Sunday, March 31, 2019

PROR REVOLUTION LEWES


HISTORY OF CAPE HENLOPEN AND BEYOND

PRIOR AMERICAN REVOLUTION LEWES TOWN HAPPENINGS

These very early news items from Lewes may not be of much importance but the account
the jewelry and it's 'posies' , whatever that is, is somewhat interesting. I take 'posies' to be
engravings on the rings.

Sunday, June 9, 1748

Dropt from Anne Church in Lewes, a pocket, wherein was a small box , with three gold
rings in it, and a pair of silver cloak clasps, a pair of large silver shoe buckles, two pair of silver sleeve buttons, with several other things. The posies of the rings are as follows; the
hair ring, ' In his breast my heart doth rest', One of the plain rings, ' Love Intire is my desire',
the other ' Content is a treasure'. The cloak clasp are marked EB. Whoever has taken them
up and will bring them to Daniel Church in Lewes, shall be handsomely rewarded . All
silversmiths or others to whom they may be offered to sale are desired to stop them.

The source appeared in the Sunday, June 9, 1748 Pennsylvania Gazette out of Philadelphia.

FRENWICK ISLAND LIGHTHOUSE


HISTORY OF CAPE HENLOPEN AND BEYOND

SUSSEX COUNTY

FENWICK ISLAND LIGHTHOUSE


One of the most famous landmarks of Sussex county is the Fenwick Island Lighthouse
which has thrown it's light beam 2 miles or more for a century out to sea faring mariners.

There was not much hustle and bustle of activity around Fenwick when it was built in 1857
under the direction of Captain William F. Reynolds, U. S. Army Engineers. In the late 1700's and mid 1800's there were numerous shipwrecks off the Fenwick seashores, so, the light
was set there to help the ship master around the dangerous coast.

The 1865 authorization by Congress for 10 acres in Delaware which held the sandstone land
marker of the Transpeninsular Line that made peace with William Penn and Lord Baltimore.

The original land site for the lighthouse was 600 square feet from the Maryland – Delaware
state line, then north into Delaware. In 1932, on the 10th of July, a 60 foot strip, running
east and west was transferred by May 11, 1932 Congress, for the construction of a road.
This tract of land sat one third mile from the surf, was a low dune covered with scrub oak
and beach grasses.

The 82-1/2 foot tall tower of white wash brick cost $23,784, the exterior conical wall is 27 inches at base and 18 inches at top. The interior conical wall, 7 inches thick, 8 feet in diameter, hold the spiral stairway to the lantern and watch walkway.

First light of the Fenwick Island Lighthouse came on August 1, 1859 and came from a
large whale oil lamp that took the service of two men for the next 75 years. Much later the lighthouse was changed over to electric which was generated by two diesel powered motors
and was much more superior than the oil lamps that had replaced the whale oil lamp in 1882.

The 1859 keeper was John Smith, W. R. Hall replaced him in 1861, and served seven years,
1869 the keeper D. H. Warrrington had an assistant Ed Pepper. Later keepers were Jame Bell,
John Gunn, john D. Bennett, Sam Soper, W. Sykes, Chester Grey and George Walker.

Lighthouse records report in 1878 the light needed two keepers that were employed but the
keep house was too small for both, so in 1881 a second keepers house was built, which housed
the keeper while the assistant keeper lived in the older keepers house.

It was 30 years before a wooden pile bridge was built to connect the island to the mainland.
The wooden bridge was 225 feet long, 12 feet wide with a 34 foot draw span. The 1500
square feet of land needed for this bridges abutments was deeded to the government by
brothers William and Frances Gum in 1928. The bridge was taken over by the state of Delaware which build a new more modern bridge in 1934. .



Prior to the bridge one had to use a large scow large enough for a team of horses and wagon,
and the driver needed to pull himself and team across by means of a pull rope. The summer
of 1958 new $200,000 bridge across the Assawomen Canal 100 yards north of the old
traffic hazard bridge.

During the Spanish American War in 1898 a telephone was connected to the Life Saving
Service was added by the National Defense Department and signal code flags were
furnished.

1899 saw the ' third order burner ' replaced with a 'forth order burner' that gave a light from
the lamp upon the lens rings and a much better light was projected from the lens.

October 21, 1940 3/4th of the lighthouse tract north of the road was sold to Charles
Gray.

Now, in 1959, a detachment of the Coast Guard Station at Indian River is in charge of
the Fenwick Island Lighthouse. At one time there was a Life Saving Station a mile and
half north of the Fenwick light, that was built there in 1891 and gave employment to
a captain and seven men, occupied by Captain Stration Schallinger, John Henry Bishop,
Charles Noble, Charles Derrickson, George Grise, Asher Tingle, John Burbage and James
Evans. This coast Guard Station was recently closed and all Sussex county Coast Guard
are now stationed at either Indian River or Lewes stations.


Abstract: Delmarva News, Selbyville, Thursday, August 6, 1959

BRYAN STEVESON


MILTON HISTORY

BRYAN STEVENSON, ALUMNUS, EASTERN UNIVERSITY

Eastern University is a co-ed Christian university in St. Davids, Pennsylvania, just a bit
west of Philadelphia on what we call 'The Main Line”. It is affiliated with American
Baptist Churches with undergraduate and graduate programs for interdenominational
Christian students. The University is accredited by the Middle States Commission on Higher
Education. The university’s parents are Eastern Baptist Theological Seminary, now Palmer Theological Seminary, born in 1925 as a department of the Seminary it became a separate
institution in 1952, moved to St. Davids as Eastern Baptist College, renamed Eastern College in 1972 and in 2001 was granted 'university status'.
The campus just west of Philadelphia in St. Davids was a 114 acre estate of the Walton
Family named Walmarthon. Warner Memorial Library is housed in the Harold Howard
Center, with it's Mazie Hall African American History Room. There is an Edison Room
for artifacts of Thomas Edison.

The university holds other sites in Center City Philadelphia, East Falls, Philadelphia,
Harrisburg, and Ripley, West Virginia.

Eastern has a men's soccer team, a woman's soccer team , basketball teams, volleyball
teams, lacross, men baseball team, woman's field hockey, softball, , tennis and golf
teams and a cross country track team.

Eastern has 3300 students, it's president is Ronald Matthews, colors maroon and white, motto “Faith, Reason and Justice”, the mascot being the Eagle

Bryan Stevenson a Milton, Delaware native is an alumnus and is the founder and director of
The Equal Justice Initiative.

Abstract: March 31, 2019 by Harrison Howeth for Milton Historical Museum, from the source WIKIPEDIA.

Saturday, March 30, 2019

DRULY TIDE STORM


HISTORY OF CAPE HENLOPEN

1831 DRULY TIDE

A significant date in Fenwick Islands history is January 15, 1831 when the Druly Tide
caused the drownings of many persons and animals . A report told the wind gust caused the waters to reach 13 to 18 feet above the usual level of the marshes. The Druly Tide was a
storm off the sea and was called that because a sea captain of Indian River Inlet by name of
Druly died in ths storm . At Lewes, this same storm was called Normans Flood, for a man named Norman who died at his 1812 home on the Henlopen Capes from the storm.

OCEAN OFF FENWICK FROZEN

Around 1895, a Fenwick area resident , Jim Bishop, drove a team of horses to a snow sleigh
on the Atlantic in a snow storm, the ocean being frozen in to chunks along the coast because
of a severe cold spell. This ice took several cottages off Hammck's Island near by Fenwick.
It was not until April that the ice cakes melted. A mill pond near Selbyville had 14 inch thick ice.

MONEY BANKS BEACH

A part of the beach not far from the lighthouse is called Money Banks beach for the fact that
lots of Spanish coins washed up by tides and breakers and gathered by beach residents who worked up the sands to secure up to $15.00 in silver coin.


Abstract: Selbyville Delmarva News, Thursday, August 6, 1959

CAPE HENLOPEN HISTORY


HISTORY OF CAPE HENLOPEN & BEYOND

THE LINE BETWEEN THE STATES

Perhaps the most famous boundary line in the nations history, thought by many
to be a boundary between slavery and free states, the Mason – Dixon Line, the
Transpeninsular Line or the North – South Line between Maryland and The Three Lower
Counties of Pennsylvania on Delaware, now Delaware, all the same line to a point.

Yes, the Point, The Middle Point, near Mardela Springs, where Mason and Dixon in 1768
set the “Crown Stones, that have the Coat of Arms of William Penn and Lord Baltimore engraved on them. Middle Point is also referred to as the Key Point of the Transpeninsular
Line.

There was a dispute in the 1680's between Penn and Lord Baltimore when Penn was granted
a land charter which overlapped Lord Baltimore's June 20, 1632 land charter. Charles
Calvert, the third Lord Baltimore , was notified of Penns Charter it was requested that he
make at meeting with Penn's agents to make a true division and separation of the provinces
of Maryland and Pennsylvania, according bounds and degrees already set and to set marks
to avoid all doubts.

Lord Baltimore did meet with either with William Penn or agents no agreement could be
reached, and, Penn, in order to have control of an access to the Atlantic Ocean, persuaded
the Duke of York to transfer lands west of the Delaware River to him. Within three years
the Duke of York was King James II of England, and William Penn now had Delaware, but
disagreements continued.. In 1732, an adjustment called for a boundary line to run due
west from Cape Henlopen , which was then at Fenwick Island, to a point midway on the
peninsula, Middle Point. From the point the boundary line is run to the northward to the
New Castle circle boundary between Delaware and Pennsylvania. This northward line is
to be marked by stone markers bearing the Coat of Arms of the proprietors to face the respective possessions. Then there was disagreement about the Delaware Pennsylvania Circle boundary which was settled in 1750 calling for the center of this circle boundary be the
court house in the center of New Castle on Delaware.

This is an abstract of Delmarva Heritage by history professor Salisbury State Teachers College
William H. Wrotten and appears in the Friday, December 19, 1959 issue of Salisbury Daily
Times newspaper, which has the “ rest of the story “ for person so interested.

1915 Cape Henlopen Ligh t Inquiry letter.


CAPE HENLOPEN HISTORY

CAPE HENLOPEN LIGHTHOUSE 1915

On Wednesday, February 19, 1915 , T. J. Rout, of the Fourth Lighthouse District, of
Philadelphia, sent a letter of inquiry to master mariners and representatives of all
maritime interest, asking for their views regards the Cape Henlopen Light Station which
is in danger of tumbling into the sea due to storms the last two seasons causing erosion .

During the 1914 summer extensive shore protection works were built and kept under
careful and continuous observation but it now appears future storm damage nay make it
necessary to arrange for aids to navigation in the vicinity.

In view of the situation, Rout has asked for answers to the questions;
      1. Do you consider the light at Cape Henlopen necessary to the safety of navigation in the vicinity ?
      2. Do you consider whether future arrangements of all the lights in the vicinity is desirable
        and can be made so as to avoid the necessity of maintaining or rebuilding Cape Henlopen Light.?
      3. Do you consider the light is absolutely necessary and a safe site cannot be found for
        it in the immediate vicinity and if the rearrangement of all lights in the vicinity
        is undesirable, whether the raising of the light at the Harbor of Refuge Station with
        proper increase of intensity will answer to purpose of navigation?
It is known that every maritime man in this vicinity is working for the rebuilding of the
Cape Henlopen Lighthouse set back several hundred feet, or, repairing bulkheads in
front to protect the light from future storms.


Abstract: The Wilmington Evening Journal, Wednesday, February 10, 1915.

Friday, March 29, 2019

FENWICK ISLAND SALT MINING


HISTORY OF CAPE HENLOPEN AND BEYOND

FENWICK ISLAND SALT MINING

1775 TO 1825

Between 1775 and 1825 Fenwick Island was known for it's salt springs and a salt

making enterprise of two young men, James and Jacob Breasure, who lived on the island

at that time. When they dug large holes in the sandy grounds, these holes soon filled with

salty water. They had large pans, four foot wide and eight foot long, set them on a brick arch

twenty inches high, then fill these pans with the salty water from the springs, and boil it.

When the water went off as a vapor, salt was left in the pans, which was put into barrels

and shipped to Philadelphia and sold for $6 a barrel.


Abstract: Selbyville Delmarva News, Thursday, August 6, 1959 article by David
J. Long.

1944 GERMAN POW'S AT LEWES CCC CAMP


CAPE HENLOPEN & BEYOND HISTORY

1944 GERMAN POW'S ARRIVE AT LEWES CAMP

Salisbury Daily Times, Wednesday, June 14, 1944:

Lewes, June 14:

The arrival here yesterday of the first German POW's to be used for labor in several Sussex
county factories created less disturbance than did the blocked proposal to bring Japanese American's labor last March.

The war prisoners are housed in the former CCC camp a mile out of town, practically
at Lewes' front door. Today, curious persons began passing by the camp but there were no
demonstrations or objections noticed. 60 of the prisoners here at the CCC camp will work at cannery and farm jobs. Stockley Brothers cannery at Rehoboth has been using 40 workers who come from Fort Delaware everyday under guard at the canning house and said they are good workers and get along well with civilians working there.

Other Sussex businesses , Houston White at Millsboro, Marrvel Packaging at Laurel,
Pearson Brothers at Seaford and Rehoboth's Stokely have contracted for the prisoners labor.

The fish processing company’s at Lewes beach had wanted labors also but the military said
they are too near Fort Miles.

DEATH OF THE CLOWN EMMETT KELLY


HISTORY IN GENERAL

DEATH OF WEARY WILLIE AKA EMMETT KELLY


Sarasota, Florida, March 29, 1979:


“The Clown”, Emmett Kelley, aka Weary Willie, who helped make the world laugh for
50 or so years, is dead. Around the world, friends and fellow performers paused a few

moments to rember him, but not for long as Kelley would say, “the show must go on'
.
He died of a heart attack in Sarasota, a circus town, at age 80, and was buried in his hometown

of Layafette, Indiana. His wife, Evi, of 24 years survives him.

His good friend, Reds Skelton, told the world, Heaven , God, and the Angels, needed a good
laugh.

His widow said Kelley is gone, but the show must go on and hopes the memories of him will
do so too.

Abstract: Wilmington News Journal , Thursday, March 29, 1979, article by Pat Leisner.

ATLANTIC CANNNG FIRE AT REHOBOTH 1917


REHOBOTH BEACH HISTORY

ATLANTIC CANNING COMPANY DESTROYED BY FIRE


September 20, 1917:

The large cannery at the edge of town has been burned on the third attempt by supposed
activities of German agents. The deputy Attorney General, D. J. Layton, is investigating
the fire.
` After two previous attempts to burn it down the large cannery pf the Atlantic Canning Company at the edge of town was destroyed by fire of incendiary origin early the
morning of Thursday, September 20, 1917.
Opinion is general that the cannery, the largest in the state, was destroyed by firebugs,
supposed to be German agents. An immense quantity of canned tomatoes was wiped out,
representing most of the seasons pack.
Deputy Attorney General D. J. Layton came here this morning to take charge of an
investigation. The loss is at least $200,000, partly covered by insurance. 18% of the
companies pack was reserved by the federal government as rations for the Army and Navy.
Governor John Gillis Townsend Jr., and Colonel Edmund Mitchell of Wilmington and
Rehoboth, are the owners of the Atlantic Canning Company.
Because evidence of two previous attempts to set fire to the cannery, it is believed the
destruction this morning marked success of incendiaries effort, since relations between management and employee are most pleasant. The company even supported a company baseball team during the season.
The first attempt to burn the cannery happened a month ago when a prowler was discovered
trying to start a fire in the building facing the canal and ten days ago a fire was discovered
and quickly extinguished without damage. This fire appeared to have be purposely kindled.
Additional watchmen had been hired as the the packing season had just ended and the plant
was to close down for the season, the foreigners, who come annually, paid off and ready to leave today for Baltimore where they live.
The watchman on duty this morning at 4 am discovered flames in the building along the Assawomon Canal and had made headway before he was able to sound an alarm. When the
Rehoboth firemen arrived it was evident the wooden buildings would be destroyed. Rehoboth
fire company was assisted by Lewes but were powerless to stop the flames or save anything.
Governor Townsend drove from Selbyville in his auto, arriving at 5 am.
The buildings were valued at $50,000 , the products destroyed at $150,000 of which there
was some insurance coverage. Several rail box cars on a siding at the plant were destroyed along with their canned goods cargo’s.
Earlier, about a month ago, the Rehoboth Canning Company , near by, was destroyed by fire .
Soloman Reis, Atlantic Canning plant manager said the factory will be rebuilt before the
next season comes about.
Tuesday night last, someone broke into the Lewes Packing Company plant and disabled it's largest and most important machinery.

ABSTRACT: WILMINGTON EVENING NEWS, SEPTEMBER 20, 1917

Wednesday, March 27, 2019

1999 Rehoboth Gets Ready for Summer in March


REHOBOTH BEACH IN MARCH 1999
HUSTLE TO GET READY FOR SUMMER

Tom King is working down his “ to do list “, order supplies, finish the painting, landscaping,

hire 26 workers, for the two stores of Kings Ice Cream in Lewes and Milton, which will open

before Easter this year.

Cynthia Small, director of Sussex County Tourism , said 5.1 million tourist come southern

Delaware each year, spending more than $573 million. 30% of these spent an overnight at

Delaware beaches with shopping hit the second pastime. The season sort of begins in April,

like Easter time. Summer only shops are opening . On good warm days the boardwalk is

near full, people smelling Threasher french fries, buying Dolly's saltwater taffy, calling for

near 8000 seasonal workers. Chesapeake Kite & Flag shop needs 12 sales people every day

in season. Beth Beckelmen of South Moon Under is filling racks of summer clothing. She

also needs a dozen sales people n season. Now hiring signs appear in almost ever store window
.
John Atwood, Books By The Bay, recently moved to a larger location with more foot traffic. He

too, figures Easter is the time the season starts. Families with young children make up a good
amount of business. 40 year old Atlantic Sands motel hires 75 season workers as does the

Beacon Motel in Lewes managed by Jenkie Lingo . Alan Fasnacht, the Rehoboth Funland

owner says he will open Mothers Day and will need 80 season workers.


Abstract: Wilmington News Journal Sunday, March 2, 1999
,

WILL ROGERS

DELAWARE HISTORY

WILL ROGERS IN PHILADELPHIA

1935


Wilmingtonian's attending the thirtieth annual diner of the Poor Richard Club at the

Bellevue Stratford in Philadelphia last night, Thursday, January 18, 1935, and saw Will

Rogers, cowboy humorist, and movie star receive the clubs gold meal to honor him as
“America's Advertising Ambassador” presented by H. H. Kynett, club president.

1500 diners heard Will Rogers speak, humorous and serious, of his views of national

problems, such as an addition to the Supreme Court , and joining the World Court

when we have enough of our own problems. Rogers talked a lot about President Roosevelt,
him doing a lot of cockeyed things but you have to love him when you meet him and he has

hold on the American people with his honesty of purpose. He also mention his thoughts on

Philadelphia’s 'Blue Law” , saying ' get out of town on Sunday' .

Abstract: Wilmington News Journal, Friday, January 18, 1935

CAPE HELOPEN HISTORY LEWES FORT 1915



CAPE HENLOPEN HISTORY



The Wilmington News Journal, Saturday , September 11, 1915, reports that

it has been reported in Lewes that Federal government engineers will soon begin plans

for a large fort to be built at Cape Henlopen near the sand dunes and that other

government work will also be done in and about the Delaware Bay entrance and the

government engineers here are surveying the roads and bridges of Sussex county for
the war department.

Source: page 2, 11 September 1915, New Journal , special correspondence of Every

Evening journal.

CAPE HENLOPEN HISTORY DR ORR 1890'S


LEWES HISTORY 1890'S

DR. WILLIAM PANYTER ORR, JR.

Dr. Orr's family has roots in Lewes stretched back to the late 17th century when the

pirate Captain Kidd dropped anchor at the Cape of Delaware Bay for over a week wile

he took on provisions and supposedly buried loot in the Cape Henlopen sands.

An ancestor of Dr. Orr's, William Orr, and other Lewes residents, went aboard Kidds

ship , purchased and brought ashore , some of the pirate loot. William Penn, head of the

Delaware colonies, found out about the exchange and had Orr and others arrested and

banned them from living in the coastal area. Although he was banished from Cape Henlopen

Orr never left town and his descendants continued to live in Lewes.

William Paynter Orr was born on March 14, 1857, according to the Delaware Pilot

newspaper, received education at Lewes schools, Pennsylvania Military College in Chester,

then West Point Academy. After graduating there he received a medical degree at

Philadelphia's University of Pennsylvania in 1884.

At first he had his medical practice in Rehoboth but soon came back to Lewes to become a

leading citizen and the resident physician at Delaware Breakwater Quarantine Station.


Abstract: Michael Morgan's Delaware Diary, Delaware Pilot , 12 February, 1897,
Delaware Coast Press, March 27, 2019.

1953 FLIGHT TO FREEDOM


UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE HISTORY
FLIGHT TO FREEDOM 1953

September of 1953, two months after an armistice , 21 year old Lt. No Kum-Sok, a
North Korean fighter pilot, defected to South Korea with a Russian MIG-15B aircraft.
Some months later Kum-Sok , now known as, Kenneth Rowe, was enrolled at the
University of Delaware, living in Brown Hall on the Green, earning a degree in engineering.

Before his defection he was 'trapped' in North Korea with no choice of a career, but had
passed an exam , accepted by the North Korean Naval Academy. He was at that time an
anti communist but there was no way out. Here he was sent to flight school, learning to
fly the MIG-15B , at that time the most advanced jet fighter aircraft in the world. He was in the first class to be trained by Soviet advisers in Manchuria, well hidden from western eyes and ears. By 1951 he was flying over the battlegrounds bu,t as he said, not really ready to
fly the plane.

Unknown to him, his mother had fled to South Korea, and here he was, alone, in a most
dangerous jobs in the world, a combat fighter pilot, flying more than 100 combat missions
during the duration of the war. These pilots flew until they died.

56 days after the armistice he made his decision to defect to the west flying out of Sunan in
the top secret MIG-15B and a 20% chance of success he did so .

At Kimpo Air Force Base his landing caught little attention until it rode to a stop in front
of a group of officers. He was taken in custody , the MIG whisked aware to a hanger.
Kum-Sok received a $100,000 reward from the U.S. Government for bringing the MIG
which he had no idea of while in North Korea. The MIG was flown by U. S. test pilots,
Major Chuck Yeager and Captain Tom Collins who reported the plane had some dangerous
flight characteristics and design flaws and was not 'pilot friendly'.

No Kum-sok, now Ken Rowe, worked a while with the American intelligence service in
Washington and traveled by train to his New York home passing the University of
Delaware in Newark where he enrolled in the College of Engineering earned a bachelor's
degree, continued his education with a degree in electrical engineering degree and became
a aeronautical engineer.

By now he was able to bring his mother from South Korea to live with him as he worked for
duPont, Boeing, Westinghouse, General Electric, married and built a family. While at U of D,
Prof. John A Munroe became friends and had Senator J. Allen Frear of Delaware have him
declared a U. S. citizen by President Eisenhower.

In 2000 he retired from Embry Riddle Aeronautical University and lives near it's campus
in Daytona Florida.

Abstract: January February 2019 issue of Graybeards Magazine.

Tuesday, March 26, 2019

MICKEY MOUSE BOOT


VETERANS HISTORY

1951 MICKEY MOUSE BOOT

The air tight boot came, with a patching kit in case a piece of shrapnel would cut into it, in

1951 to the Marines in the 1st Marine Division stationed in Korea. It was, 'boot, combat,

rubber, insulated' but called by all, 'the Mickey Mouse Boot', because the oversized

shape and black color gave the looks of Hollywood's Mickey Mouse comic character's

shoes. They soon proved valuable in preventing frozen feet, and whatever 'you' called them

mattered not. It was not a long distant marching boot but no one did much marching in the

inclement weather.

The concept was that body heat from the feet were stored as a vapor barrier between two

layers of felt lined rubber , keeping cold moisture outside, away from the Marine's feet
.
The wearer needed to change socks and dry his feet often to prevent frostbite.

The Mickey Mouse boots came to Korea in 1951 to 1952 and  frozen feet  cases  dropped .


Abstract: By Harrison H, January- February, 2019 , The Graybeards Magazine.

SHAD


CAPE HENLOPEN HISTORY

SHAD FISH

The Cape Gazette, Tuesday, March 26, 2019, “Viewpoints” has a photo by George A. Wolf,
from the George and Irene Casey postcard collection, of shad nets drying and mentions
Herring Creek in the south west corner of Rehoboth Bay being named such from the spring
spawning run for centuries of the Shad , known for it's delicate roe. This photo set a
question, “does everyone know what a shad really is” ? I doubt it , so here we go:

Meriam Websters says Shad is a noun, that the word shad. A shad fish is any of several fishes,
of genus Alosa, of the herring family, having a deep (fat) body, which migrates from salt water to fresh water to spawn. Since before the 12th century it has been a somewhat important food fish.

According to WIKIPEDIA, American Shad, is an anadromous, ( going from salt water to fresh water to lay eggs) clupeid fish ( like herring, sardine, menhaden and shad) of North America in the North Atlantic from Newfoundland to Florida. It's distant cousin is an North
American shad. The American Shad fed the American founders.

A shad can weigh from three to eight pounds and when cooked, boiled, fried or baked, having a delicate flavor without needing sauces, herbs or spices. Shad roe, the eggs of the
female shad, are considered a delicacy

Shad are usually in 'schools' of thousands on the water surface eating plankton or fish eggs
and at times small fish or shrimp. A female will produce more than 30,000 eggs that hatch
in 12 to 15 days depending on the temperature of the water.

Source: Meriam Webster dictionary and Wikpedia, both on the www.

WITCH HAZEL


WITCH HAZEL

Witch hazels, Hammelis, are a genus of flowering plants in the family
Hamamelidaceae, with four species in North America, mexicana, ovalis, virginisna,
and varnalis, one in Japan, japonica, and China , molis, all aka winterbloom.

Witch hazels are a deciduous shrub growing to 10 to 25 feet, leaves are oval, The 'virginian' blooms September to November, other species, January to March. It's twigs
are used as a divining rod. Residue oil's are a remedy for psoriasis and eczema , as a
deydration of skin salve, insect bites and poison ivy lotions and in aftershave lotions.

The extract includes calcium oxalate, gallotannins, safrole , used externally on
hemorrhoids and minor skin irritations. The extract is obtained by boiling the stems to
produce decoction which was first sold in Essex, Connecticut in 1866.

Abstract: In reference to Laurie Stuchlik's photo March 26th, 2019, Cape Gazette.
Reference WIKIPEDIA.

Monday, March 25, 2019

DE BRAAK HISTORY FROM LONDON EVENNG MAIL 1798


CAPE HENLOPEN HISTORY

1798

DE BRAAK HISTORY


The Monday, July 2, 1798, London England Evening Mail newspaper reported

that Mr. Vincent Low who arrived London from Cape Henlopen yesterday afternoon

brought news of the loss of the Britanic Majesty's sloop of war, De Braak, Captain Drew,

master, which overset in Old Kiln Roads about 4 o'clock, afternoon Friday last, in

fine seas t the time, under mainsail, and, reefed topsails, about to drop anchor, her boat at

her side, waiting for the Captain, who intended to go ashore at Lewes Town when a sudden

slew of wind laid her down on her beam ends, filled with sea, and went down with Drew
,
and the ships company, except for the boatswain and 25 others who escaped in the life boat.

The DeBraak had left the fleet off the Western Islands for some strange reason and

had been unable to rejoin the convoy.

De Braak's crew of 85 persons in all, half of them survived included those aboard a

prize ship she had taken, leaving the Prize Master, a midshipman, and boatswain.

Captain Drew's lady was in New York where she was every hour in anxious

expectation of the happiness of meeting him.


The 'prize' lies at the cape's fort.


Abstract: London England's, Evening Mail, Monday, July 2, 1782, courtesy of
Terry Hansen of Facebook .

1935 DeBraak Salvage effort


CAPE HENLOPEN HISTORY

1935 NEWSPAPER ITEM REGARDS DE BRACK HUNTERS

Friday, July 19, 1935, Daily Mail , Newspapers.com, reports a piece of a sunken
British hull located off Cape Henlopen , believed to be the De Braak, has been found and
equipment is being rushed to the site to raise the vessel from t he shifting sands of the
Breakwater Harbor. The piece found by a diver is a carved wood railing, undeniable,
from the De Braak according to Randolph MacCracke, a great grandson of the De Braak's
skipper.
This led the leaders of the salvage operation , Charles Calstead of Atteboro,
Massachusetts and Richard Wilson, of Providence, Rhode Island, to rush in equipment
to raise the wreck. The diver, Harry Morgan, of Florida, reports the wreck lies half
buried in sand on the bay floor.

Hailing from the West Indies, Captain James Drew the skipper in command was
seeking anchorage at the capes when a wind gust turned her over, she fast filling with the sea and sunk with 40 sailors and a cargo of gold loot from two Spanish galleons.

All during the 1800's the wreck attracted treasure seekers and fifty year ago a stock
company in Philidelphia sold stock for $25 a share anf after a large sum had been spent
with no results, shares fell to ten cents, the search was abandoned. Early in 1930's the
Baltimore Derrick and Salvage Company of Baltimore tried to raise the wreck, and the misfortune of one vessel burning to sea level, another grounded and beat to pieces, caused
another failure.


Abstract: Friday, July 19, 1935, Daily Mail, Newspaperabstracts.com

Sunday, March 24, 2019

CHESAPEAKE BAY JEFFERSON ISLAND


CHESAPEAKE BAY HISTORY

JEFFERSON ISLAND AT POPLR HARBOR.

President Roosevelt to visit the Jefferson Island Rod and Gun Club Sunday, July 14, 1935

aboard the yacht duPont, flagship of Maryland's Conservation Commission. Other guest

will be cabinet members, and members of the House of Representatives.

The party will board the duPont at Annapolis Sunday morning for the trip across the

Chesapeake Bay to Jefferson Island of the Poplar Harbor island group just off Tilghmans

Island on the Eastern Shore, at the mouth of Eastern Bay. This is the first time Roosevelt

has ever visited the Jefferson Club. The Jefferson Rod and Gun Club members are

prominent Democrats under Senator Joseph T. Robinson, it's president.

Maryland's Governor Nice was invited , however, he is attending the convention of the

American Bar Association in Los Angeles.


Abstract: Tuesday, July 9, 1935, Baltimore Sun newspapers.

CAPE HENLOPEN HISTORY 1935 NAVY SUBMARINE BASE


CAPE HENLOPEN HISTORY

1935 NAVY BASE

United States Secretary of War, George Dern, has a request to Delaware

Governor Buck , asking for the Delaware Legislature to cede to the United States

government at tract of land at Cape Henlopen for a Navy submarine base. Governor
Buck has taken the matter up with Lewes Mayor Hocker to see if there be any objection

since Lewes Commissioners have the lease-hold control of the public lands on the bay front.

State Legislation is required, same as was done for the Quarantine Station, which is

` part of the tract wanted by the Navy. The United States Government has already approved

the establishment of the Navy Base at Cape Henlopen but just how soon the base would be

built in unknown.


Abstract: Wilmington News Journal , Friday, January 18, 1935

S-5 SUBMARINE


S-5 SUBMARINE


The Baltimore Sun, Friday, September 3, 1920 reports the Army transport ship,
The General Goethals, is standing by the S-5 U. S. Submarine, sunk in the Atlantic since
Wednesday September 1st, to keep the vessel near the surface, until a dozen Navy ships
from various ports, on the way to salvage her arrive. The subs position in the water is almost vertical, held fast by the General Goethals with cables.

It is not known how the S-5 became disabled nor how the General Goetheal learned of
the disaster.
***

September 2, 1920, out of New York, a message revealed more information on
the plight of the S-5 submarine in distress off the Cape Henlopen coast.
A telephone buoy tossing on the waves in the path of the Army Transport General Goethals,
whose crew heard the bell on the buoy ringing, lowered a boat, reached the buoy, tapped into
the telephone line, heard a message from the S-5, that it was in distress and sinking, air running short and their machinery damaged. Need help.
The General Goethals then stood by, sent messages and kept communications by the telephone on the buoy with the S-5.
In Farmington, Connecticut, an amateur wireless operator also heard the message and
made it public and that night a wireless message from the Army vessel said the crew of the
S-5 had received air by the crew cutting a hole in the subs hull to place a air hose into her.

Another message from the Navy told that two destroyers were on their way, the
Preston and the Breckenridge , left Norfolk at 11 pm with divers and apparatus aboard.,
will reach the scene about 2 am. The battleship, Ohio, reported by wireless that she was
on her way with an electric drill and acetylene torch on board.

***
The U.S. S-5 S Submarine, left Boston Monday, September 1, 1920 after being
placed in commission . The S-5 was built at the Fore River Yards of Bethlehem Ship
Building Corporation in Quincy, Massachusetts, and is one of the newest submarines
built for the navy. It is 240 feet long, 23 feet wide, and a cruising radius of 5000 miles with maximum 15 knots speed. It is equipped with two quick firing guns, six torpedo tubes and two diesel engines.

Abstract: Friday, September 3, 1920 Baltimore Sun newspaper.




Saturday, March 23, 2019

CAPE HENLOPEN HISTORY S-5 SUBNARINE SINKS OFF COAST.


CAPE HENLOPEN HISTORY 1920

U.S. S-5 SUBMARNE SINKS OFF DELAWARE COAST

The S-5 U.S. Submarine, bound for Baltimore, sinks off Cape Henlopen , 55 miles east of
the Fenwick Shoals Lightship and lay submerged 35 hours before being discovered.

The crew, all but two officers, were rescued from the undersea craft after being submerged
42 hours according to a 3 am radio message received at the Philadelphia Navy Yard Friday,
September 3, 1920.

The S-5 , with a crew of four officers, 26 sailors, was bound for Baltimore to stimulate Navy recruitment to complete the quota of the crew, and is now lying 55 mile east of Fenwick Shoals lightship in the Atlantic Ocean off Cape Henlopen, disabled and submerged after it went down Wednesday morning at 10 am.

An Army transport, the General Goethals, is standing by, pumping air into the sub and has
a precarious hold , keeping the vessel near the surface.

Commander of the S-5 is Lieut. Charles M. Cook, Jr., who was in command of the U.S.
E-2 when an explosion occurred in January, 1916, killing five crew men.

Commander Northcroft, Navy recruiting bureau, had arrangements made to dock the submarine at East Falls and Eastern Avenue for inspection by the public.

Abstract: Baltimore Sun, Friday, September 3, 1920

RADIUM


RADIUM



Another topic under discussion by the 8 am Wescoats Corner & Five Points Arby's coffee

group needing instant research.

Radium is a chemical element, Ra 88, is silver white, turns black when it hits air, and is

radioactive, discovered by Marie and Pierre Curie in 1898. It is found in uranium and is

not necessary for living organisms and has adverse effects . It's only use is in nuclear

medicines. Radium releases radon gas and gamma rays which causes cancer and bone diseases.

Abstract: WIKIPEDIA

RADIUM GIRLS


RADIUM GIRLS


Another topic under discussion at the 8 am Wescoats Corner & Five Points Arby's coffee
group, Saturday morning the 23 of March, 2019, is ' The Radium Girls ' , known in
the 1920's, and needing instant research.

The radium girls were female factory workers who contracted radiation while painting
watch dials with luminous paint in Orange, New Jersey, Ottawa, Illinois and
Waterbury, Connecticut.

The women workers had been instructed to ' point ' their brush with their lips to get a fine
point and were told the paint was harmless. The ' paint' was made from powdered radium,
gum arabic and water. The New Jersey women sued in 1928 and the case was settled ' out
of court' and the Illinois women won a suit in 1938.

The luminous paint material is extracted and purified from Carnotite ore mined at Paradox
Valley, Colorado and other mines in Utah. Near 4000 women were painting watch faces with
radium for payment of one penny and a half to lip, dip and paint for each of 250 dials
a day. Most of these workers later suffered anemia, fractures, necrosis, but the ailment was ignored.

Litigation was difficult, no lawyer wanted to take on the big radium company and the courts were slow to review the cases which when heard were appealed, appealed and appealed.
In 1939 the U. S. Supreme Court refused ti here the case.

The five workers who were known as ' The Radium Girls ' were Grace Fryer, Edna Hussman, Katherine Schaub and two sisters Quinta McDonald and Albina Larice.

Abstract: WIKIPEDIA

CAPE HENLOPEN HISTORY TEST COURSE


CAPE HENLOPEN HISTORY

1920

TEST AREA FOR PHILADELPHIA BUILT SHIPS

Just off Cape Henlopen Lighthouse, the Breakwater and Cape May is the official test

course for vessels built in Philadelphia. To let the public know when the course is “ in use “
red flags are flown from steel towers on shore and the ends of the Breakwater. White

buoys set between the two breakwaters define the course. These test were usually made on

Sundays, but in the last war they were a daily occurrence.

The vessel being tested will arrive at full speed at a shore tower with a red flag, and race to

the red flag at the end of Breakwater, making a run of one mile. Other testing is done outside

the official course.

In these same waters, ocean bound steamers have their compass adjusted by officials

before going out to sea. Vessels are put through test involving every point of the compass
,
circling maneuvers, runs north, east, south and west, to get the compass in an exact

position.


Abstract: The Baltimore Sun, Sunday, November 14, 1920

Friday, March 22, 2019

1920 COAST GUARD STATIONS


CAPE HENLOPEN HISTORY

COAST GUARD STATIONS ON DELAWARE'S COAST 1920




In addition to the lighthouses and the Radio Compass Station the U. S. has six Coast Guard

Stations one either side of Henlopen Light and four farther down the 37 miles of coast,
patrolled at night by 60 Coast Guard , Ten men serve each station. One at each station

takes his turn in the lookout, scanning the sea for distress signals. Each station is fitted with

a self bailing, self righting lifeboat . During the patrols surfmen find lost children, bodies,

trunks washed ashore, a are called upon to save bathers to far out to make shore.


Abstract: Baltimore Sun, November 14, 1920 by Har

1920'S DELAWARE BREAKWATER LIGHT



CAPE HENLOPEN HISTORY 1920

DELAWARE BREAKWATER LIGHT


At the Delaware Breakwater is a lighthouse watched by two keepers, one on duty for 10

days, and one on shore leave for 10 days, out of thirty.

At sundown the starting of the revolving red and white light begins with a gill of alcohol

being held over a cup of oil and heated , then the oil runs through tubes to a large heated

asbestos mantle entered in the powerful lens which is then lighted, burns for the night, using about
a gallon of oil. A mechanism in the center of the lighthouse revolves the light, acting much like a

clock with a long pendulum on which is a 75 pound weight, revolving the light throwing red and

white light for miles out.

Abstract: Sunday, November 24, 1920, Baltimore Sun by Harrison H, March 22, 2019.

1920 CAPE HENLOPEN LIGHTHOUSE HISTORY.



CAPE HENLOPEN HISTORY

THE LIGHTHOUSE IN 1920

In the past 10 years the Federal government has spent over $200,000 to build 'jetties'
around the Cape Henlopen Lighthouse just off the Delaware Bay Breakwater. The old lighthouse
erected by the British in 1760 is in danger of being washed away.

Timbers of piling, nailed, bolted and lashed together that once made a 500 foot long jettie
are now warped, twisted and deeply imbedded in sand, allowing heavy seas to break over it and
wash away the lighthouse foundation. Pine trees have been allowed to grow on the dune to help stay
the erosion to no avail. The jetties last no time at all and give but little protection.
Originally, the lighthouse stood 300 foot from the breakers in high ground The lighthouse
holds expensive glass prisms and mechanism, a plate of silver as a reflector, worth $2000, and
in the keepers house is a grandfathers floor clock, still keeping time, left by the British many years
ago. It is made of mahogany by a Boston clock maker.

There is a movement to save the structure by Delaware's Congress, the state historical society and interested individuals, asking the Navy for some of the German war ships recently
given the United States and the obsolete Navy battleships now used for target practice, with which
to build jetties around Cape Henlopen.

Hiram Burton, former Delaware Congressman, who lives five mile from the Capes, has
said the Henlopen Light House was built in 1760 one mile from the ocean breakers. That's when Hen and Chicken Shoals, which reach four miles toward Rehoboth, was part of the beach, separated by a shallow channel, making it a 'hammock', where cattle were grazed in the summers. The
building of the Breakwater has caused the tides to strike the beach in a way to cause erosion.

Burton and his followers call for a jettie north about a mile or so , from the lighthouse, from shore to Hen and Chicken shoals , slanting slightly south to take the currents in back of it. This is where the old German war ships and the Navy's obsolete battleships come into play. Fill them with stone, sink them in the proper direction and they become bulwarks for ages.

Recently the Navy built a radio compass station within a stones throw of the lighthouse which directs navigation at sea, giving bearings to vessels going into the Delaware Bay that do
not need to wait for a pilot to board to make entrance to the Breakwater.

Abstract: Baltimore Sun, Sunday, November 14, 1920 by Harrison H, March 22, 2019.