Sunday, July 7, 2019
ON THE ROAD TO FENWICK ISLAND
HISTORY OF CAPE HENLOPEN
AND BEYOND
ON THE ROAD TO FENWICK
ISLAND FROM REHOBOTH
February 9, 1915:
Wilmington Evening Journal :
A hundred year ago is was
difficult to travel between these two beach towns, a sandy
road of wild sand dunes
from Dewey Beach southward to Fenwick Island, an inlet at
Indian River Inlet with no
bridge, and a new town under construction , Bethany Beach.
By horse or foot it was
difficult to traverse the round about way and autos needed to use
the highways on the
western side of the inland bays, through Millsboro.
In 1915, The Delaware
Public Lands Commission, issued a report to urge the building of
a
coastal road between
Rehoboth and Fenwick, across the wicked dunes that “will return a
thousand fold to the
state for every dollar spent”. Yes, they knew of the many
obstacles
that lay in the way for an
early 20th century road, sandy, unpaved, rutted and
impassable
in wet weather. Plus,
until 1911 there were no roads to feed western or northern traffic
to
the coastal highways. That
came about when T. Coleman du Pont built his own hard surface
road north to south in
mid state. Still this event did not directly benefit at coastal
road
from Rehoboth to Fenwick.
Farm produce, at that time '”marsh hay grass' was the only
money maker with a small
bit of cattle grazing.
Oceanside vacation homes
did catch a few eyes of the more wealthy property owners and
the Indian River Inlet
needed to be covered. The commission knew they were late with these
decisions but WW I delays,
squabbling politics and economic difficulties stood in the path.
It was 1939 before a hard
surface road appeared with a bridge over the inlet, but, it did,
“return a thousand fold
of every dollar spent”.
Abstract: 9 February,
1915, Wilmington Evening News, and Michael Morgan's Delaware
Diary, Delaware Coast
Press, 2019.
Saturday, July 6, 2019
MELENIA TRUMP
RECOGNITION TO MELANIA
TRUMP
God Bless BRAD DOWNEY
and her SLOVENIAN hometown
for the commissioned
statue of Melenia to be built.
Let us hear the status
and location of this monument from time to time.
1876 JULY 4TH AT LEWES
HISTORY OF LEWES DELAWARE
LEWES 4TH JULY
CELEBRATION. 6 JULY 1876.
The Wilmington Daily
Commercial , 6 July 1886, commented, the 4 July 1876
celebration deserves
more than than a passing notice. Most notable was the parade
of the Continental Guards
organized two weeks before by Captain S. S. Bookhammer
with Continental
Uniforms, cocked hats, knee britches, buckles of brass, and
all.
In 1786, 100 years
before before, the celebration of the signing of the Declaration
of
Independence, was a bit
more subdued.
After several battles won
by the British, British Captain Andrew Snape Hamond ,
has the HMS Roebuck at
the Delaware River , somewhat in charge of British shipping and
the control of a 'group'
of Tory's proclaim Loyalty to the King Of England and had
reported to his
commanding officer, “ I have the pleasure to inform you that
the
inhabitants of the Lower
Two Counties on the Delaware have had 3000 arms taken
up and declare
themselves in favor of the British government”.
Hamon was correct about
this support to the British in Kent and Sussex on the Delaware,
but failed to note the Lewes residents were strongly in support of
the American Independence and the Patriots of Lewes organized
and led by Henry Fisher, William
Peery, in resistance to
the British. The American Patroit group was able to carry on
the dominance of the Delaware Bay and River and lower
Sussex by actions in the shipping with much needed war
supplies to Philadelphia and the British Forces.
On the day the signing
of the Declaration, Lewes was under siege. W illiam Adair
announced in his 1776 Journal, “Independence Proclaimed, by
the head of “ye Delaware Battalion , July 10, with 3
Cheers”. The days later, July 20, Independence of Lewes was
declared by three 'toast'
of the their three cannon.
The 100th
anniversary, 1876, Lewes made the celebration the “Greatest
Ever” and
2000 people attended. The
Wilmington Daily Commercial reported after political speeches
100 guns of the Guards
were fired and a parade was made with a draft of four horses
which filled the streets
and all moved to the beach at dusk to see fireworks of shooting
stars and combinations of
brilliant effect.
Abstract: Wilmington
Daily Commercial, July 6, 1867, a column of Delaware Diary,
by Michael Morgan,
Delaware Coast Press on July 3, 2019 .
Friday, July 5, 2019
JOHNNY CARSON REPLACES JACK PAAR
THE MORNING SHOW TV
HISTORY
JOHNNY CARSON TO REPLACE
JACK PAAR
Monday, December 13,
1954 : Baltimore Evening Sun, Baltimore , Maryland.
Johnny Carson, a young
Hollywood comedian, will take over for Jack Paar, as host
of the “Morning Show”,
January 3, while Paar is on vacatoion in Cuba.
Carson, who won critics
acclaim last season when he took over the Red Skel ton
Show on a four hour
notice when Skelton fell ill. Johnny Carson first won an
audience
in Corning , Iowa while
in high school as an magician and ventriloquist.
During WW II as a Navy
Ensign , served on the USS Pennsylvania, as an
Entertainer, was
discharged in 1949 , and became a television announcer in
Omaha.
While there he married
Jody Wolcott and headed toward Hollywood. Last summer he was
emcee for the quiz show
“Earn Your Vacation”
Corning is the County
Seat of Adams County Seat Iowa , sits at the intersection of
Highway U. S. 34 and Iowa
148 southwest of Omaha . Carson is also the 1877 birthplace
of Daniel Webster
Turner, Governor of Iowa 1931 to 1933. It was a settlement of
French
Icarians on the Icaria
Lake.
Home of the “Johnny
Carson Birthplace Society”, and the annual celebration of
“Le Festival De
L'Heritage Francais”.
Abstract: Baltimore
Evening Sun, Monday, 13 December, 1954 and Wikipedia.
Tuesday, July 2, 2019
JUNCTION & BEAKWATER RAILROAD ENGINE HOUSE,
RAILROAD HISTORY
JUNCTION & BREAKWATER
LEWES ENGINE HOUSE.
Monday, 21 August, 1882
: Wilmington, Delaware Daily Gazette :
A new engne house for the
Junction amd Brealwater Railroad has been opened at Queen
Ann's Street and Pilot
Town Road, Lewes.
The Railroad is now
building it's own box cars with several already in use.at this
time.
It is the intrntion to
erect a large machine shop along the line somwhere yet not
decided
upon.
Abstract: Daily Gazette,
Wilmington, Delaware,, 21 August, 1882.
Saturday, June 29, 2019
REHOBOTH BEACH HISTORY OF MOSQUOTOES
REHOBORTH BEACH HISTORY
1882 THRU 1897
WHEN MOSQUOTOES PLAYED,
FRISKED AND FROLOICKED
Rehoboth Sunday Star,
Daily Gazette , August 20, 1882:
Since our last news a
week ago the trials and trouble has been mosquitoes, taking
the breeze from mother
ocean in piece. The sound of the hum of the peasky insect
early every morning,
throughout the day, the stinginging of it's bites, was the last
note
which lulled a weary one
to rest.
Hundered of guests left on
this account . “Smothers” , beach bond fires and netting
were common everywhere.
“Hope” kept many here and that hope came yesterday mornning
troughout the day when a
ocean breeze came and the mosquitoes left.
Abstract:: Wilmington
Daily Gazette, Monday, August 21, 1982:
Friday, June 21, 2019
1918 GERMAN U-BOATS RAID ATLANTIC COAST. MAY TO JUNE.
HISTORY OF CAPE HENLOPEN
AND BEYOND
GERMAN U-BOATS RAID
ATLANTIC COAST
MAY THROUGH JUNE 1918
Tuesday, 4 June, 1918:
Oshkosh, Wisconsin, Northwestern, United Press Summery.
Ships sunk by German
U-Boats last coastal raid;
WINNECONNE, a 1869 ton
steam freighter owned by
American Trans-Atlantic- Company of New York with
crew of 28, off Cape May
26 May; The HERBERT L PRATT, 6000 ton, steamer tanker,
Atlantic Refinery , 38
crew members, Tampico to Philadelphia, by torpedo yesterday,
5 miles south of Overfalls
off Cape Henlopen, lost one crew member; TEXEL, 3210
ton, owned by a Dutch
Company, flying flag of The United States, with crew of 38,
from
West Indies to an American
Port with a $2,000,000 cargo of sugar, Sunday, off New York
Harbor, crew landed
Atlantic City early today; a 1791 ton schooner, EDWARD H. COLE,
owned by Crowell &
Thurlow Boston, with crew of 11, from Norfolk to Portland, ME.,
50 miles off Barnegat,
Sunday afternoon, crew landed at New York yesterday ; the
JACOB M. HASKEL, 1778
ton schooner, of Crowell & Thurlow, Boston, crew of 10,
Boston to Norfolk, fifty
miles off Barnegat, Sunday afternoon by shell fire; ISABEL
B. WILLEY, 611 ton
schooner, of Atlas Company, crew of 8, Perth Amboy, to
Newport News, 26 May,
between Cape Henlopen and Cape Charles; HATTIE W. DUNN,
365 ton schooner, Dunn &
Elliott, Thomaston, ME., crew of 6, Cape Henlopen and
Cape Charles, 25 May;
EDNA, 325 ton schooner,
C. A. Small, Machlas, ME., Philadelphia to Havanah, sunk off
of Winterquarter Lightship, between Cape Henlopen and Cape
Charles, 25 May;
HAUPPAUGE, 1339 ton,
schooner, with crew of 10, no records. Ships lost, believed
to have been sunk;
CAROLINA, 5093 ton,
passenger and freight steamer, of New York and Porto Rica
Steamship Company, 220 passengers and crew of 120, Porto
Rica to New York, sent wireless she was being shelled 150 miles
of f Sandy Hook at 7 pm Sunday.
No details for SAMUEL W.
HATHAWAY , 1038 ton
schooner, of Crowwell
& Thurlow, Boston, with a crew of nine.
Abstract: Oshkosh
Northwestern, Oshkosh, Wisconsin, Tuesday, 4 June, 1918 : TO:
HISTORY OF CAPE HENLOPEN
AND BEYOND AT CAPE GAZETTE.
Sunday, June 16, 2019
WRECK OF THE SCHOONER SARAH B. LAWRENCE
HISTORY OF SEAWRECKS
SARAH B LAWRENCE
Delaware Breakwater,
Delaware 10 February 1910 :
A 60 mph terrific gale
wind has the four masted schooner Sarah B. Lawrence, out of
Newport News, for Boston, with a cargo of coal, aground on the
Hen and Chicken Shoal
of Cape Henlopen and is
being pounded to pieces by the wild surf.
The crew of nine men and
the captains wife were taken from her just as she broke in
half by Cape Henlopen
Life Savers and landed at Lewes.
The government wireless
system was put in action and calls were made from Sandy
Hook to Norfolk for
cutter assistance. The Cape Henlopen Life Savers needed the help
of a Breakwater tug to get their launch to the schooner for the
rescue which was sinking as they
reached the her. The crew
and lady were huddled on the fore house of the sunken vessel.
Ropes and life preservers
were brought into use. The rescue took several hours to effect
and the survivors were
made comfortable it the tug then landed at Lewes.
Abstract: Washington.
D.C. Evening Star, Wednesday, 10 February, 1909.
Saturday, June 15, 2019
HERBRT L PRATT, OIL TANKER SUNK BY GERMAN U-BOAT 1918
HISTORY OF SHIPWRECKS
AMERICAN TANKER STEAMER
HERBERT L. PRATT
MEXICO TO PHILADLEPHIA
WITH OIL.
Abstract: Tuesday,
4 June 1918, Washington D. C. Evening Star
Philadelphia, PA., June
4, 1918:
The American Tanker Steamer
Herbert L. Pratt, Mexico for Philadelphia with a cargo
of oil was sunk by a German
U-boat, off Cape Henlopen and lays in the mouth of Delaware
Bay. The British tanker Arco was also fired upon by the sub, but
being light,
made her escape and was
past Reedy Island last night by 10 pm.
Within 20 minutes of the
Pratt sinking U.S. Naval vessels gave chase to the sub a short
time later fores upon
an undersea object but thee is no report of the outcome of the
occurrence.
The Pratt crew was landed
at Cape Henlopen' s Fourth Naval Station and cared for that
night.
The Pratt is four miles
south by southeast of the Cape Henlopen Light House, her
stern can be seen out of the water and she appears she can be
raised .
Friday, June 14, 2019
1913 NEW LEWES FIRE ENGINE
HISTORY OF LEWES FIRE
COMPANY
THE NEW 1913 AMERICAN
LAFRANCE FIRE ENGINE IS PURCHASED.
At the garage of
William Walsh on this December evening much excitement was
noticed as a new American LaFrance Fire Engine was delivered.
The gasoline driven fire
engine had been purchased
by the Lewes Fire Department for $4750.00 from a company in
Elmira, New York . The
1913 Wilmington Evening News made note that the vehicle was
of the newest design and
will reach the speed of 40 mph. It carried 7 men, had at least a
1000
feet of water hose, two
40 gallon chemical cylinders, two 3 gallon extinguisher, a
twenty
foot extension ladder,
Big excitement was had
when being unloaded when it caught fire which was extinguished
quickly.
The new fire wagon was
driven about the area to be shown off and let residents know the
Lewes Fire Department was ready to fight fires.
In 1886 Ebe Lynch
organized and was chief of the Lewes Fire company, housed at
the corner of Third and
Chestnut Streets, then the Town Hall. They had 100 feet of water
hose,
a set of ladders and a
horse drawn chemical wagon with gleaming copper chemical tanks
The 30 gallon tank was
filled with water and sodium bicarbonate so that when a small
tank
of sulfuric acid was
added it produced carbon dioxide to send the water to the fire.
Abstract: Delaware
Diary by Michael Morgan in Delaware Beaches Delaware Coast Press,
Wednesday 12 June 2019.
STEAMER AMERICA WRECKED OFF SPAIN COAST.
HISTORY OF SHIPWRECKS
NEW & OLD
THE STEAMER AMERICA
WRECKED
Castellon, Spain, 10
February 1909 :
The Steamer America has
been wrecked off the coast of Castellon Province,
sixty of her crew and
passengers were saved.
The Steamer America was
well known in Brooklyn until 1904 when she made her last voyage
to Brooklyn from Marseilles as one of the Fabre Line
Steamers. On this
voyage she had over 1000
Italian immigrant’s aboard, broke down and drifted a
fornight
then pocked up and towed
by the Italian Freight Steamer Dinnemora to the Bermudas,
hence, from the Bermudas
to Brooklyn with the Italian immigrants by Luckenback Tugs.
In 1881 she was launched
as the Britannia by the Royland shipbuilding yards at
Liverpool. She was an iron, single screw , schooner rigged
vessel, with three decks and lots of steerage with a small
number of passenger cabins. 328 feet long, 40 foot wide,
depth of hold of 23.4 feet . Her owner was Compagnie
Francaise de Navagigation a Vapeurs and she ran the Marseilles
to Brooklyn service of the Ferbe Line with a sister ship,
Neustria, presumed lost at sea since she left Brooklyn last
October and has not been heard of.
Since being retired by the
Brooklyn run, America has traded with Spanish and
Portuguese ports with
limited passengers and freight service.
Abstracts: Wednesday,
10 February, 1909, Brooklyn Daily Eagle, New York.
Thursday, June 13, 2019
1935 FIRST FISHNG REEF
ARTIFICIAL FISHING REEF
1ST BUILT 1935
Friday 4 February, 1966,
Charles H. Vaughan, reading from the booklet, “Pennsylvania -
Reading Seashore Lines” makes the claim that the first
artificial fishing
reef was begun off the
southern tip of New Jersey.
Long Island anglers lay
claim their reef of 1950 was first.
Long before artificial
reefs, fishermen found the most consistent catches are made
in the vicinity of old ship
wrecks well situated on the bottoms.
Early spring 1935, Cape
May - Wildwood Partyboat Association's president, Robert
Pierpoint, already aware that South Jersey fishing is better
than other northern points of
Cape Henlopen, but feels
a fish preserve will create a rest and feeding place and have a
positive effect for South
Jersey's fishing
The U.S. War Department
granted a fishing ground, four square miles, 1935 for the
planting of old boats,
autos, railroad ties, old Christmas trees , medal tanks, drums,
and debris for shell fish to cling to and form vast colonies of
aquatic life. The first vessel was
a 183 foot sand barge sunk
in September 1935, folowed by three other wrecks.
Stormy weather and ice
delayed work last fall. It takes almost three months for a
breeding ground to
develop.
When complete there will
be a resting and feeding ground for millions of fish and
recently a fishing
preserve was started off Atlantic City. We get no information of the
Long Island project.
Abstract: Friday, 4
February, 1966, Philadelphia Inquirer.
Wednesday, June 12, 2019
1498 CAPE HENLOPEN REFUGE FOR JOHN CABOTS MUIINOUS CREWS
HISTORY OF CAPE HENOPEN
AND BEYOND.
IN 1498 CAPE HENLOPEN
BECAME REFUGE OF THE MUTINOIS CREWS OF THE ENGLISHMAN EXPLOR JOHN
CABOT.
Captain John Cabot
returned to King Henry VII 's England early fall of 1498 and
reported he had found the
western sea passage to Asia, the rich lands, of The Great Khan,
2100 miles west of
Ireland. However this was unproven as Cabot had brought back no
silks
nor spices. Jolly good
sport, King Henry VIII . excepted the lands he did prove to have
found as Captain of the
ship Mathew.
This lands turned out to
be Cape Breton, Nova Scotia. The crew of Mathew, 18 men
had landed 24 June 1497,
which brought Captain John Cabot 10 pounds and a pension of
20 pounds a year as
reward. At that time of the year the weather was warm and green
but
Cabot was stead fast he
had reached northeast Asia.
King Henry VIII figured
Cabot had found someplace of value and the next year
outfitted two vessels
with 800 men who reached Baffin Land. Inuktitut, aka,
Qikigtaaluk,
Candian territory.
Cabot continued north
until the cold and ice caused his men to muntiny and bring
the vessels back
southward to Cape Henlopen for refuge.
Abstract: Philadelphia
Inquirer, Sunday, 9 August, 1959.
Monday, June 10, 2019
MCCXXIX 1219
1219 MCCXIX YEAR.
The year 1219 was an
ordinary year which began on Tuesday of the Julian
Calendar. Evidently the
earth was occupied. There were the Crusaders and the Egyptian
City of Al Mensurah
Egypt was founded on the Meditteranean Sea. There were Danes,
and China got a windmill.
The Crusader’s or the
Crusade’s become very difficult to research, so, just a few
facts
about them. They were
WARS of religious groups, medieval Latins, Holy Lands, Muslims.
The word Cruasdes word did
not exist until 1760. It appears The Crusader's were either
good or bad, depending where you were standing at the moment. Just
one bunch wanting to kill and maim another group depending on the
groups leaders. Wikipedia will give you 8 or more pages if you
wish.
In the year 1219 the
Fifth Crusaders were out and about and took control of Damietta
Egypt in a siege as St Francis of Assisi introduced Catholicism
to Egypt. That's the sort of thing which was going on in Africa
in 1219.
In Asia, Genghis Khan
called for Oiu Chuji to visit so he could advise him on
immortality. The shogun reduced him to a figurehead. That's
that for Asia.
In Europe, Livonia,
Danish warriors of King Valdemar II took Tallinn and Danes
conquered northern
Eastoia. Now get this will you, what is today's flag of Denmark,
fell
from the sky during the
battle. Lithuanian nobles made peace against invading
Christians.
Allan Marcel at the death
of Aymeric St. Maur, became Master of the Temple in England.
The Island of Burchana,
East Frisian, was broken up in a north Sea flood.
Technology is introduced
in China , the windmill.
There you have it, modern
history in late middle ages from abstracts of Wiipedia.
of the World Wide Web
device, 800 years later. I wonder what was missed by just not
knowing what was going on.
Sunday, June 9, 2019
DELAWARE & DELAMARVA RAILROADS
DELAWARE & DELMARVA
RAILROAD
A CONTINOUS DOCUMENT
THAT CAN BW VIEWED ON
Let us start with
Wikipedia information we who have computers all have on hand.
Lets us start with the
Queen Ann's Railroad with the facts on hand. The railroad was
formed in Maryland 1894 and received Delaware legislative
authorization in 1895. This railroad ran from Love Point,
Maryland to Lewes Delaware and connected to Baltimore by
ferry across the Chesapeake
and Cape May, New Jersey by steamers from Lewes. In 1894 the
western terminus was Queenstown Maryland. Shortly the terminus was
extended 13
miles to Love Point on
the Chesapeake Bay in 1902. The Cape May summer only express
began in 1901. The
railroad also owned steamers Endeavor, Queen Ann and Queen Caroline
In 1905 the Queen
Ann's Railroad became the Maryland, Delaware and Virginia
Railroad, MD*V, a
subsidiary of Pennsylvania Railroad.
The Queen Ann's had served
Centerville, Chester, Denton, Love Point, Queen Ann. Queenstown,
Stevensville all in Maryland, in Delaware it had stations at
Hickman, Adamsville, Blanchard, Ellendale, Georgetown,
Greenwood, , Lewes Milton, Owens, Oakley, Whitesboro and
Rehoboth. 1928 both the MD&V and the BC&A railroads
merged
with Baltimore Eastern
Railway.
Today, most of the
abandoned original track lands are the Cross Island Trail a part of
the American Discovery
Trail. Both Milton and Ellnendale Delaware have a historic
marker
and the original stations
in Stevensville and Sudlersville Maryland are museums.
Friday, June 7, 2019
1903 DELAWARE CAPES STORM DAMAGE.
GREAT DAMAGE AT DELAWARE
CAPES
Thursday, 17 September
1903 The Anaconda Standard, Anaconda, Montana :
Delaware Breakwater,
Delaware, September 16, 1903 :
A storm from the south
which has been coming up the Atlantic coast for several days struck
the Delaware Capes at 3 am and lasted until 7 pm with winds of
80 mph and torrents of rain, took at least six lives.
The schooner Harrie A.
Marsh, befell a most serious wreck in the afternoon yesterday,
and the Captain, J. B.
Mehaffey and his four man crew were drowned. The New London
schooner from Painters Point, Maine, for Philadelphia with a
cargo of paving stone got
caught in a windstorm
outside the new stone breakwater, the Captain tying to make the
harbor of refuge found he
had to drop anchor and ride out the winds but the anchors did not
hold and the schooner with her dead weight of stone washed on the
rocks of the harbor of refuge. The steam pilot boat Philadelphia
went for rescue but saved only Mate Norman Campbell and one other
seaman. The exhausted rescued men were landed at the Lewes Life
Saving Station and cared for.
In the harbor three
schooners dragged anchor and collided, the, Emilly Northam,
Adeline Townsend, and Seabird. The two mast Seabird sank with her
crew rescued and
landed on Cape Henlopen at
that Life Saving Station and cared for. The Northam, had her
jib boom carried away and
her yawl stove. The Townsend lost her headgear and jib boom.
Barges Elmwood,
Gilbertson and Kalmia, laden with coal from Philaelphia sank in
Delaware
Bay westward of the Brown
Shoal. Their crews were rescued by the tug Tamaquash which
had the barges in tow. The
tug Spartan towing three barges, Travorton, Hammond and one
unknown, sank near Bear Shoal, while at anchor. No records of the
tugs crew. Three more
coal barges off Cape
Henlopen sank in the ocean and crews missing.
A bark unknown t anchor
off Ocean City with distress signal brought the Philadelphia
out to rescue and assist.
Another Philadelphia barge, Marcus Hook, was adrift and picked
up by tugs and towed to safe anchorage.
Much damage was done to
the breakwater, east end light, washed away, the Reporting
Station damaged and the telegraph line down all day. Lewes also
felt damage, trees uprooted
and chimneys damaged.
Abstract: Thursday 17
September, 1903, Anaconda Standard, Anaconda, Montana.
Thursday, June 6, 2019
PERIERS, FRANCE AND BETHANY BEACH TWIN CITIES
BETHANY BEACH HAS TWIN IN
FRANCE
PERIERS, NORMANDY IS IT.
Bethany Beach, Sussex
County, Delaware and Periers, Normandy, France, officially
became twin cities early
this spring of 2010. Periers has many memorials to the 90th
U.S. Infantry Division
and D-Day June 6, 1944.
A Bethany resident, Diana
Cowell, played a major role in the twinning of the two towns
has visited Periers with
her father, a Normandy Landing veteran of WW II , if fact in 2006
her family visited to
spread ashes of her deceased father there. In a 2008 visit she met
the
towns mayor, Gabriel
Daube , who expressed a desire to have a twin city in America
and
Bethany Beach became the
subject and Daube sent a formal request with her encouragement.
The Cultural and
Historic Affairs Committee of Bethany Beach spearheaded the
partnership.
The vice mayor and
committees chairman, Carol Olmstead, said the town was very
receptive
to the unity.
On D-Day every year
American and French flags are placed on American graves of those
who died there in WW II.
Mayor Daube and his wife,
three generations of the Levaufre family who are close to Cowell
visited Cape Henlopen area
in 2010. Daube will be presented a key to Bethany at a concert
at the bandstand during
this visit. Cowell has said Periers is very friendly to Americans
and
is grateful and gracious.
Abstract: Salisbury Daily
Times, staff writers, Laura Dignan and Wallace McKelvey,
Tuesday, 17 August,
2010.
BETHANY BEACH HAS TWIN IN
FRANCE
PERIERS, NORMANDY IS IT.
Bethany Beach, Sussex
County, Delaware and Periers, Normandy, France, officially
became twin cities early
this spring of 2010. Periers has many memorials to the 90th
U.S. Infantry Division
and D-Day June 6, 1944.
A Bethany resident, Diana
Cowell, played a major role in the twinning of the two towns
has visited Periers with
her father, a Normandy Landing veteran of WW II , if fact in 2006
her family visited to
spread ashes of her deceased father there. In a 2008 visit she met
the
towns mayor, Gabriel
Daube , who expressed a desire to have a twin city in America
and
Bethany Beach became the
subject and Daube sent a formal request with her encouragement.
The Cultural and
Historic Affairs Committee of Bethany Beach spearheaded the
partnership.
The vice mayor and
committees chairman, Carol Olmstead, said the town was very
receptive
to the unity.
On D-Day every year
American and French flags are placed on American graves of those
who died there in WW II.
Mayor Daube and his wife,
three generations of the Levaufre family who are close to Cowell
visited Cape Henlopen area
in 2010. Daube will be presented a key to Bethany at a concert
at the bandstand during
this visit. Cowell has said Periers is very friendly to Americans
and
is grateful and gracious.
Abstract: Salisbury Daily
Times, staff writers, Laura Dignan and Wallace McKelvey,
Tuesday, 17 August,
2010.
C.S.S. SHENANDOAH AND CAPTAIN WADDELL'S WORLD CRUISE
CONFEDERATE STEAMSHIP
SHENANDOAH
CAPTAIN WADDELL'S CRUISE
Captain James Iredell
Waddell, a daring Carolina sailor, the commander of the
C.S. S. Shenandoah was
the only mariner to carry the flag of the Confereracy around the
world. The facts of Captain Waddell's cruise were gathered by
Captain S. A. Ashe, who
as a 1858 Naval Academy
Midshipman, sailed under Lieuttenant Waddell and learned
what a good officer and
gentleman he was and was proud of him as a North Carolinian.
The story as follows was
given in Wilmington, Delaware in 1904 by Captain Ashe.
James Iredell Waddell,
was born July 13, 1824, to Francis Nash and Elizabeth
Davis Moore Waddell .
At age 17 Waddell
received an appointment as midshipman in the U. S. Navy,
ordered to vessel in
Norfolk. There, almost before he had got his uniform to fit, his
fighting
blood showed. An older
midshipman was offensive to him and Waddell called him to
the field of honor where
he received a wound to the hip and caused him to limp a little
through life. A Navy record told he was on leave to recover from
the effects of a duel.
Later, when the Navy was
going to steam, a science was added, famous ship
masters became obslete,
machines, turrets and armor plate were to supplant sails and
6 pounder's, Waddell's
inspirations led him to a challenge with an older officer to
mortal combat, made him sort of a hero to the younger officers,
learning to fight at a longer distance and the importance of
armor protection.
In 1848, passing his
examinations, he was put on duty at the Observatory in Washington
for three tears, then assigned to a practice ship at Annapolis,
then to vessel
Germantown, a ship named to
commemorate the battle in which his distinguished grandfather
received a mortal wound.
Retuning from a cruise
as a Naval Officer August 1861 he tendered his resignation
which was refused. On a
dark and stormy night he and a brother in law, Mr. Inglehart,
shipped as oystermen on
an oyster boat out into the Chesapeake avoiding capture made
good their way to Dixie.
Waddell , now a Confederate Officer, was assigned to disrupt
American shipping. There not being many ships on the Atlantic to
fly an American flag the
Confederates wanted to
destroy an American whaling fleet active in the Pacific and
selected
Lieutenant Waddell to do
so.
At this time a Confederate
representative in Europe, Captain Bullock, had purchased
The Sea King which was
large and could carry a large group of men , sailed well under
canvas, had steam screw able to raise out of water when not in
use. 1864 Waddell was ordered to Madeira to take command of
the Sea King, fly the Confererate flag, refit and provision her,
then rename and christened her, The Shenando . Waddell had
trouble finding a crew to serve within conditions not to be
married and to become
Confederates so he ended up with half a crew of 23 men. Officers
were obliged to work with
the crew and did so. The Shenandoah entered her career with the
flag of the South to the breeze , taking her place as a
Confederate cruiser afloat duly
commissioned on her ocean
home with noble, brave men.
The Shenandoah was a
composite vessel, frame of iron, hull of teak six inches thick,
steam speed of 9 mph and under sail 15 mph. She had a battery of
four 8 inch guns smooth
bore , two rifle bore
Whitworth 2 pounders and two 12 ponders
The Shenandoah made a
prize on her first chase and later prizes furnished 20 more
seamen, bringing the crew
and officers to 62 man. 5th of December they made
Tristam da
Canha, near St. Helena,
and passed to the east of Africa, reaching Melbourne Australa, on
January 25 1865. Here
they landed prisoners, refitted, left February 18. After
leaving
sight of harbor, a number
of men who had stowed aboard came on deck and enlisted to the
crew, now 114 . Sailing northward with many adventures and
capturing many prizes they were off the shores of Kamakatka in
May. The farther north they sailed the longer the days
became which was more and
more interesting to the crew. They went as far as Gifinski and
Transk Bay but unable to
enter for the15 foot thick ice. . More captures were made and the
smoke of the burning
vessels made landmarks against the sky.
On June 23 midsummer
Waddell captured two whalers which had news of Grant and Lee and
Appomattox, not good news for one in the Polar Ocean cleaning up
the whaling
ships, twenty four in the
next six days.
June 29 the Confederate
flag was flying in the Artic Ocean and on that day Waddell
turned away from the pole
and passed southward through the Bering Strait, July 5 they passed
Aleutian Islands and the
last land Shenandoah would see for days. August 3, in N
latitude
16, 122 west longitude
Shenadoah gave chase to a sailing bark and overtook the British
Harraconta, 13 days from
San Francisco, to Liverpool, and asked news of the Captain about
the war and told the war was over and the Shenandoah was being
searched for and would be considered pirates when caught. Our
first duty was to suspend hostilities and to proclaim
such suspension. An entry
was made in the log book 5 August 1885 Shenandoah off the
coast of Mexico “Having receivd intelligence by the bark
Barraconta of the Confederate government's overthrow, all
attempts to destroy shipping or property of the United State will
cease this date. First Lieutenant W. C. Whittle has received
orders to disarm the ship and its crew. The next step was to seek
asylum with any country strong enough to see we have a full and
fair trial. Waddell , who now had no authority since his commission
expired with the
end of the Confederacy,
set sail to England with his well disciplined crew.
The 15th
September, running 15 mph , Shenandoah turned Cape Horn and set
her
course northward for
Liverpool and exchanged no signals. Crossing the equator for
the forth time on October 11, 1865, The afternoon of October
25, 500 miles south of the
Azores, they sighted a
Federal cruiser and crossed courses with her to find she was in
waiting for Shenandoah an her crew. Capt Waddell declared a
situation of anxious
suspense, and kept the
course. As they passed darkness of the night prevented any signals
and when 4 miles apart
sailed past , set a southward course and ordered full steam
running
15 miles east, then north
100 miles, when a southwest wind blew her within 700 miles
of Liverpool . The calm
left Shenandoah in sight of 11 sails all day long as she
remained
under sail until dark
when all sails were furled and she went under steam and pushed
her
way toward the desired
haven at Liverpool. November 5th Shenandoah entered
St. Georges
Channel, 122 days from the
Aleutian's with out sight of land and saw the beacon right where it
was supposed to be. This was a remarkable record of
navigation. A pilot came aboard at
night and was informed
of the character of the ship.
There was great
satisfaction for our success reaching an European port and the
chief danger was over
when on the 6th November 1865 Shenendoah steamed up the
Mersey
bearing the Confederate
flag. After anchoring, a British Officer boarded Shenandoah to
inform Captain Waddell
the Confederacy was no more and the Confederate flag that had been
around the world was lowered at 10 am, 6th
November, 1865. The Shenandoah was then
given in charge of the
British government.
For several days British
and American officials were in correspondence regard the ship
and its crew. November 8th, the crew was ordered to
depart , the British turned Shenandoah over to United States
authorities who in turn sold her to the Sultan of Zanzibar
and later lost at sea.
C.S.S. Shenandoah ran
58,000 miles during her thirteen month cruise and met with no
accident and did not drop
anchor for eight months. She had destroyed more vessels than any
other ship of war,
Captain Waddell lingered
several years in Europe because of feelings of the United
States government against him but in 1875 took command of a
Pacific Mail Company steamer from San Francisco to Japan and
Australia .
On one of his return
voyages he had another chance to prove his seamanship abilities
when his ship struck an
uncharted obstacle which had been thrown in the channel by a
recent earthquake about
13 miles from shore. The damage to the vessel left a fifty foot
hole which quickly flooded
the vessel, he took personal control of 420 passengers, men,
women and children , his crew members and prepared to abandon
the sinking ship about 3 miles from shore. Captain Waddell was the
last to leave the sinking vessel. No one was lost.
The admirable conduct of
Captain Waddell won highest praise among the maritime
people of the world.
After this incident he retired to live in Annapolis where the
governor of Maryland chose him to master the Oyster Guard Boats
of the Chesapeake to enforce Maryland's laws upon the fleet of the
bays oystermen. It was at this job that he died, March
25, 1886 at the age of 62.
Maryland's Legislature adjourned to do him honor. Old Dixie
soldiers under General
George Stuart as Marshall marched to his grave with pallbearers
Captain Morris, General
Bradley Johnson and other Confederates, an escort of honor led
by Colonel William
Morris. The Maryland governor and State Officers participated. It
was
a State Funeral, the only
one accorded to a Confederate north of the Potomac River.
Abstract: The North
Carolina Review, Richmond Times Dispatch, Sunday, September
7, 1913. for my
www.delmarhistory.blogspot.com
Wednesday, June 5, 2019
DELAWARE DRIVER EDUCATION ON CAPE GAZETTE VIEWPOINTS.
HISTORY OF DELAWARE
DRIVER EDUCATION
The Tuesday's June 4,
2019, Cape Gazette's Viewpoints shows a 1949 vintage
Ford automobile practicing
parallel parking by a marked Student Driver Training car.
A Brief History of
Drivers Education article is posted by Delaware Department
of Education on the www.
internet.
The comprehensive program
Drivers Education was enacted in Delaware in 1934,
by Delaware Safety
Council that sponsored classroom instruction in several schools.
Behind the wheel
instruction was introduced in the 1935-1936 school year. Eight
cars were
made available by Hugh
Gallagher Union Park Motor Company of Wilmington to make this
high school course
possible. By 1948 Driver Ed was offered by all public
schools of
Delaware. In 1948 – 1949
school year Delaware's Legislature appropriated $50,000
to the State Board of
Education for the program.
Recognized leaders of
Drivers ED are Hugh Gallagher, Captain Clarence Lynch, Delaware
State Police, Theodore Burton, and other educational people.
Tuesday, June 4, 2019
RONALD RUSSELL REHOBOTH FIREMAN RECEIVES CARNEGIE MEDAL
GOVENOR RUSSELL PETERSON
DECORATES FIREMAN RONALD RUSSELL
A CARNEGIE HERO AWARD
MEDAL
May your bravery be an
inspiration to us all, said Perterson, as he presented the
Carnegie Hero Award Medal
to Rehoboth Beach volunteer fireman Ronald Russell. During
an intermission at the
concert of the Wilmington Concert Band which had drawn a capacity
crowd to the Beach Band
Stand on Rehoboth Avenue and Boardwalk.
Fireman Russell received
the medal in recognition of his part in rescuing Reinert
Roaldson, from the surf
after he was washed overboard in a storm from an oil barge that
had blown ashore. Fireman
Russell braved 20 foot waves and swam 225 feet to grab
the seaman and pull him
to other rescuers on shore.
Another barge seaman was
rescued after he went overboard and farther out to sea by
Coast Guard helicopter.
Russell is the 5611
person to receive the Caregie Medal since 1904.
Abstract: Wilmington
Morning News, Monday, 7 September, 1970
1970 DEWEY BEACH SEVERE THUNDER STORM
DEWEY BEACH LASHED HIGH
WINDS, HEAVY RAIN AND SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS
FRIDAY JULY 10 1970
Delmarva Power has worked
all weekend to restore damage to poles and wires
knocked out by a severe
storm which struck Delaware and Maryland coastal areas Friday
19 July, 1970. During
the storm a 69,000 volt power line fell and trapped 15 cars and
passengers on the Ocean
City highway south of Dewey Beach. There were no injuries
from the electric.
In addition to the shore
other parts of Maryland and Delaware were lashed by high
winds, heavy rain and
severe thunderstorms.
Delaware State Trooper,
Lou Rickards , on patrol at 2 or 3 pm, shut the road after
lightning struck the
power lines and they began to fall. He had the traffic stop and
park on
the roadside and ordered
everyone to stay in their cars as the wires and pole were laying
on
the vehicles. Within a
hour the power company had all the cars freed with no injuries.
Abstract: Salisbury
Daily Times, Sunday, 12 July 1970.
Monday, June 3, 2019
SAVAGE FAMILY NORTHAMPTON VIRGINIA
SAVAGES NECK 1600
Thomas Savage, considered
the first permanent European settler on the Eastern
Shore received a tract of
land from Debedeavon, Chief of the Accawmacke Tribe in the
1600's, named Savage
Neck, which has seen a number of beautiful homesteads over the
centuries, including
Elkington, built in the last half of the 18th century
and named for
the wife of the first
Thomas Savage, Hannah Ann Elkington.
During the 1800's and
1900's this big house, little house, colonnade, and kitchen,
style home with exquisite
architectural details, went through the hands of Parkers,
Upshurs, Scott, Willing , Nottingham and Willis families.
A Thomas L Savage, sold
this property in 1790 to John Stratton, U.S. Congressman
1801 to 1804.
Construction details are
Flemish bond finishes, gables, cornice, and dormer windows
and a yard full of 18th
century outhouses.
Abstract: Eastern Shore
News, Wednesday, 9 September, 2015.
VIRGINIAS EASTERN SHORE IN 1962
VIRGINIA'S EASTERN
SHORE IN 1962
SECOND OLDEST ENGLISH
SETTLEMENT
The second oldest
permanent English settlement of America, following the
Jamestown Colony, just so
happens to be on the Eastern Shore of Virginia, separated
from the Virginia mainland
by the Chesapeake Bay. It predates Plymouth rock by years.
You can find the oldest
continuous court records in our country, dating to 1632, and
more
surviving seventeenth ,
eighteenth and early nineteenth century structures than any other
section of the United
States.
There are open for
visitors eleven homes and gardens, the Accomac Debtors Prison,
in Eastville it's old
Court House, Clerks Office and Debtors Prison, five early
chueches,
the Francis Mackwmie
Presbyterian, St. James, St. Georges, Christ and Hungers
Epscopal
Churches. In Accomac,
are four homes, The Haven, Seymour House, West View, and
Pine View, examples of
early Eastern Shore architecture build after 1791 with 1816
additions., having hand carved interior woodwork. Boxwood
gardens with white picket
fence and real old trees.
West View has old age
boxwood gardens, fine interior work and a house full of
local antiques and family
portraits. Pine View's large Victorian House holds a collection
of Oriental and American
antiques. East of Accomac, don't miss The Folly, the entrance
marked only by a small
gate house, sits at the head of Folly Creek, built in 1765 with
large exterior chimney.
Going east to Oceanside
Road, south, through farm lands and villages to Bradfords Bay
and Gulf Stream House known for its gardens.
Near Belle Haven finds
Wainhouse early 19th century to looksat local
cabinetmakers
art works.
Oak Grove Plantation is
a part of 3700 acres given to Sir George Yeardley in
1621, Captain General
Governor of Virginia , Chief Debedeavon, the “laughing king of
the
great Nuswatsocks Indians”
the house built 1750 with later additions overlooks gardens on
the Mattawoan Creek and
Chesapeake Bay.
South of Eastville are
Eyreville and Eyre Hall built by an Eyre family . The house
Eyreville was built 1730
by William Littleton Eyre and since has been owned by the Eyre
Family. Eyre Hall has old boxwood gardens, a 1730 house with local
woodwork interior.
The Eastern Shore of
Virginia offers many attractions to visitors interested in
colonial activities and
old homesteads.
Abstracts: Danville,
Virginia Danville Register, Sunday. 22 April 1962.
Sunday, June 2, 2019
RV SHEARWATER 2015
RESEARCH VESSEL
SHEARWATER
AT OCEAN CITY COAST GUARD
STATION
JUNE 2015
Sunday, 7 June 2015 :
There she sits, stuck out
like a sore thumb, waiting for a four day rain to end, the 110
foot
RV Shearwater, making
ready to survey the Atlantic Ocean floor for Maryland's
offshore
wind farm to sit.
Her job is to collect
geophysical data to support detailed engineering for a 500
megaawatt
offshore wind project to
be built by US Wind, Inc., on 40,000 acres 15 to 25 miles off
the coast. They want to know what the bottoms is made of, how
deep is the water, what obstructions are there so foundations can
be built below the water, said the senior manager
Justin Bailey, who works
for Alpine Ocean Seismic Survey.
Alpine intends to use
four pieces of equipment to understand whats what. Seismic Airguns
will not be used. There
will be a side scan sonar to make a map showing boulders, ship
wrecks, etc. Then the magnetometer to find any iron at the bottom
or below, a echo sounder
and profiler. There is no
concern for noise to bother marine life.
Also on board are five
protected species observers to monitor marine life close to the
vessel
who can stop operations.
Abstract: Wilmington News
Journal's Rachael Pacella of Delmarva Media Group , Sunday, 7
June, 2015.
1717 WHYDAH CAPE COD
WRECK OF THE 1717 WHYDAH
CAPE COD, MASSAHUSETTS
Salem, Massachusetts :
A sunken cutlass with a
cargo of gold doubloons, may or may not, be booty of
an 18th century
pirate ship, but ship wreck experts say the objects raised from
the Cape Cod
waters show evidence of
an early and important wreck.
Shortly after Barry
Clifford announced he had found the 1717 Whydah which sank
during a storm, he
displayed artifacts to the Underwater Archeological Resources
to prove
the coins, cannon balls and
a pistols brass fingerguard were the loot of pirate Black Sam
Bellamy after 267 years
under water. The coins and fingerguard will be the earliest find
in Massachusetts.
Clifford has spent two
or more years combing the sandy ocean floor off Wellfleet
for the Whydah said she
was exactly where a British mapmaker reported the sinking of a
three masted galley,
1500 feet off shore. The State Board quickly confirmed the
find
as that of the Whydah
and worth $400,000.
Before it's capture by
pirates 3 February 1717, the Whydah was a British vessel
sailing between England,
Africa, Caribbaean Islands and the American colonies and at
the time she sank was
carrying cargo including 180, 5 pound sacks of coins , 4-1/2 tons
of
gold and silver.
Clifford will not be allowed to take up the ship until he has full
approval
by next summer.
Clifford holds title to
the ship wreck by a 1983 Federal Judge ruling.
Abstract: Sunday
Morning News , Wilmington, Delaware, 29 July, 1984.
Saturday, June 1, 2019
MARCH 1993 BLIZZARD
BLIZZARD OF '93
MARCH 14 1993
Molly Murray, a reporter
of the Sussex Bureau Sunday News Journal reported
the northeaster which bore
down southern Delaware caused nowhere near the damage
predicted and a chance
for another blast was fast fading. Still many beach towns on the
long battered coast were
emptied by evacuation early Saturday morning or closed off by
snow drifts and flooding
at 3 am Officials early reports indicate beaches had little
serious erosion.
Another reason for the
light erosion was the uneasy, quiet, pocket of calm air within
the storm that came along
the coast during the midday high tide. Northeast wind shifter to
the east, gusty and
confused in their direction. John Hughes, a state director, on
duty, said the
'calm' came just in time.
He was on Haven Road, Indian River, when the ocean was just
about to break through
the dunes when the winds started to lay, and the worst of the storm
moved to the north and
was over for southern Delaware. When the storm came in on Friday
officials agreed we were
in for real trouble and it could devastate the Delaware Coast.
Now the west winds
continued to blow shingles off roofs and do property damage but it
pushed the waves away
fro the coast. Damaging winds hit a peak at 60 mph and roads were
littered.
The storm of the
century , but, wasn’t .
Abstract: Sunday News
Journal , 14 March 1993 by Molly Murray.
2001 BELIZE HURRICANE IRIS
2001 HURRICANE IRIS
HITS BELIZE
The Salisbury Maryland
Daily Times, Wednesday, 10 October, 2001 :
Belize City, Belize:
A 120 foot American deep
sea divers boat with 20 vacationing Virginians on board
capsized as Hurricane
Iris with 140 mph winds roared into Belize. All 20 divers were
lost
and feared drown.
The 120 foot MV Wave
Dancer carried 20 Richmond divers and 8 crew members
of the Peter Hughes Diving
Team of Miami. Belize coastal towns were devastated by Iris
this years strongest storm
that left Tuesday the 9th. 5 of the 8 crew were
saved. The Wave
Dancer was docked in Big
Creek, 80 miles SSW of Belize City, and a storm surge lifted
the divers boat, snapped
all the lines and threw her on the dock.
Belize officials did not
know if there were more deaths due to the storm. Hundreds of
homes were destroyed as
was the Independence soccer stadium and only hotel.
Abstract: Daily Times,
Salisbury, Maryland, Wednesday, 10 October, 2001.
Friday, May 31, 2019
1954 HURRICANE EDNA
1954 HURRICANE EDNA
Friday, 10 September,
1954 :
Hurricane Edna's storm
center moving north up Carolina coast with 115 mph winds
at it's center. It is
expected to rake the coast anywhere between Cape Hatteras and
Maine.
Delaware weather
forecast are calling for rain squalls with gale force winds
for
tonight and tomorrow.
Inland forecast will undergo heavy rain and strong winds. The
storm, a distinct threat,
could reach our coast late tonight with rain into tomorrow with
cool
northeast air. State
Police and highway workers are at the ready standing by at
Georgetown.
The Delaware Bay menhaden
fleet is safe in anchorage in the Christiana at Pusey &
Jones pier.
New York City expects the
hurricane to hit downtown the nations largest city head
on tomorrow , one of the
most serious hurricanes in the bureaus history. 40 mph winds are
expected by 3 am and expect to be hurricane force by noon.
Right now Edna is 225
miles south of Hatteras moving 10 mph slightly east of
north.
The Navy is moving 80
ships from the Norfolk base. The battleship Iowa , cruiser
Juneau, carriers Saipan and Mindoro left to ride the storm out
at sea. Smaller craft was moved up the Chesapeake Bay to Navy
hurricane anchorage at Tangier Island . All Navy aircraft has
been moved.
All of New England is well
prepared and ships at sea report they are aware of the storm and
are standing by at the ready.
Abstract : Wilmington
News Journal , Friday, 10 September, 1954.