Delaware,
The first of the thirteen original States that ratified the federal Constitution; takes its name from Lord De la Warr (Delaware), who entered the bay of that name in 1610, when he was governor of Virginia. It had been discovered by Hudson in 1609. In 1629 Samuel Godyn, a director of the Dutch West India Company, bought of the Indians a tract of land near the mouth of the Delaware; and the next year De Vries, with twenty colonists from Holland, settled near the site of Lewes. The colony was destroyed by the natives three years afterwards, and the Indians had sole possession of that district until 1638, when a colony of Swedes and FinnsState seal of Delaware. |
Old Swedish Church, Wilmington, Delaware. |
When Howe entered Philadelphia (September, 1777) the Americans still held control of the Delaware River below that city. On Mud Island, near the confluence of the Schuylkill and Delaware, was built Fort Mifflin. On the New Jersey shore, opposite, at Red Bank, was Fort Mercer, a strong redoubt, well furnished with heavy artillery. At Billingsport, on the same shore, 3 miles lower down, were extensive but unfinished works designed to guard some obstructions in the river there. Other formidable obstructions were placed in the river below forts Mifflin and Mercer, in the form of chevaux-de-frise—sunken crates of stones, with heavy spears of iron-pointed timber, to receive and pierce the bows of vessels. Besides these, there were floating batteries on the river. See Mercer, Fort; Mifflin, Fort.
Governors of Delaware: under the Swedes.
Name. | Date. |
Peter Minuit | 1638 to 1640 |
Peter Hollender | 1640 to 1642 |
Johan Printz | 1643 to 1652 |
Johan Pappegoia. | 1653 to 1654 |
Johan C. Rising | 1654 to 1655 |
under the Dutch. | |
Peter Stuyvesant | 1655 to 1664 |
governors of Delaware: English colonial. From 1664 up to 1682, under the government of New
York; and from 1683 up to 1773, under the proprietary government of Pennsylvania.
State.
Name. | Date. |
John McKinley | 1776 to 1777 |
Caesar Rodney | 1778 to 1781 |
John Dickinson | 1782to 1783 |
John Cook | 1783 |
Nicholas Van Dyke | 1784 to 1786 |
Thomas Collins | 1786 to 1789 |
Joshua Clayton | 1789 to 1796 |
Gunning Bedford | 1796 to 1797 |
Daniel Rodgers | 1797 to 1798 |
Richard Bassett | 1798 to 1801 |
James Sykes | 1801 to 1802 |
David Hall | 1802 to 1805 |
Nathaniel Mitchell | 1805 to 1808 |
George Truitt | 1808 to 1811 |
Joseph Hazlett | 1811 to 1814 |
Daniel Rodney | 1814 to 1817 |
John Clark | 1817 to 1820 |
Jacob Stout | 1820 to 1821 |
John Collins | 1821 to 1822 |
Caleb Rodney | 1822 to 1823 |
Joseph Hazlett | 1823 to 1824 |
Samuel Paynter | 1824 to 1827 |
Charles Polk | 1827 to 1830 |
David Hazzard | 1830 to 1833 |
Caleb P. Bennett | 1833 to 1836 |
Charles Polk | 1836 to 1837 |
Cornelius P. Comegys. | 1837 to 1840 |
William B. Cooper. | 1840 to 1844 |
Thomas Stockton. | 1844 to 1846 |
Joseph Maul. | 1846 |
William Temple | 1846 |
William Thorp . | 1847 to 1851 |
William H. Ross. | 1851 to 1855 |
Peter F. Cansey . | 1855 to 1859 |
William Burton . | 1859 to 1863 |
William Cannon | 1863 to 1867 |
Grove Saulsbury.. | 1867to 1871 |
James Ponder . | 1871 to 1875 |
John P. Cochran. | 1875 to 1879 |
John W. Hall. | 1879 to 1883 |
Charles C. Stockley . | 1883 to 1887 |
Benjamin T. Biggs.. | 1887 to 1891 |
Robert J. Reynolds. | 1891 to 1895 |
Joshua H. Marvil. | 1895 |
William T. Watson . | 1895 to 1897 |
Ebe W. Tunnell. | 1897 to 1901 |
John Hunn. | 1901 to—— |
United States Senators.
[64]Name | No. of Congress | Date. |
Richard Bassett | 1st and 2d | 1789 to 1793 |
George Read | 1st to 2d | 1789 to 1793 |
Henry Latimer. | 3d to 6th | 1793 to 1801 |
John Vining. | 3d to 5th | 1793 to1798 |
Joshua Clayton | 5th | 1798 |
William Hill Wells | 5th to 8th | 1799 to 1805 |
Samuel White. | 7th to 11th | 1801 to 1809 |
James A. Bayard | 8th to 12th | 1805 to 1813 |
Outerbridge Horsey | 1lth to 16th | 1810 to 1821 |
William Hill Wells | 13th to 14th | 1813 to1817 |
Nicholas Van Dyke | 15th to 19th | 1817 to1827 |
Caesar A. Rodney | 17th | 1821 to 1823 |
Thomas Clayton | 18th to 19th | 1824 to 1827 |
Daniel Rodney | 19th | 1826 |
Henry M. Ridgely. | 19th to 20th | 1827 to 1829 |
Louis McLane | 20th to 21st | 1827 to 1829 |
John A. Clayton | 21st to 23d | 1829 to 1835 |
Arnold Naudain. | 21st to 23d | 1830 to 1836 |
Richard H. Bayard | 24th to 28th | 1836 to 1845 |
Thomas Clayton | 24th to 29th | 1837 to 1847 |
John M. Clayton | 29th to 30th | 1845 to 1849 |
Name. | No. of Congress | Date. |
John Wales | 30th to 31st | 1849 to 1851 |
Presley Spruance | 30th to 32d | 1847 to 1853 |
James A. Bayard | 32d to 38th | 1851 to 1864 |
John M. Clayton | 33d to 34th | 1853 to 1856 |
Joseph P. Comegys | 34th | 1856 |
Martin Bates | 35th | 1858 |
Willard Saulsbury | 36th to 41st | 1859 to 1871 |
George Read Riddle | 38th to 40th | 1864 to 1867 |
James A. Bayard | 40th | 1867 to 1869 |
Thomas Francis Bayard | 41st to 48th | 1869 to 1885 |
Eli Saulsbury | 42d to 50th | 1871 to 1889 |
George Gray | 49th to 56th | 1885 to 1899 |
Anthony Higgins | 51st to 54th | 1889 to 1895 |
Richard R. Kenney | 54th to 56th | 1897 to 1901 |