Sunday, June 3, 2018

THIS WEEK IN DELAWARE HISTORY JUNE 4 TO 0


THIS WEEK IN DELAWARE HISTORY
JUNE 4 TO JUNE 10

JUNE 4
1842: A quarrel in Congress led to a duel in Claymont and the wounding of
General James Watson Webb of New York and Comgressman Thomas Marshall of
Kentucky, nephew of Chief Justice John Marshall. Webb has been know to cuff and cane
“inferior” rivals on the streets.

1890: Dr. Joseph Conwell of Milton, wrote his brother in St. Louis that the Milton peach
crop was a failure, and wheat and corn not much better and that very little money was
around. He noted ship carpenters were making $1.25 to $1.50 a day and labor 75 cents.

1954: Brookside at Newark, has homes for $58 to $72 per month

2002: 140,000 came to Dover Downs for NASCAR races, the largest number ever of
spectators in the 31 year history of the track.

JUNE 5
1776: Thomas Cooch , recently from England, purchased 229 acres near Newark.

1864: The 1st Delaware Regiment took part in the siege of Petersburg as General U. S.
Grant tightened the ring on the Confederacy.

1925: Near 5000 people stood in the heat at the New Journal office to hear the results of
the Gene Tunney & Tom Gibbon boxing match.

1956: Gary Deyoung, was the first Caucasian to graduate from Dovers Delaware s State
College.

JUNE 6
1806: The Grand Lodge of Delaware, Ancient Free & Accepted Masons, A.F. & A. M. ,
was organized in Wilmington's town Hall.

1904: Charles Bush, Newark's Delaware College, Class of 1903, became Delaware's
first Rhodes Scholar.

1942: University of Delaware, now allow men and women to attend class together.

JUNE 7
1848: U. S. Senator John M. Clayton received one vote for the presidential nomination
at the Wigg Party Convention in Philadelphia, and Zackary Taylor was nominated
.
1935: Mary Carey and her son, Howard, of Frankford were hanged for the murder of
her brother Robert Hitchens of Omar, over a $2000 insurance policy in 1927. Another
son received a life sentence and another son got seven years.

1954: President Eisenhower flew to Dover Air Base to speak at Washington College\
in Chestetown.

1988: 30 people were treated a Kent General when 70 MPH winds hit Smyrna, knocked
out power, uprooted trees at Belmont Hall, overturned planes at the airport. There were no
deaths.

JUNE 8
1906: Delawares trains can run on Sundays, despite the Blue Laws, says Chief Justice
Charles Lore.
1919: The 59th Pioneer Infantry of Delaware returned home from France.
1924: A measles epidemic in Middletown caused the Forest Presbyterian Church picnic to
be canceled.
1984: Georgetown newswoman Mary Houston Robinson, daughter of former Congressman
Robert Houston, died at age 91.

JUNE 9
1813: Captain Robert Stockton, of New Castle, later Delaware Governor, distinguished
himself fighting at Ft. George, Ontario, Canada, a year later his brother was killed at
Lundy's Lane , Niagara Falls.
1923: President Warren Harding had dinner at the home of Dr. Frank Grier of 301
Lakeview Avenue and was that evening inducted in the Tall Cedars of Lebanon .
1951: The Charles Cullen Bridge over Indian river Inlet was reopened after repairs from
storm damage.
1958: President Eisenhower appointed Edwin DeHaven Steel Jr., to Judge of the US
District Court of Delaware

JUNE 10
1826: Daniel & William Newbold, anticipating growth with the opening of the Chesapeake & Delaware Canal, laid out straight and wide streets at the east end and called the town
Delaware City.
1848: Congressman Abraham Lincoln , campaigning for Zachary Taylor made an
address from the balcony of the Athenaeum at Fourth Street Market House in Wilmington.
1918: Former President William Howard Taft, now a teacher at Yale Law School , and a
future Chief Justice of the U. S. Supreme Court, spoke to the class of 1918 of the U of D.
1967: After the class of 1967 of Jason High School in Geogetown was graduated the property
was turned over to Delaware Technical & Community College



Abstract:: June 3, 2018 by Harrison H. from June 6, 2002 Sussex Countian,
This Week in Delaware History, by Roger A. Martin.

No comments:

Post a Comment