John E's Pond Explained

John E's Pond
Other Name:John E's Tug Hole
Location:Washington County, Rhode Island
Pushpin Map:USA Rhode Island
Coords:41.1558°N -71.5597°W
Type:Lake
Basin Countries:United States

John E's Pond or John E's Tug Hole is a pond on Block Island in Washington County, Rhode Island.[1]

The land around the pond is partially conserved by The Nature Conservancy and by the Block Island Land Trust. The pond is part of a larger network of wet bogs. Historically, it was seasonally dammed to facilitate the harvest of peat and ice.

John E's Pond is used recreationally for swimming, fishing, and boating. It is habitat for birds like the northern harrier, and woody shrubs such as sweet pepperbush are common around the margins.

Etymology

John E's Pond is notable for being one of five American federally-recognized place names with a possessive apostrophe. When the name was officialized in 1963, the U.S. Board on Geographic Names allowed the apostrophe to prevent the name from being read as John "Ess" Pond.[2]

The word tug in the term tug hole archaically means peat, which was the main source of fuel on Block Island for early settlers. Tug hole is a local term for ponds that were used for harvesting peat (known colloquially as tugging).[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Summary Report: John E's Pond . edits.nationalmap.gov . Geographic Names Information System . 14 August 2024 . en.
  2. News: Brean . Henry . Obscure federal rule erased apostrophes from place names . 14 August 2024 . Las Vegas Review-Journal . 6 February 2018.
  3. Web site: Gaffett . Kim . John E's Tug Hole: Explore Block Island . YouTube . The Nature Conservancy in Rhode Island . 14 August 2024 . 3 March 2021.