CEDAR CREEK HUNDRED
THE BRICK GRANARY &
ROGERSVILLE
1776 - 2007 BY DAVE
KENTON 2008
A SERIES
Between Rehoboth and
Milford , on the west side of the highway, old King Highway,
at Argos Corners, or aka
Rogersville, was a brick granary, known as Brick Granary,
sitting on land grant issued by Duke of York, in 1 676.
The granary dates back
to 1775 and Daniel Rogers who came to what was
known as the “wading
place” of the Cedar Creek from Pungoteague, in Accomack,
Virginia. David age 21, son of gentry of Virginia, James and
Patience Rogers, large
land owners, the family of
Daniel Rogers who had been in Virginia since 1665.
Young Daniel came in
1775, with some financial means and purchased 128 acres of farm
land from heirs of Reynear Williams and son Joathan, land owners
on Slaughter Neck.
Just before the Revolution
land at the head of major rivers in Kent & Sussex Delaware,
were settled by families
of Levin Crapper at Mispillion, Clark Conwell , Broadkill, Benjamin
Waples at Primehook, and,
Avery Draper at Cedar Creek, to capitalize on river trade to
Philadelphia merchants
and establish grist mills, bark mills, trading stores,
taverns and
wharves, providing access
for local grain, cord wood, barrel staves by sailing schooners
to growing cities along the
Atlantic coast.
When Daniel Rogers arrived
in Cedar Creek at age 21 he was single, bought the 128
acre farm from Littleton
Townsend and Jonathan Williams, heirs to Reynear Williams,
staunch member of St.
Matthews Anglican church established 1705 on Cedar Creek
\millpond. Reynear was
owner of the Brick Granary.
Daniel Rogers was quick
in commerce, traded with Levin Crapper, most successful
area merchant, who at age
65 was Rogers model. Crapper had a grist mill on the Mispillion
and lived in an impressive
brick mansion which soon became the home of Daniel Rogers
in 1780.
As Rogers began trade with
Philadelphoia, Crapper died in 1775, leaving a son, five
daughters, a grandson,
Zadock Crapper II . Rogers was administrator of Crappers will and
became well known by the
heirs. Crapers estate was large and took years to settle. He
had
2500 acres of land,,
sailing vessels, vast stores of goods, his only heir was son
Moulton
who died two years after
his father.
Moulton left a widow,
Esther, and son Zadock II. Daniel Rogers married Esther, July 20,
1778 and moved to the
mansion by 1780. They had children, James, Thomas and Betsy.
Rogers operated the Brick
Granary farm on Cedar Creek, and the large Crapper estate, now
partly owned by his wife
Esther, Rogers was guardian of Zadock II, and purchased the
Crapper Mansion. End
Part 1
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