LEWES BLOCK HOUSE POND
Journal of the Lewes
Historical Society, Volume IV, November 2001 by Hazel
Brittingham
A natural feature found on
early plots and maps of Lewes is Blockhouse Pond and was
the south end of of Market
Street, Mulberry Street, and Shipcarpenter Street. It was
about an
eighteen acre spread.
In the mid 1930's is was
drained by the CCC to curb the mosquito infestation around
Lewes. It was restored in
1976 when Blockhouse Pond Park was established for
recreational
activities and also serve
as an emergency water supply. Lewes Community Platground was set
in 1994 at the NW corner.
Today the eleven acre area
is surrounded by residences, the Bethel Methodist Cemetery,
Beebe Medical Center and
public school property. A near property of Beebe, the old
convalescent
center, sits on what was
known as Frog Hill which it is said git the name from the bull frogs
serenading in the pond.
Way back, 1670, Lewes
folk request of the English Governor, Sir Francis Lovelace, to
make use of discarded
materials of a deteriorated fort on the bank of the creek to
build a forty
foot square 'blockhouse'
in the middle of town, thus giving the name to the pond and the
area.
In the late 1600's county
deeds and records used the names 'block house field' and
'block house pond' to
identify adjoining property.
During the War of 1812 is
is recorded that 500 troop were encamped at Blockhouse Pond
and when bombardment took
place, women and children of Lewes sought refuge in the Blockhouse.
Blockhouse Pond also held
the towns reserve of ice harvested in winter in addition to a fine
skating rendezvous.
Wilmington Morning News,
Thursday, February 8, 1912
Lewes, Delaware Pond
Filled With Skaters:
Block House Pond , almost
a hallowed spot in the memory of every boy and girl who ever lived
in
Lewes, is the scene of
gayety these days when throngs of skaters and ice boats make
merry all day.
Wilmington Evening
Journal, Friday, September 3,, 1915
Lewes, Delaware Lewes
Talks of Playground
Lewes residents are in to
forming a movement to purchase the old block house pond in back of
the
Union School of Lewes,
fill it in, and make a playground of it. The majority of the pond
is owned
by Lewes and the rest by
private individuals. Since the pond is dry at this time of
year it is
considered a good time to
fill it in.
In a 1903 Wilmington News
Journal it is reported that blockhouse Pond host free ice skating'
Also a 1913 New Journal
reports that very early on St. Peters Episcopal Church of Lewes
owned land up to
Blockhouse Pond.
A 1922 Wilmington New
Journal reports that the Lewes Civic Club at their Monday night
meeting discussed the
filling in of Blockhouse Pond and met with approval. Dr. Hiram H.
Burton,
gave a very interesting
talk regarding the pond which is ten acres or more and would be of
considerable value if
reclaimed.
Wilmington New Journal,
Tuesday, July 3, 1934
Block House Pond, Old
Lewes Landmark, Passes in War With Mosquitoes
Lewes Delaware, July 3
'Special',
Another landmark, Block
House Pond, has passed on. Once a beautiful rendezvous to early
colonists back to the
latter part of the 17th century but of late years has
become a stagnant
mosquito harbor and a
menace to the town, has been drained by the Lewes CCC Camp. It took
four hundred foot of
ditches to drain the pond which is close to the Beebe Hospital
and the Lewes
High School.
It has served the town's
history well, in 1670 a block house was built of bricks and logs
salvaged
from an old fort on the
Lewes Creek. , was a refuge during the War of 1812 bombardment,
during
which Mrs Elizabeth Ann
Marshall, of the Lewes Marshall family, was born, cradled in corn
fodder
and lullabied by the cannon
roar, and lived to be 99 years of age.
1700's and 1800's, it
was a favorite rendezvous for the Lewes young people, with
lilies and
clear water in summer and
ice for skating in the winters. There were ice houses upon the banks
to
store ice from winter for
the summers. 1920 saw the last of ice skating as dried undergrowth
and
12 foot high cat tails
took over and the pond became a stagnant mosquito incuabator.
It is thought that Mulberry
and Market streets will be continued through and a new residential
section
will emerge.
Wilmington Morning News,
Monday, August 13, 1934
CCC workers from Lewes
Camp, under the direction of the Mosquito Control Commission, are
draining the bog that was
once Whites Pond, on the opposite side of town from Blockhouse
Pond ,
which was once a beautiful
body of water.
Wilmington News Journal,
Wednesday, February 13, 1935
The draining of Block
House Pond Lewes is without an ice skating rink, however, a new
improved rink in the rear
of the CCC Camp will soon be available for skaters. The CCC officers
and men decided that they
and the town needs a skating pond and have blocked up a lake like
'depression' along the railroad near the camp, which will soon be
filled with enough water to make
a safe skating rink.
Wilmington Morning News,
Friday, November 12, 1937
Beebe Hospital Patients
Alarmed At Cat of Nine Tail Fire
Lewes,, November 11, 1937:
Ten acres of blazing cat of
nine tails at Block House Pond provided the most spectacular
fire
here in many years. The
frame house of Charles West who is confined to bed by an illness
was
endangered and patients of
Beebe Hospital were excited by the flames, as were students at the
high
school near by.
The flames from the pond
foliage sent large clouds of yellow smoke and ashes over half the
town.
The fire started by a Beebe
employee burning a trash pile which was fanned by high winds quickly
spread to adjacent marsh
lands which took Lewes Volunteer Fire Company six hours to bring
under
control.
Wilmington Morning News,
Friday, December 23, 1938
Hospital Annex Threatened
as Wind Fans Blaze of Block House Pond
A burning morass of cat of
nine tails on the dry bed of Block House Pond threatened the new
$100,000 annex of Beebe
Hospital as high winds flames over 20 acres before firemen brought
them under control . Dense
smoke from the blaze covered most of he town of Lewes all day.
Alton Brittingham of the
fire company thinks the fire was set by hunters to drive pheasants
and
rabbits out of the cat
tales. It took two hours to bring the fire under control but not
before it had spread across the dry grass of the Methodist
Cemetery to the state highway.
Abstract by Harrison H.
March 1, 2018, Nassau, Delaware.