Things to See in Delaware

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Posted by Your Guide on April 26, 2006 9:10 PM

Aspendale, Kenton, DE
A small late-18th century plantation, with little-changed dependencies, lanes, and field divisions. The main house exemplifies the moderately-sized Georgian brick farmhouse and the persistence of Early Georgian architectural traditions in colonial Delaware. A frame wing may predate the main brick portion of the house. Private residence.

Broom, Jacob House: Montchanon, DE
Broom, a signer of the U.S. Constitution, served in the Delaware legislature and attended the Annapolis Convention (1786). He lived in this house from 1795 to 1802. Broom also was a pioneer industrialist who established the first cotton mill on the Brandywine in 1795. The house is not open to the public.

Corbit-Sharp House: Odessa, DE
The house, erected in 1772-4, is one of the great late Georgian houses in Delaware and the Middle Colonies. It illustrates the architectural influence of a major town on smaller towns in its region. The gardens were designed in 1932 by Marian Cruger Coffin.

John Dickenson House: Dover, DE
Dickenson served in the Delaware and Pennsylvania legislatures and was a member of the Stamp Act Congress, the First and Second Continental Congresses and the Constitutional Convention. His political writings, which include ‘The Letters of a Pennsylvania Farmer’, earned him the title ‘Penman of the Revolution’.
The site was recently restored.

Eleutherian Mills Wilmington, DE
Site of the 1802 works that revolutionized powder manufacturing and became the E.I DuPont industry. The site includes DuPont’s residence, offices and mills.

Fort Christina: Wilmington, DE
The fort was the site of the first Swedish military outpost, circa 1638 in the Delaware Valley, which became the center of the first Swedish settlement in North America and its trading and commercial center. It fell into disrepair after the English conquest in 1664 and except for a few rocks jutting into the river, which served as a landing site, the last vestiges of the fort have disappeared.

Lombardy Hall, Wilmington, DE
From 1793 to 1812, this place served as the home of Gunning Bedford, Jr., a delegate from Delaware to the Continental Congress and the Annapolis Convention, and a signer of the U.S. Constitution in 1787.

Holy Trinity (Old Swedes) Church: Wilmington, DE
The oldest surviving building of a Delaware Valley Swedish congregation, the church is built on the site of the Fort Christina settlement’s first burial ground. The church was constructed after the fall of New Sweden, but services were held in Swedish even into the eighteenth century. It has housed an Episcopal parish since 1791.

New Castle Historic District, New Castle, DE
New Castle was founded by Peter Stuyvesant in 1651 as the seat of the New Netherlands government, and served as the colonial capital of Delaware until 1766. The Historic District offers a broad range of architectural styles to view, which remained essentially unchanged from the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries.

New Castle Courthouse, New Castle, DE
The Assembly of the Three Lower Counties (Delaware) met here from 1704 until May 1777. The first State legislature under the newly framed state constitution met here on October 28, 1776.



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