The inlet and adjacent dunes were a favorite place for the amblings of American poet A.R. Ammons, resulting in one of his best known poems, "Corsons Inlet".
The passing of automobiles to Corson's inlet has naturally left giant, mogul-like bumps in the road, oddly evenly spaced, all reaching the same height and depth (approx. 3 feet).
Corson's Inlet, a passage of the sea, through the beach, to the lagunes and marshes of Upper t-ship, Cape May co., about half a mile in width.[4]
Corson Inlet was described in 1878, viz.,
Corson's Inlet connects Corson's Sound and Ludlam's Bay with the ocean. It is upwards of half a mile wide, and is navigable for small-sized vessels; it has seven feet of water on its bar.[5]
History
Corson Inlet appears as Bottle Inlet on a map circa 1700;[6] and as "Coston's Inlet" on a map published in 1749 by Lewis Evans.[7]
Notes
^Merriam Webster's Geographical Dictionary, Third Edition, p. 283
^Merriam Webster's Geographical Dictionary, Third Edition, p. 283