TOLL GATE DIGS Pubblico Deposited

Contenuto dell'articolo
  • The E-Sylum: Volume 6, Number 14, April 6, 2003, Article 11

    TOLL GATE DIGS

    Joe Wolfe writes: "This is an article I wrote for a metal
    detecting club's monthly newsletter and thought you might
    want it for The E-Sylum also. It would demonstrate some
    of the research successful coin shooters do to find coins or
    caches and provide a little background on where those
    dropped coins come from."

    [I've edited the article a bit to cut down its size, but
    the main points remain. -Editor]

    "One source of sites to search for old coins are tollgates on
    pre-1900s turnpikes. The word turnpike by definition contains
    tollgates which were the collection points of tolls on the early
    Virginia roads. ... I believe people dropped coins around the
    tollgates, in the road, at the tollgate, and on the way to the
    tollkeeper's house. Remember the tolls were collected all year
    long, even during storms, snow, sunrise, and sunset. So a coin
    dropped in the mud, snow, or dark could be easily lost.

    In my research I concentrated on Fairfax and Loudoun Counties
    but turnpikes exist all over Virginia and in other states. I found
    15 different turnpikes.

    The single and best source for tollgate locations are old maps.
    Not only do they list tollgates but they show the exact location,
    the path of the turnpike, place a date on the tollgate, and often
    provide the name of the tollkeeper. All these can help to
    pinpoint the tollgate. Other sources include books, articles, and
    archives for the old turnpike companies. Archives exist in several
    local libraries and the State Library in Richmond. The State
    Library also has an unpublished manuscript on Virginia Turnpikes.
    But maps are the best and this is where I would direct you.

    Tollgates were usually authorized every five miles and were
    often located near bridges and crossroads. I assume this was
    to prevent travelers from bypassing the tollgates. The bridge
    created a bottleneck in the road and the crossroads allowed
    tolls to be collected from everyone passing by. Tollgates
    often changed locations as new roads opened and when the
    tolltaker changed. Often a person already living in the area
    was selected to be the tolltaker and the tollgate moved to his
    house. So the tollgate near Difficult Run might have four
    different locations, both sides of the road and both sides of
    the stream. Of course a map only shows a snapshot of the
    tollgates on a turnpike on a certain date. If an old house
    exists next to a substantial stream it may be an undocumented
    tollgate. I should mention I found the modern reproduction
    maps from various sources of data to be worse than useless.
    They seemed to place the word "tollgate" on the map where
    it was most convenient to write it.

    I have visited many of these tollgates and I am sorry to say
    many are covered by asphalt. As our use of roads developed
    the roads were widened and the tollgate covered. The
    collection point was often located right next to the road. The
    grading of the shoulders of roads also took care of many.
    The best to detect are the ones where the tollhouse still
    stands or its ruins can be found.

    One final point is there are still many tollgates around. I found
    over 50 locations in Loudoun and Fairfax alone and according
    to its annual report the Little River Turnpike, circa 1830,
    made over $100,000 in its busiest year.

    I am still searching for an untouched tollgate and have found
    only a few coins so far. The oldest was a 1773 pillar dollar
    that was paper-thin."

URL di origine Data di pubblicazione
  • 2003-04-06
Volume
  • 6

Le relazioni

Autore NNP