DORCHESTER
COUNTY MARYLAND
IN
THE EARLY TO MID
1900'S
Dorchester
, made a county in 1669, is the largest on the Eastern Shore but much
of it is salt marsh with tidal streams of great beauty were fish,
muskrat, deer and ducks thrive for the fishermen and hunters. Lying
between two sizable estuaries, the Choptank to the north and
Nanticoke to the south, with bays, creeks, straits, large and small
islands, a person could spend a lifetime exploring its beauty.
There is deep and shallow water for fishing for rock, taylor
bluefish, or perch. Ducking is a big sport with large preserves for
shooters.
As
Dorchester is readily accessible by water it was settled early and
many quaint seventeenth century structures are standing. Richard
Preston, a Quaker, was the first Dorchester delegate to the General
Assembly held in St. Mary's.
There
is to the north, East New Market, with old houses so distinctive is
style, Cambridge, on the Choptank at its widest point, two miles,
the shores second largest city, with narrow overcrowded streets,
large trees in the residential area, is a maritime town. At the
Point , a residence built in 1706 still stand and is occupied. Also
are LaGrange, the Wallace Mansion, with a boxwood garden and the
oldest magnolia tree on the Eastern Shore, and the Jordan House with
a beautiful interior. Up and down the river are Eldon, known as
Shoal Creek House, Glasgow Hambrook, Castle Haven, Sopcot and lets
not forget Horns point. On Hoopers Island, to the south, is Church
Creek, an ancient place, with the Treaty Oak, the scene of a powwow
between settlers and native Indians long ago It was a ship building
town until the timber was used up. Next down the Hooper Island Road
is Trinity Church, known also as Old Church, established in 1680.
This church is in possession of a red velvet cushion on which
Queen Ann knelt when
she
was crowned, and a silver chalice presented by Queen Ann. The bricks
of the church were said for years to have been brought from England
but it is known the colonist made bricks as soon as they settled and
near by is a hollow, probably where the clay for the bricks was
dug. Near here are two old houses, one on Church Creek, known as
Old house, now two centuries old. Lake Cove, same age or so by fifty
years, where Lovey Lake lived during the Revolution and saved the
house from the British, deponent sayeth how. Near by stands an old
windmill which until a few years ago was still able to grind grain.
Hoopers
Island is really three islands, Upper, Middle and Lower. Applegarth,
a ghost town, for a washed out bridge never replace, and the town
population moving inland during WWI for high paying jobs never
returned. Three other villages, Honga, Fishing Creek and
Hooperville, oyster packing towns, with people of ancient customs
and friendly hearts.
Tails
of the past: Hoopers Straits was once know as Limbo, so named by
Captain John Smith in 1608 when driven there by a great storm after
which he repaired his sails with his sailors shirts.
On
Goose Creek there lived an old chief of the Wiwash Tribe who took the
name of Billy Rumley, married a white woman and remained at Goose
Creek when the others of the tribe moved north..............Story is
that to 'punish' his wife and to 'make her sweet' he would tie her in
his big chimney to the 'lubber pole' and 'smoke' her . There are
still some individuals with a tinge of copper in their skin who are
descendants of Billy Rumley and his white wife in this neighborhood.
SOURCE:
Maryland Main and the Eastern Shore by Hulbert Footner
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