One of the best videos you have done Joey, packed with information and history. I appreciate the time and effort you put in to research, film and assemble your videos. Thanks Joey. 👍
Well done Joey. Loved how you included the detailed history in the beginning to set the stage. Then moved into the exploration of the near-shore ship. Then saved the BEST part for the end. Goose bumps seeing the back to back ships creating the breakwater for the shore line along with the perfect background music to provide gravity to the scenes. Wow.
This one of my favorite videos on your channel. I was impressed with your knowledge of the boats and I never knew they used wooden boats in WWI. Awesome video.
Hey hi youre standing near my house. Elsinboro. One of these is right around the corner. There are maps available that say visible shipwreck. Very interesting, I love NJ's history with the sea, lighthouses and vessels. There may be some oyster boats out there. Oystering was a massive economic boost long ago. Artificial island. Hope creek 1 and 2.
Wow! Never noticed those ships out there before. I used to fill the vending machines out on artificial island many years ago. Never took notice to those.
Could you research the ship at Diamond beach Cape May? Before it disappears. Just a request. I remember back in the 50s, that you could actually make out a ship.
@@WildwoodVideoArchive thank you. I live in LAC and I kind of thought this was past the point where you needed special access. This was an awesome video too. I knew there were sunken ships out there I just never knew where they came from.
Are there any houses that can be rented near morey’s pier? I have an interview with someone from morey’s tomorrow for a summer job and I’m going to need somewhere to stay. I’m like 3-5 hours away from wildwood and won’t get there for like 2 weeks. I just wanted to ask since you live closer than I do. If you respond I appreciate it.
I knew those ships were there because I worked at those plants, but I never knew they were sunk in place over 100 years ago. I always thought they were put there when they built the plants. But it’s the other way around, looks like they built the plants there because there was already a ship breakwater. Thanks for the lesson.
That was a nice tour of the Ship Graveyard in South Jersey, and I really like the ship that had some decorative grass growing in it. Keep up the good work Joey.
Thank you for sharing. I used to crab and fish here back in the 80s and wondered what were these ships doing there. I never knew how extensive the wrecks were. Brings back good memories.