Thursday, January 31, 2019

MEMORIAL FOR THEODORE ROOSEVELT.


THEODORE ROOSEVELT
DIES 6 JANUARY 1919

Lewes, Delaware, January 31, 2019: 100 years ago :

February 9, is set aside for the tribute to Theodore Roosevelt by the
Governor of Delaware, John Gillis Townsend.
To meet with reverence that day will recognize his influence.

The Governor ask all people, irrespective of race, color, or political
association, to arrange a suitable memorial on the day designated.

In New York City, at the Church of St. Nicholas, 5th Avenue & 48th
Street, where he worshiped since childhood, the Roosevelt pew was left
empty, decorated only with a wreath of laurel. Roosevelt attended the church 44 years. As a young boy he had a heart of tendernesss. He was
quick witted too. He was intense for knowledge and had a logical mind


Abstract: Wilmington Morning News, Saturday, February 1, 1919.

ASKECKSY OF SUSSEX HITORY


SUSSEX COUNTY DELAWARE HISTORY
ASKECKSY
Sussex County Delaware History from my delmarhistory.blogspot.com is
a post to facebook pages of my choice for those who are interested.

Askecksy is a historic area in southeast Sussex, latitude 38.6, longitude
    1. It is west by west by south of Millsboro, between Ingram’s
Pond and Workman's Corner – Cross Key's Road, which is my choice
of location. Slavins choice, I say is the correct location, is south of
Millsboro between Irons Branch and road 24. Irons branch aka Indian Town Branch in 1800's
Chris Slavins' Peninsula Roots - Winnasoccum post has Askecksy at
the west end of a 'branch' that appears to be named Legyan Branch flowing
into Indian River.
ASKECKSY & INDIAN RIVER INDIANS
September 13, 2015, Chris Slavins wrote :
Delmarva Peninsula Indians which were said to be 'dwindling' were
hearded into settlements. One settlement, Assawamen, on Indian town Branch, aka Dirickson Creek thence moved to the south side of Indian
River, aka, Baltimore River, to Askecksy, aka, Askquessence and other similar names. This was in 1705.
The Indian River Indian chief, Robin, had a request approved for a
settlement of 1000 acres reserved for the tribes private use in 1705.. The Nanticokes and the Choptanks, on behalf of Queen Wyransconmickonous, had agreed to this settlement which was somewhat swampy and had many black bear and timber rattelsnakes. At this time Nanticokes had moved to
Broad Creek Town from Chicacoan near Vienna, Maryland.
1742 the tribes met at a secret powwow and made plans to massacre the
settlers with the help of the French who would land on the coast. The
plot was discovered and failed.
The so called Winnasoccum Uprising having failed, the Peninsula tribes
abandoned their lands and migrated to Pennsylvania. The Indian River
tribe sold it's land to William Burton in 1743, and either went north
or lingered in the area, intermarried with the settlers and adopted English
ways and spawned the Nanticoke Indian Association in 1840.

Abstract: Askecksy & Indian River Indians, by Chris Slavins, September
12, 2015, Peninsula Roots.

Wednesday, January 30, 2019

BICYCLE HISTORY


BICYCLE HISTORY
1886 - 1900 BICYCLE FEVER

In 1886 the “ Safety “ bike “ was introduced to American cyclists. The
“ Safety “ bike had two wheels the same size, front and rear, then later
fitted with pneumatic tires, now we have a safe, comfortable and easy to ride machine doing away with the old bike with a huge front wheel and
very small rear wheel, hard to ride and dangerous.

1890 saw 40,000 bicycles produced and 1896 there were 1,200,000 bikes
built in America. The “ Safety “ bike sold for $25 to $ 75. Special clothing
for riders was also popular at $5 per suit.

With the number of bikes being riden, yes, there were complaints, like riding on the walkways and night riding with out lights. In Lewes an association
was formed, “ The Baseball & Bicycle Association “, si when there was no base ball game you had a safe place to ride.

As roads became better thoroughfares, the event of the horseless carriages,
the bicycle craze subsided.

A famous Red Head Elgin King was advertised for $14.95 in Delaware
Pilot, May 14, 1897.

Abstract: Harrision H. 1/30/2019, Michael Morgan's Delaware Diary, Delaware Coast Press, January 30, 2019, May 1, 1897 Delaware Pilot.

Tuesday, January 29, 2019

CLAYTON MELSON, LEWES MORTICAN



CLAYTON HENRY MELSON
LEWES, DELAWARE MORTICAN
January 27, 2019, at Lewes, Delaware the following data was gathered
about Clayton Henry Melson because the family was under discussion
on Facebook pages “Lewes to Ocean City Memories” & “Growing Up in
Rehoboth, Lewes & Dewey Beach” . An post had been made that the original Melson Funeral Home structure being demolished and a lot of traffic had followed. This data was found on the www, at Ancestry.com,
newspaperarchives.com and whatever. Therefore there are probably errors
or misinformation. New data, corrections are invited. My email address
is hryevon@comcast.net for such.

I have used ancestry.com family tree “Melson Family” by cfmmgt, one
of seven Clayton Henry Melson born 1910, family trees.

Clayton Henry Melson, born 5 July 1910, {New Jersey} and died 19
December, 1971. A Sussex County Delaware birth certificate tells he
was born in Lewes, South Street, Sussex County, under the attention of Dr. Richard Beebe. We will see his family was for several generations residents of Lewes and vicinity. The 1940 census has him living in Lewes.

A photo attached to this family tree shows a very handsome man and an
attractive lady that I assume are Clayton and Mary. They were married in
April 1927, he being 17 years of age and she being 19 years old. In 1927
his wife, Mary Page was titled 'Miss South Jersey' in a Vineland New
Jersey beauty contest. Mary Page Melson died in the year 2000.
OK, now we have a family tree page by ' cfmmgt ' telling that Clayton
Henry Melson and Mary Elizabeth Page are husband and wife, with nine
children. In 1930 they lived in Florence, Burlington County, New Jersey, and that a son, Phillip Henry Melson was born the 12th of August 1933,
in Burlington, New Jersey. It also tells that on 26 April 1936, son Scott Strick Melson was born in Lewes, Delaware.

The ancestry.com 1940 census list Clayton Henry Melson, age 39, wife Mary P., age 31, residents of 511 {Dinsy Ave} Lewes, Clayton being a
mortician. I question the ages listed, thought she was two year senior.

The census list four sons, Clayton, Jr., born 1932, Phillip, born 1934,
Page, born 1935, Scott, born 1936. A “Find A Grave Index” list a
Mary Lou Fisher, aka Mary Louise Melson as a child.

Ancestry Melson Family Tree by cfmmgt list Clayton Henry Melson's
parents as Phillip Henry Melson, 1885 – 1918, died young at 33, born
in Lewes, was a brick mason, and, Cora T. Scott, aka, Cora Townsend
Melson Strick, born August 1887, in Delaware, may have been resident
of Indian River Hundred, died August 1963, Sussex county.

Ancestry ATHEY Family Tree LON by pea247verizonnet, Long Neck,
Delaware (247 names, most all private) list: 1935 resident of Lewes,
wife name , Mary SOPHIA Page, in addition to the four boys before
mentioned, list a child Mary Lou Melson, daughter, Albert Melson, son,
Anna Elizabeth Melson, daughter, another son, 'private' that married
daughter of Henry Hill and Marion Wilson, name 'private' that had daughter
'private' who married the grandson ,by name of 'private', of William Hudson and his wife Marjory Jones.

OK. Back to Clayton seniors parents, Phillip Henry Melson, born
LEWES, 4th December 1885, and died in Lewes, 16 October 1918, at
age 33. Phillip may have been twice married. The listed wife of Phillip
is Cora T. Scott, aka, Cora Townsend Scott, aka Cora Townsend Strick
Scott Melson and maybe others yet to appear. Cora T. Scott is listed as
born 1887, died 1963, and have son Claytom Henry Melson, 1910 – 1971.
Phillip Henry Melson 1885 – 1918, is buried in Bethel Cemetery, Lewes.
Phillip was a mason, aka, brick layer.

Above Phillip's wife, Cora Townsend Strick Melson, born August 1887,
, in Delaware, died August 1963, Sussex county Delaware, evidently
married twice, once to George W. Strich, aka, George W Strick. Who was
born 1875. There are no children listed for this marriage. Cora's father was Charley G. Scott, 1848 – 1916, who was married to Jane R. Joseph, born 1855 – died 1939. Cora has sister, Hattie Jane,(1890 - 1953) married to a Jerread, a brother, Archie Scott, (1895 - 1960) , brother Andrew Burton
Scott (1897 – 1947), brother Alton Lee Scott, (1899 - 1969), brother Harry
Edward Scott, (183 – 1918), brother John Ralph Scott (1877 - 1937),
another sister, Mary Scott (1879 – 1946) . Cora is buried in Bethel
Cemetery, Lewes. The Scott family probably came from Ireland, through
New Jersey according to records.

OK. We have Clayton Sr's, and his parents data on hand, I think and
hope so. Corrections, additions are welcome.

So, lets try Clayton, Sr's., grandfather and grandmother, Alfred B. &
Laura D. Webb. Data from amcestry.com Melson Family Tree by
dfmmgt. Alfred Burton Melson, born 4 September 1857, Delaware,
died 17 December 1890, Lewes. Here we have a problem. The 1940
census list Alfred, age 82, born 1858, alive, a “Find A Grave” page
list Alfred Burton, born 4 Sept 1857, death date 12 Dec 1940, buried
Bethel , Lewes. So, he lived until 12 December 1940. He was a farmers son, worked the farm, also was a brick layer an in 1930 had his own truck farm. On 13 January 1885 , his age 27, he married Laura D. Webb, who was born 1860 and died 1955. They had sons, Phillip Henry Melson, 1885 -1918, Charles Tunnell Melson, 1887 – 1973, William Orr
Melson, 1894 - 1941, a daughter Addie May Melson, 1891 – 1896.
Larua Webb, his wife, as of 13 January 1885, was born Lewes, 6 December 1860. She died 9 March 1955. Her father was Joshua Webb, her ` mother was Mary E. who died in 1903. She is also buried in Bethel.
Records call Joshua Webb as being born in 1795 New Brunswick Canada,
he died 1888, Blissville, Sunbury, New Brunswick.

Earlier Melson family members are ; Alfred Burton Melson's parents
were William S. (1806 -1890) and Elizabeth Short Melson, (1821 – 1886).
William S. Melson' s parents were Joseph Wesley Melson (1727 – 1809)
and Elizabeth Creighton, (1727 – 1808), Joseph Wesley Melson was son
of Benjamin (1704 – 1771) and Hanna Hammer, born Nanticoke, Somerset Maryland, somerset, Benjamin's father was Samuel (1673 ) of Accomac, Virginia, , his wife Margaret Taylor . Benjamin is son of John Melson, 1645 – 1694) born England, died 1694 in Accomac, Virginia. His wife was
Elizabeth Paynter. John was son of Francis Melson Jr., born 1613
Stutterton, Lincolnshire, England, death 1655. his wife Rebecca. Francis
Nelson, Sr., born 1585 died 1655 was last of this family on record.

E. FRANK ROACH WESTCOAT CORNER


E. FRANK ROACH
OCTOBER 4, 1955

Lewes, Delaware October 5, 1955:

E. Frank Roach, age 53, Westcoats Corner gas station operator,
died Tuesday, October 4, 1955 in Beebe Hospital of a cerebral
hemerrhage.

Frank was born nea r Robinsonville, son of John Coard Roach
and Carolean Johnson Roach. He was active in civic affairs, a
director of Lewes Trust, and well known for his homespun
philosophy.

Surviving are his wife, former Hilda V. Bradshaw of Smith Island,
two sisters, Mrs. Charles Ackerman, Philadelphia, Mrs. Peter
Previli, Atlantic City,, two brothers, Conrad of Nassau, and Alfred
of Milton, a merchant.

E. Frank Roach is buried in Bethel Methodist Cemetery , Lewes.

Saturday, January 26, 2019

MANNSIONS OF EASTERN SHORE & DELMARVA PENINSULA


MANSIONS OF THE EASTERN SHORE & DELMARVA PENINSULA

DORCHESTER MARYLAND'S REHOBOTH AT PUCKUM BRANCH.

Rehoboth, aka, Lee Mansion and Turpin Place , sits high and
dry at 5850 Puckum Road, Eldorado, Dorchester county, Maryland.

Rehoboth Mansion,  2-1/2 story Flemish bond brick house,
three bays wide and three bays deep. It stands on a high foundation with
large cellar windows at ground level. Wall's of the house, two brick belt,
vary from 18 inches to 24 inches. The principal facade faces the
southwest, towards Marshy Hope Creek. It has another entrance in the
southeast bay covered by a one bay pedimented porch supported by
fluted Doric columns. The windows are 12/12 sash dormer, at the gables
are round 4 light windows, the southwest gable end has French doors, all
with brick arches. The chimneys are flush with exterior walls. A 1-1/2
story wood frame kitchen wing is attached to the northeast bay.

The interior of Rehoboth was gutted by fire in October 1916.
On February 27, 1917, Frances W. Breuil bought 70 acres of the Rehoboth
Mansion estate which included the four walls. He had the house rebuilt
exact except for a circular three floor staircase.

Rehoboth was linked with Richard Henry Lee and Francis
Lightfoot Lee, each signed the Declaration of Independence and
members of the Virginia Lee family. Rehoboth descended through
the Thomas Simm Lee family, the second elected Governor of Maryland.
The architecture of the house has it's own story.
Abstract: National Register Properties in Maryland.

A Maryland State Road Commission historical sign at Eldorado and
Puckum Road reads, “ Rehoboth” Patented by Captain John Lee of the
State of Virginia, 1673, for 2350 acres, descended through the Lee's
until 1787. Thomas Sim Lee, second governor of Maryland, descended
from the Rehoboth Lee's.

1949 REHOBOTH AIRPORT AOPA SUMMER ROUNDUP


REHOBOTH AIRPORT
THIRD ANNUAL “ SUMMER ROUNDUP”
SEPTEMBER 17 & 18, 1949

A Cape Gazette “Viewpoint” photo of 1949 Rehoboth Airport,
recently shows the airport and a lot of 'dot's' that turn out to be small
aircraft, if magnified, parked around the airport runways.

Questioned at Arby's 8 am coffee by Warren Walls, an instant
research has been made.

The Friday, September 9, 1949. Wilmington News Journal reports
that on Saturday, September 17 & 18, 1949, 800 private planes are to converge on Rehoboth Airport for the third annual “Summer Roundup”
of the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association.

Edmund Chamberlain, Rehoboth Airport manager, has been
informed by the AOPA that 800 aircraft, bringing some 2000 persons
are expected. The Chamber of Commerce through May Hall McCabe,
the service clubs of town will make overnight preparations and the parking
of the aircraft as they land.

This year is also the 10th anniversary of the AOPA.

Saturday night there were ten bonfires for a beach party dinner.
There was an air show by the Delaware National Guard with the F-47
fighters from New Castle airport.

Also in the picture you will see a larger aircraft on the north to south
runway, a two engine passenger plane, which is more than likely an
All American Airways flight that began to use Rehoboth Airport in
May of 1949 after the Delaware Power & Light, the Diamond State
Telephone Companies relocated overhead service wires, so the large
DC-3 passenger plane could land and take off safely.

Friday, January 25, 2019

PUCKUM 2

PUCKUM 2

Puckum is more than just a curious name of a country road and a ditch that
crosses that road and flows into the Marshy Hope Creek. Puckum was an
Indian of Somerset and married a free Negro by name of Johnson.
They were not accepted in Princess Anne and moved up here to Dorchester.
According to old somerset records John Puckum married Jone Johnson,
February 25, 1682. Puckum was of the Monie Tribe living in a village
on the north side of Great Monie Creek. Northeast a few miles on the
south side of Great Monie lived the first free black family of Somerset and
Jone was probably one of this family. There is no record of them having
children and no record of ANY Puckum on the Eastern Shore of Maryland.

However, in Laurel, Delaware there were two Puckum families. One was
Amy Puckum, but she did not know of the Puckum Road Puckums. She
did know her people were English and she knew from a book she had that
an Indian had taken up the Puckum name. She felt she might have an
Indian background. Her great, great, grandfather's, Perry Puckum's, picture
showed he was fair skinned, had different hair and might have been Indian
or a mix.

So lets say, John Puckum, brought Jone Johnson Puckum to the Marshy
Hope shores in the last 20 years of the 17th century. Here he shared land
and dreams with one of the most prominent families in America, the
Lee family of Virginia. In 1673 Captain John Lee patented “Rehoboth”,
a 2500 acre plantation along the northwest branch of the Nanticoke River,
which we know is Marshy Hope Creek. Puckum Road bisects the heart of
the original Lee estate. In the fall of 1673, John Lee died in Virginia, so,
John Lee , never did live at Rehoboth on Marshy Hope Creek. Nor did
descenders who the estate was bequeathed too, Harry Light Horse Lee
nor his son Robert E. Lee ever live there. The mansion is said to have
been built by Thomas Lee, in 1723. Thomas was father of Richard Henry
Lee and Francis Lightfoot Lee who were signers of the Declaration of
Independence. The Lee Mansion was devastated by fire in 1916. Another
account has it that Captain John Smoot built the house between 1783 and
1790. It is recorded that John Smoot purchased 200 acres of the Lee's
Rehoboth estate from Lettice Corbin Lee in 1787.


Major Frank Turpin, captain of Dorchester's Militia in the Revolution, was
a resident of the Lee Mansion and was a gracious host, having parties and
balls which continued for days.

Latter, Hal Roth, the writer, visited with Ruth Breuil, the owner, to see if
she had heard of Puckum, which she said was farther down the road.
Ms Breuil was more interested in talking about her father in law, Francis
J. Breuil, of Philadelphia, who came to Dorchester with a great collection of
firearm's and rebuilt the Lee Mansion in 1917 that sits high on a bank, a
distance from the water, all alone where Mrs Ruth Breuil and her spaniel,
General Lee live.
F. J. Breuil, on May 13, 1942 reported he had 1000 quaint firearms and
could equip ten companies of 50 men each if needed by the Dorchester
County Minute Men organized in 1942, five months after Pearl Harbor.

On his way back home on Maiden forest Road, between Reids Grove and
Hawkeye, on route 50, Roth stopped at Rosemary's in Eldorado and
asked a man filling his pickup with gas, “how do I get to Puckum' ?
The man, flung his arm in the direction of a road sign, “that Puckum Road
right there”. Then he asked how would he know he was at Puckum, The
man said to drive down Puckum and if you come to another road, you have gone to far”. Everyone's right, 'you can't get to Puckum from here'.


Abstract: Salisbury Daily Times, 1998, by Hal Roth.

PUCKUM

PUCKUM

Yes, I know Hal Roth wrote “You can't get to Puckum from here” as
have may other items been found in newpapers, books and the internet
on the ' subject' . Lot's of Dorchester native born have said Puckum
is not a place, but an area. I am OK with that.

What I do know is; At Eldorado , say crossroads if you want, it is a small
community with history and a grave yard with my ancestors buried there.
So, it's part of “ me “. At Eldorado, there is a road headed north by the
name of Puckum Road. As I say it is a north and south running road,
which crosses over Puckum Branch before it stops at an east and west
road named Wesley Road which is off of the Finchville to Eldorado Road.
Wesley Road goes toward the Nanticoke River, I suppose I should say the
Marshy Hope Creek, but as I said I am from Dorchester county and call
things as I wish. Anyway, at the 'Creek' Wesley turns north to end at the
Harrison Ferry to Finchville Road, right near Hurlock. South of where
Wesley Road turns north, is some wild county forest lands, and two or three
miles back toward Eldorado or Brookview Bridge, once Crocthers Ferry,
flows the Puckum Branch before it dumps into the river or creek. Puckum
Branch is short. Less that 7 miles long.

So, I am going out on the limb and say I 'consider' Puckum, an area and
not a place, between the Harrison Ferry to Finchville Road and Wesley
Road intersection, south to wild lands and where Puckum Branch flows
into Marshy Hope Creek. Ok. That my Puckum.

According to many of Dorchester, Puckum is where you just passed
through or is just down the road a piece. On the south of Puckum Branch
was a 1732 plantation, Hackett's Adventure, I think the grave yard I have mentioned is on this land, and the ruins of a brick chimney was found that
indicates there was once someone who inhabited this land, maybe Puckum

Another good bet, the Nanticoke Indian tribe had a village on the east side
of the Nanticoke River near what was later Barrens Creek that had the
name Puckamee. There is more to come about “Puckum”
Abstract: Salisbury Daily Times, August 18, 1998, Hal Roth's column .

PUCKUM

PUCKUM

Yes, I know Hal Roth wrote “You can't get to Puckum from here” as
have may other items been found in newpapers, books and the internet
on the ' subject' . Lot's of Dorchester native born have said Puckum
is not a place, but an area. I am OK with that.

What I do know is; At Eldorado , say crossroads if you want, it is a small
community with history and a grave yard with my ancestors buried there.
So, it's part of “ me “. At Eldorado, there is a road headed north by the
name of Puckum Road. As I say it is a north and south running road,
which crosses over Puckum Branch before it stops at an east and west
road named Wesley Road which is off of the Finchville to Eldorado Road.
Wesley Road goes toward the Nanticoke River, I suppose I should say the
Marshy Hope Creek, but as I said I am from Dorchester county and call
things as I wish. Anyway, at the 'Creek' Wesley turns north to end at the
Harrison Ferry to Finchville Road, right near Hurlock. South of where
Wesley Road turns north, is some wild county forest lands, and two or three
miles back toward Eldorado or Brookview Bridge, once Crocthers Ferry,
flows the Puckum Branch before it dumps into the river or creek. Puckum
Branch is short. Less that 7 miles long.

So, I am going out on the limb and say I 'consider' Puckum, an area and
not a place, between the Harrison Ferry to Finchville Road and Wesley
Road intersection, south to wild lands and where Puckum Branch flows
into Marshy Hope Creek. Ok. That my Puckum.

According to many of Dorchester, Puckum is where you just passed
through or is just down the road a piece. On the south of Puckum Branch
was a 1732 plantation, Hackett's Adventure, I think the grave yard I have mentioned is on this land, and the ruins of a brick chimney was found that
indicates there was once someone who inhabited this land, maybe Puckum

Another good bet, the Nanticoke Indian tribe had a village on the east side
of the Nanticoke River near what was later Barrens Creek that had the
name Puckamee. There is more to come about “Puckum”
Abstract: Salisbury Daily Times, August 18, 1998, Hal Roth's column .

Thursday, January 24, 2019

CHEER CENTER HISTORY


HISTORY OF SUSSEX CHEER CENTERS

THE WARREN L. & CHARLES C. ALLEN, JR., COMMUNITY & ADULT
DAY CENTER AT GEORGETOWN'S SAND HILL ROAD.

The Salisbury Daily Times on Wednesday January 20th, 1999 reported
that Sussex county senior citizens will soon have a new 24,000 square
foot, $6 million center at 20520 Sand Hill Road , Georgetown , where
medical assistance for Alzheimer's care, therapy service, social events,
meals, a beauty shop and barber shop, and low cost housing is available
on the 15 acre compound to open June, 1999. It will have a stage in it's
auditorium for plays and weddings. The day care center will have a low
fee of $50 per day, include lunch and nurses. One bedroom apartments with bath, small kitchen, utilities, available for a low fee, will be on
three floors each with washer & dryer. At present there is a four year wait
list.

Abstract: January 20, 1999, Salisbury Daily Times by staff writer Anne
Miller of the Daily Times.

HISTORY PENINSULA ROADS


DELMARVA PENINSULA ROADS HISTORY
A DUSTY ROAD TO OCEAN CITY

The 1st of July, in 1904, Evertt Jackson, in his horseless carriage, aka
an automobile, finally got to the west side of Sinepuxent Bay with his
friends Allen Benjamin of Salisbury, J Edgar Imams, Ocean City,
hotel owner. The only way to get across the bay to the ocean was by
using the railroad bridge, which they did, before any train arrived, and
in seconds were the first automobile on Ocean City streets.

In 1904 the 30 mile trip from Salisbury to Ocean City could be made
in only 4 hours and 18 minutes, that's with tire repair stops and stops to cool
overheated engines between Willards and Whaleyville. The roads then
were for horse and ox drawn vehicles and Everett evidently ran off the road
a time or two. Bicycles were also in trend and roads were obsessed with
them.

1904 roads were sometimes covered with a layer of crushed stone or oyster
and clam shells. This improved roads for slow moving auto's but when
“speeding" became the game, flaws occurred, like dust. As fast as 20
mph left a dust cloud behind. The dust called for auto drivers and
passengers to wear 'dusters” , a heavy long coat. Then came speed
control, engine governor's and speed bumps in the road.

Ocean City officials found a “bituminous” surface over the crushed stone
kept the dust down. Soon Ocean city street and roads were covered by the
black top material and road to the resort also became covered.
Maintenance of these road became necessary and this is when “ district
engineer's” were created. These new state employee's rode around to
look for 'pot holes' on motorcycles and called “State Patrolmen” earning
$2 a day. They lasted until 1930. Snow removal was another problem, it
was found the cost of repair to roads that did not remove the snow was much
more that the cost of removing the snow. So 'snow plows' became part
of road maintenance.

Abstract: Salisbury Daily Times, January 20, 1999, a Michael Morgan
offering.

Wednesday, January 23, 2019

AUGUSTUS WRIGHT BEAVER DAM CHAPEL POND.

AUGUSTUS WRIGHT
A NANTICOKE GENTLEMAN

BEAVER DAM'S CHAPEL POND

Gussie Wright kept the peace between the “ little fellers “ that
build the dams which threaten to flood nearby Sussex farmers land
and those land owner and farmers of Indian River Hundred.

Gussie is an old man of Nanticoke Indian ancestry.

Old Gussie Wright knows the effects of nature and is quietly engaged
in keeping man and nature in balance between the farmers and the
beavers around Chapel Pond . Gus takes pride that the pond, after near
a century of absence, is back again with it's pine woods, a nursery for
wood ducks, is next door to ancient St. George's Chapel that has stood
by since 1794 on the site of an 1718 Anglican chapel.

Speeding by on the Robinsonville – Fairmount road one might miss
Chapel Pond for looking at the old brick chapel. The pond doesn’t
look like a pond because of the growth of swamp maples yet to be drowned
out by high water but the old mill dam and the new beaver dam can be seen
from the roadway.

With affectionate care Gus Wright has cleared underbrush but leaving
the cedars, hollies and oaks as decorations. Out of a split log he has
made a swinging footbridge over the spillway.

Chapel Pond grist mill was probably owned and operated by both the
Burton family and the Robinson family. It has been gone a century or more
after the mill dam gave way during a nor'east storm and was not repaired,
leaving the pond to become a swamp with only a trickle of water flowing
through it.

In the early 1930's the Delaware Game & Fish Commission set out a few
pair of beaver in southeastern Sussex with hope they would survive and
multiply to replace the extinct native beavers. The newcomers made
themselves at home along the heads of Guinea creek and Herring creek.


Beaver dams have been destroyed by farmers when the little engineers
have flooded adjacent lands. The Delaware Highway Department has
problems keeping drainage culverts clear of beaver built obstructions.

Several years ago, Gus Wright, who has the farm that adjoins Chapel
Pond, noticed each morning fresh cut swamp maple saplings placed
neatly into the break of the old dam. Week after week this “repairing”
took place, layer upon layer of sticks and branches and black muck were
embedded in the rising dam. The water began to rise behind the dam.
Then came the complaints and threats to tear the whole thing out. But
Gus had other ideas, he would keep both the beavers and farmer happy
by regulating the water level all by himself. He did so by removing
the beavers work, however the beaver had other ideas and brought twice
the amount to top our the dam almost every night. Gus had to go and pull
out each nights work every morning. Near by was his prof , a four foot
high pile of maples sticks which he would burn . Gussie took great pride
in maintaining the delicate balance between farmers and the beavers. He
thought a pond with beavers. Summer duck and other living wild things
was good to have around. Gus would show visitors the old dam and it's
repair, the six inch white oak trees the beavers had felled, the ruins of
the old grist mill.

Augustus Wright, age 84, a Indian River Hundred farmer at Chapel
Pond, died July 5 1963 in Beebe Hospital, Lewes, and is buried at
Indian Mission Church. He is survived by a daughter Mrs. Cornelia
Duplessis of Philadelphia. His death has made a difference to the many
people who knew him. What will happen to the little shady park, Beaver
Falls, at Chapel Pond ? Will the Sussex woods reclaim the pond, the
benches he built of 'twigs' for people to watch the beavers build their
lodge and swim about, the paths and transplanted hollies.
He was proud of his Nanticoke ancestry. On the 9th of May 1925 he
married Laura Cerney. One account has his parents as Return Wright
and Charlotte Johnson Wright, both born in 1850. His wife Laura was
born 1888 and died 1953.

Abstract: Wilmington Morning News, January28, 947, by Anthony Higgins.

Tuesday, January 22, 2019

ACCMAC VIRGINIA DEBTORS PRISON


ACCOMAC VIRGINIA

THE DEBTORS' PRISON

Lets take a trip down the peninsula to Accomac county Virginia, which is
the location of early settlement's from which many Sussex county and
Dorchester county pioneers came to settle in the 1600's and 1700's .

The historic Debtors' Prison in Accomac, Virginia was built in 1783 as
the home for the Accomack county jailer. In 1824 it was turned over
as a debtors' prison until 1849. Selby Simpson was it's architect

In design it is a small building, 18' x 30', one story, three bays, built
with Flemish brick and it sat on the southwest corner of a 70 foot square
jailyard. There are two chimney's , he east one is exterior and the west
one is interior.

The interior is typical of a small hall and parlor dwelling most common
in it's ere, having two rooms down stairs and two rooms in the 'attic'. The
lower east room it the larger and in it's southeast corner is an enclosed
staircase to the garrett. There is a fire place.

Significant is that it is the oldest municipal building standing in Accomac
county, and a survivor of a typical 20th century building which were once
common on Virginia's eastern shore.

Source: WIKIPEDIA .

Monday, January 21, 2019

WILSON LINE MESECK


WILSON LINE
&
SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION

The Wilmington News Journal, January 22, 1968, reported that the 30
year old Wilson Liner, John A. Meseck, is on it's way to Piney Point's
Seafarers International Union seamanship school. She is being towed by
the tug Tern, Captain J. A. Williamson, a 30 hour trip if the ice is not too
bad.

The 1,978 ton Meseck built 1938 as the river steamer Nasushon for the
Hudson River and New York harbor with the Meseck Shiplines.

In 1942 she carried 12 pound guns on deck, one of 8 converted riverboats
which became hospital ships at D Day. After the war she returned to
America and bought by Wilson Lines, Inc, as an excursion boat, then retired
to rusting in the Christina.

The Seafarers Union, the largest maritime union of the United States
members with over 35,000 members, was organized in 1938 to
represent mariners who sail aboard U. S. Flag Ships . It offers access
health care, retirement and educational benefits. The union is active
in political arenas to maintain safe conditions for work aboard vessels
and to ensure high standards in membership training. The union operates
the Paul Hall Center for maritime training and education at Piney Point,
Baltimore, Maryland.


Abstract: Wilmington News Journal, January 22, 1968 by Tom Malone


Sunday, January 20, 2019

BLACKWATER CANADA GEESE

DORCHESTER'S BLACKWATER REFUGE

CANADA GEESE FROM UNGAVA, CANADA

In recent years more Canada geese are wintering on the Eastern Shore
than any other locality of North America. Most of these geese had been
wintering farther south, along the Outer Coastal Plain of North Carolina.

One recognized reason for this is 'food'. The modern harvesting of grain
corn leaves near 10% of the farmers crop in the field, thus 'food' for the
geese.

The Eastern Shore geese come from the Ungava Peninsula of far north
Canada. This Ungava Peninsula of Nunavik, Quebec, Canada is bounded by Hudson Bay to the west, Hudson Strait to the north and Ungava Bay
on the east, and is part of the Labrador Peninsula covering 97,000
square miles. The capes of Cape Wolstenholme are it's northernmost
point. The peninsula is a treeless tundra with a large number of rivers and
lakes which flow east to west. Here it is extremely cold.

Banded bird records show that our Eastern Shore birds nest and breed
along east James Bay and Hudson Bay. Band recoveries come from the
Cree Indian and Eskimo villages which depend on the geese as part of
their food source.

The migration corridor begins at James and Hudson Bays east side, south
through Quebec, across Lake Ontario, through central New York state,
eastern Pennsylvania to the Chesapeake. In migrating these birds cruise
around 40 mph and cover 50 mile each day at the height of 2000 to 4000
feet. They try to arrive at Hudson Bay by May 1st.

Abstract: The 1978 “Blackwater” , National Wildlife Refuge, Dorchester,
Maryland, by Brooke Meanley. By Harrison H, 01/20/19, for Facebook
readers and www.delmarhistory.blogspot.com . My abstracts are brief
quotatios of interesting reviews.

Saturday, January 19, 2019

DORCHESTER SWAMP OWL AT BLACKWATER


SWAMP OWL


The marshlands and pine woods and the so called pine swamp in
the Blackwater Refuge of Dorchester County Maryland are where our
community of Swamp Owl's live, also known as a barred owl, along with
it's counterpart , the great horned owl.

Both species of these owl's are nocturnal equivalent of hawks.
The Barred Owl and the red shouldered hawk are friendly species, their
haunts and food habits are similar and use the same nesting areas. There
have been times when both owl eggs and hawks eggs have been found in
each others nest.

The swamp owl eats cratfish, woodcock, blue jays, moles and fish.
Fox squirrels have been taken by Swamp Owl's.

A barred owl and a red tail hawk are the same size

Abstract: “Blackwater” National wildlife Refuge, of Dorchester County
Maryland by Brooke Meanley, 1978.
January 19, 2019 by Harrison H. for www.delmarhistory.blogspot.com
and Facebook pages.

Friday, January 18, 2019

TIMBERDOODLE


THE TIMBERDOODLE

This bird, also known as a woodcock, stays hidden until dusk or dawn's
dim light and like to be around damp pine woods and hardwood swamps.
They feed day or night, probing in soft soil with their very long bills for
earthworms . It's nest are depressions on flat ground in woods or thickets
and it's eggs are mostly eaten by snakes. Young, just hatched birds, leave
the nest within an hour of being hatched. A nest usually contains four eggs.

The most interesting action of this fowl is it's sky dancing during the
spring courtship where it selects a breeding ground to sing and dance
right after nightfall . After five minutes of beeping, it flushes, rises fast to
fifty feet, it's wings create a musical twitter, flying in wide circles, then
hovers as he pours forth a series of chirps and he glides to the ground in
a zig zag course to the spot he launched himself seconds before.

The Timberdoodle migrates south in fall to southeastern marshes.


Abstract: “Blackwater” National Wildlife Refuge, Dorchester county
Maryland, by Brook Meanley

PIONEER POINT


MANSIONS OF THE EASTERN SHORE & DELMARVA PENINSULA

PIONEER POINT, CENTERVILLE, MARYLAND


Pioneer Point, a 1600 acre estate with nine miles of waterfront on the
Chester and Corsican Rivers, built in 1925 for almost three million
dollars by John J. Raskob had 19 rooms and a separate dormitory
for the families 13 children. The Raskob wife, Helena , better known
as Skipper, and the children made the property a working horse farm with
a stable of 36 thoroughbreds and other amenities of wealth.

John Raskob, a financial leader was usually at the side of Pierre S.
duPont, spent most of his time in New York at business, while Skipper
directed the management of Pioneer Point with the help of a 20 year
younger Jack Corcoran. Soon Corcoran became Skippers object of
affection and after Raskob died in 1950 at Pioneer Point she
remarried with Corcoran.

Raskob was close in partnership with duPont and General Motors and had
helped him in the design of the Chemours Building in Wilmington. He was also involved in the design of the Empire State Building at New York.
Raskob first built a residence in Claymont that is now Archmere Academy.

The Raskob's lost two sons in automobile accidents in the early 1930's.

Pioneer Point sold several times and in 1972 the Soviet's bought it as a
pleasure palace for their Washington, D.C. Embassy and it's vistitors.

President Obama evicted the Russian diplomats from the Centerville
estate for spying in the United States.

Abstract: Wilmington News Journal, Monday, January 16, 2017, by
the News Journals Harry Themal, 01/18/19 by Harrison H. for