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.
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