REHOBOTH'S
SILVER LAKE BRIDGE
Cape
Gazette's View Points, Tuesday, January 1, 2019, shows the
New Bridge over Silver Lake at Rehoboth, a 1955 era postcard of
Delaware Archives' collection of George an Irene Caley,
indicating the bridge was fairly new. OK, there is a news
item in the
Wilmington
News Journal, Saturday July 30, 1938 which states that the
bridge is to be closed for a few days while contractors E. Hammond
& Co., make test before actual work on the new bridge
begins on
September
3, for a 519 foot long, 40 foot wide bridge for automobiles and
pedestrians.
So lets take it that the 'fairly new' bridge on the 1955 postcard
was
built in 1938 and 1939.
Also
from Cape Gazette's History in Photographs , May 29, 2018, is
a
picture
of Rehoboth's Silver Lake Bridge on a 1929 postcard showing a
wooden
bridge while the 1955 bridge is cement.
A
Saturday, August 28, 1926 Wilmington News Journal news item
mentions
the main thoroughfare of Rehoboth Heights , the north & south
Bayard
Avenue, eighty feet wide with a park in the center , touches a
Silver
Lake Bridge now under construction , which will carry Bayard
Avenue
across Silver Lake to Dewey Beach .
Does
not this say the wooden bridge on the 1929 postcard was built
in
1926.
A
1925 ad in the Wilmington Evening Journal for Rehoboth
Heights,
on
Silver Lake and Atlantic Ocean, already an established
section of
Rehoboth
Beach. .
In
1866 Rehoboth Heights was a beautiful farm, bound by Lewes
Canal,
Silver
Lake, once Newboulds Pond, and the Atlantic, was the pride of its
owner
who would not sell. Yet later he did sell, received $1500 and
was
pleased.
A few years later it brought $5000 and the purchaser was
considered
'crazy'. Then Robert Hinkley , the owner and builder of
Bellhaven
Hotel, paid $15,000 for the farm. 1925 a group headed by
Henry
Conant bought it for $45000 and began development of the 150
acre
farm. Streets, water and sewer have been added, as has electricity.
On
March 8th, 1927 town commissioners Major Harry
Satterfield, Hall
Anderson,
Fred Ross, Wm Sipple , Ralph Paynter, and Bill Tappan,
met
in the fire house to lay out a route for concrete streets
being
authorized
by Legislature. This route starts at First Street and Brooklyn
Avenue,
to Rehoboth Avenue, to the boardwalk and circle back to First
thence
to Lake Gerar on Lake Street at the Henlopen Hotel, out Columbia
Avenue
to Fifth Street.
As
Rehoboth Heights is annexed the street at Second Street and
Rehoboth
down Bayard Avenue to the county bridge across Silver Lake
will be
concrete.
Also it has been decided to close the town dump now at Lake
Gerar
and Irenee duPont's Lake Gerar project and will be filled, and
set
with
trees.
Abstract:
Wilmington News Journal newspapers 1924 to 1937.
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