BROADKILL HUNDRED
Hundred was the earliest
settled in Sussex and was the most sparsely populated.
It had been divided twice,
1833 and 1861 when it lost the western half to Georgetown Hundred.
Milton was Broadkill's
only major town.
The hundred gets its name
from the river that flows through it's center, once an important
river. It had a ship
building industry, grist mills, saw mills and such.
At one time, early 1800's,
the name was spelled Broadkiln, and in 1975 Milton people had
the county council formally
change the name back to Broadkill.
Broadkill, is a dutch word
for 'broad river”,
The first landowner of the
hundred was wily Hermanus Wiltbank who also had a strong hold
on affairs of Lewes or as
it was then, Zwaanenael, who came with the second wave of Dutch
settlers.
Soon after William Penn came
into play in the Three Lowar Counties and both had made peace with
each other, Wiltbank died but his family remained active in local
affairs.
Another early landowner
was William Clark, a Penn follower and his lieutenant, who
received a 500 acre tract
between the Coolspring branch and Beaver Dam branch of the Broadkill
River. This was known as
“Penns Worminghurst” that later passed to one Preserved
Coggeshall.
Clark had also sold land to
Thomas Fisher, the son of John Fisher, who came with Penn to the
colony,
ancestors of Major Thomas
Fisher of Lewes , an Revolutionary War figure.
Others families of early
Broadkill were Hazzards, Paynters, Reeds, Dodds, Bryans,
Ponders and Clowes, all
instermental in the development of Broadkill Hundred and Sussex
County.
Prior to the 1900's the
Broadkill River had become less the river it once was, and is now
just a peaceful recreational body of water.
James Grey, in 1686, owned
the land where Milton was built , which he named “Milford” , a
1000 acre tract that
after a series of conveyances , the Milton portion on the south
side of the
river came to George Conwell
and that on the north side came to William Perry, another
Revolutionary figure. Both Cornwell and Perry laid out lots and
sold them so soon a village appeared.
This village took several
names early on, Osborne Landing, Conwell Landing, Upper
Landing,
and Head of Broadkill. In
1807 an act of General Assembly named the town Milton, it is
said, to honor, the blind poet John Milton.
Milton in , 1806 had four
stores and seven granaries, the granaries supporting a water borne
grain shipping business.
Also in the early 1800's there was a large quantity of finished
lumber
shipped from the small port.
Milton was incorporated in 1865 and flourshed until the end of the
sailing ship age, in the 1880's.
One of Broadkills house of
worship was established before the town of Milton was by ¾
of a century. St. John The
Baptist was built at Long Bridge Branch in the Broadkill Forest in
1728.
Quaakers and Presbyterians
were active at the edge of the hundred at Coolspring. Goshen
Methodist
came to Milton in 1820.
Broadkill gave the state of Delaware five governors and one to
Wyoming Territory.
TOWNS OF BROADKILL
Milton became a town of
small garment factories, button cutting shops, a brick yard and
later several canning houses.
Harbeson came about in 1869
when the railroad built a station for the Georgetown to Lewes
railroad line. The village
was named for the man who owned the land the village was built upon,
Harbeson Hickman. This same year there became a post office and
within twenty years a school
house, blacksmith shop, two
stores and maybe ten homes. Shipping of the lumber from the mills in
the nearby forest area
became a big opearation at Harbeson. There was briefly a horse race
track and
annualfair at Harbeson.
The Delmarva poultry industry kept the town alive later on.
Drawbridge was named such,
as it was the location of a draw bridge over the Broadkll River for
the main road south to Lewes from the north. Paynters were the
family of Drawbridge, even once named Paynters Drawbridge. It had a
post office, a merchant and one of the first ship yards.
Overbrook was a
neighborhood, not even a villeage, but it had a railroad stateion
on the 1900's
Queen Anns RR, postoffice at
the general store, even a small school . It was well know to the fox
hunters of the days.
Broadkill Beach was a
summer resort, if you could handle the mosquitos of the great salt
marshes.
Source: History of
Sussex County by Dick Clark, July 1976:
I have a Great-great Grandfather, John Rennels, who wa supposed to have been born at BroadKill 100 in February 17 (or 26), 1781. Are there records that go back that far?
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