HISTORY OF CAPE
HENLOPEN AND BEYOND
TWO STONES IN A FIELD
The Baltimore Sun, Monday,
July 14, 1952 :
In a farm field in the
northeast corner of Wicomico county, near Packinghouse
Cornersin Delaware, off the road from Barren Creek Mill to
Sharptown Road, 3 miles north
of Barren Creek Mill,
sit two ancient weather beaten stone markers. One stone marks the
midpoint on the Peninsula
between the Atlantic and Chesapeake. The other is the eastern
anchor to the Mason Dixon
Line.
They go back to the mid
17th century and Cecilius Calvert, second Lord
Baltimore
and the New Amsterdam
Dutch. The Governor of New Amsterdam, Peter Stuyvesant, in
1659 sent Augustine
Heerman and Resolve Waldren to Maryland to discuss boundary lines.
The Dutch wanted a line
from Cape Henlopen due west across the peninsula and a line
north from the midpoint.
The section to the north and east would belong to the Dutch and
Maryland would have lands
south and west. Maryland declined this arrangement. Eighteen
year later, 1677, the Dutch
ceded all their American territory to the English. Charles II
of Maryland patent lands
north of the colony to a bother, James, the Duke of York, who
passed it on to William
Penn. This northern line sat in dispute and the matter tune over to
the
Privy Council which,
recommended to keep the 1659 line.
The English Revolution of
1688 drove James II from the throne. The colony of
Maryland passed through
several Calverts to Charles Calvert, 5th Lord
Baltimore. Then
William Penn died, his
colony went to his sons, and boundary dispute was resumed.
On May 10, 1732 a meeting
of Charles V, Lord Baltimore, and the Penns, it was
agreed to accept the 1685
Privy Council line. This agreement had mistakes as to the Cape
Henlopen location, then
called Cape Cornelius and the cape where the east west line began
was False Cape at Fenwick Island, Delaware, This matter was
legally solved with Maryland
loosing ground to Delaware
and east west line made permanent as it was.
Surveyors going north
from the east west midpoint got as far as 7 miles west of
New Castle Court House
and had a 5 mile error.
This is the time when
Calvert and the Penns brought in Jeremiah Dixon and
Charles Mason to determine
the boundary. They began work 15th November 1763 and
reached the east west
midpoint 25th June 1764 and they got it right.
Both of the midpoint
markers are called Crown Stones, having the Pen Arms and
Calvert Arms on the
sides.
Abstract The Baltimore
Sun , Monday July 14, 1952, the article signed by F.F.B.
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