving as landmark which identified the small village.[1]

At least four versions of the legend circulate, all variations on the theme of a dapper man with a silk hat. One version simply ends with his hat being stomped on, the most widely circulated one ends with him throwing it in the tree. The other two hold that Ong was a tavern keeper who either painted a silk hat on his sign or threw his hat into a tree after getting angry with a woman.[4]

History

According to Forgotten Towns of Southern New Jersey by Henry Charlton Beck, Ong's Hat was a real village. According to Beck, around the 1860s, Ong's Hat was a lively town and served as a social center for the surrounding area. It was known for the availability of alcohol and one of the first arrests of a bootlegger occurred at Ong's Hat. Prizefighting was also popular.[5]

Beck says that a Polish couple, the Chininiskis, moved to Ong's Hat in the early 20th century. By that time only seven residents remained. The Chininiskis disappeared soon after. Years later, hunters found a female skeleton at Ong's Hat, which police speculated was that of Mrs. Chininiski. Tracking Mr. Chininiski to New York but unable to prove anything, Burlington County Sheriff Ellis Parker kept the skull in his office for many years as a reminder of the unsolved case.[5]

By 1936, Ong's Hat was still on maps but nothing was there except a clearing, an abandoned shed, and bits of brick and roofing suggesting houses had once been there. When Beck visited he found only Eli Freed, a 79-year-old farmer who moved to the area from Chicago. In the foreword to the 1961 edition of the book, Beck reports that Freed no longer lived at Ong's Hat and that additional legends concerning the village had emerged.[5]

A 1968 letter published in the New York Times, written by an Ong family descendant, claims reports of an actual town are a misnomer. Instead, he says his ancestors lived in Little Egg Harbor in the early 17th century and transported their grain to Burlington, New Jersey, for grinding. They built a hut midway through the route where they could rest overnight, and according to the letter the name Ong's Hut was added to maps and gradually corrupted to Ong's Hat.[6]

In his 1944 book, Jersey Genesis, Beck himself says in reporting on Ong's Hat he fell for "elaborate traps" and that the story he had earlier repeated was a "fairy tale". He then subscribes to the explanation that the name is a corruption of Ong's Hut, a stopover point for a farmer from Little Egg Harbor.[7]

Urban legend

As a long-abandoned small settlement, Ong's Hat remained obscure until its name and location was co-opted in a book called Ong's Hat: The Beginning by Joseph Matheny, which was based on stories that had circulated on computer bulletin boards which held that a cult of outcast scientists opened an interdimensional gateway in Ong's Hat. Matheny was not clear as to whether his book was intended as fact or fiction.[1]

Diner

Ong's Hat was also the name of a diner located in the vicinity of this town. The diner was in operation from the early 1980s to 1990's. The diner was refurbished and eventually reopened under a different name. Visitors to the Ong's Hat Diner may recall that a branch with a top hat perched in one of its boughs adorned its ceiling.

References

  1. ^ a b c Sceurman, Mark (2006). "Weird N.J. Volume 2". Sterling Publishing Company. pp. 68–69. ISBN 1402739419. http://books.google.com/books?id=J6TxcT7N9RgC&pg=PA68. 
  2. ^ Scheller, Kay (2006). New Jersey Off the Beaten Path (8th ed.). Globe Pequot. p. 145. ISBN 0762740558. http://books.google.com/books?id=ehhk_kB57osC&pg=PA145&dq=%22ong%27s+hat%22+maps. 
  3. ^ Dickinson, Leon A. (1929-06-23). "It's the Season now Up in the Catskills". New York Times: pp. XX16. http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F20715FA3E55127A93C1AB178DD85F4D8285F9. 
  4. ^ Cicetti, Fred (1976-09-05). "'Scrappy Corner' Put Up a Good Fight". New York Times: p. 236. 
  5. ^ a b c Beck, Henry Charlton (1984) [1961]. Forgotten Towns of Southern New Jersey. Rutgers University Press. pp. 6, 19–25. ISBN 9780813510163. http://books.google.com/books?id=5GFauv67InQC. 
  6. ^ Cook, Ross K. (1968-06-30). "Ong's Hat". New York Times: pp. BR 16–17. 
  7. ^ Beck, Henry Charlton (1983) [1944]. Jersey Genesis. Rutgers University Press. pp. 302–303. ISBN 9780813510156. http://books.google.com/books?id=5o4X4JVDaTkC&pg=PA302&dq=%22Ong%27s+Hat%22. 

External links

Coordinates: 39°54′39″N 74°37′15″W / 39.91083°N 74.62083°W / 39.91083; -74.62083


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