HISTORY OF CAPE HENLOPEN
AND BEYOND
YEAR - ROUND HOMES
GAINING IN REHOBOTH
Rehoboth Beach is being
more and more an all year residence to many
Washington retirees.
Tall pines and surf breakers are one of the “ draws” we hear
time and time again from
those 'settling' here. A country atmosphere, tall trees, pine,
oak, dogwood and holy a
stones throw to the surf of the Atlantic Ocean which makes
Rehoboth unique.
Colonial antique homes
are preserved here and if not found here are sought out in the
Sussex County countryside, dragged, piece by piece, to a new
location at the beach, restored with the greatest of care to
become home. An example, at the Corkrans
Homestead, is the
century's old Paynter family home added to the old Marsh
Family
homestead , granddaddy to
them all, built in 1743 by Peter Marsh, yeoman. This home
is home to Colonel and
Mrs Wilbur Sherman Corkran.
The Steerett family
found their Gum family ancestors home, built 1806, 20 miles
away, at Frankford, moved it to 23 Henlopen Avenue , in six
pieces, and over six weeks
had it in Rehoboth. Their
children are a sixth generation to make it their home. The
structure today is much the same as it was when built, foundation
beams, original unfinished
logs of nearby forest, 20
inch wide floor boards. The handmade fireplace bricks came to
Rehoboth in bushel
baskets. The grandfather's old physician's counter with the
stacked
medicine bottles and pill
boxes is now the happy hour cocktail bar.
The Prew Savoy summer
home, 71 Henlopen Avenue, also has colonial charm,
named 'Chez Savoy'.
It was moved from Indian River, set in a nest of trees and shrubs
,
is said to have been the
first country post office in the state.
Another 1948
rehabilitation, Pine Reach Henlopen Acres, Dr. & Mrs
Radford
Brown, from Washington,
has original cypress shingles, wide pine floors, early hardware
and dentil moulding and
chair rails, also dated 1743.
Abstract: Wednesday, 13
October 1948, Wilmington Morning News, by Virginia
Cullen.
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