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Delaware Colony

Delaware Colony in the North American Middle Colonies consisted of land on the west bank of the Delaware River Bay. In the early 17th century, the area was inhabited by Lenape and possibly Assateague Native American Indian tribes. The first European settlers were Swedes, who established the colony of New Sweden at Fort Christina in present-day Wilmington, Delaware, in 1638. The Dutch captured the colony in 1655 and annexed it to New Netherland to the north. Great Britain subsequently took control of it from the Dutch in 1664. In 1682, William Penn, the Quaker proprietor of the Province of Pennsylvania to the north leased the three lower counties on the Delaware River from James, the Duke of York, who went on to become King James II.

Lower Counties on
the Delaware
1664–1776
Delaware in 1757
StatusColony of England (1664–1707)
Colony of Great Britain (1707–76)
CapitalNew Castle
Common languagesEnglish, Dutch, Munsee, Unami
GovernmentDependent proprietary colony
Proprietor 
• 1664-1682
Territory contested
• 1682-1718
William Penn (first)
• 1775-1776
John Penn (last)
LegislatureGeneral Assembly
History 
• Established
1664
1776
CurrencyDelaware pound
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Today part ofUnited States

The lower counties of Delaware were governed as part of the Province of Pennsylvania from 1682 until 1701, when the lower counties petitioned for and were granted an independent colonial legislature; the two colonies shared the same governor until 1776. The English colonists who settled in Delaware were mainly Quakers. In the first half of the 18th century, New Castle and Philadelphia became the primary ports of entry to the new world for a quarter of a million Protestant immigrants from Northern Ireland, referred to as "Scotch-Irish" in America and "Ulster Scots" in Northern Ireland. Delaware had no established religion at this time. With the start of the American Revolutionary War, Delaware's assembly voted to break all ties with both Great Britain and the Province of Pennsylvania, forming the state of Delaware.

Dutch and Swedish settlements edit

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1670700—    
16801,005+43.6%
16901,482+47.5%
17002,470+66.7%
17103,645+47.6%
17205,385+47.7%
17309,170+70.3%
174019,870+116.7%
175028,704+44.5%
176033,250+15.8%
177035,496+6.8%
177437,219+4.9%
178045,385+21.9%
Source: 1670–1760;[1] 1774[2] 1770–1780[3]

From the early Dutch settlement in 1631 to the colony's rule by Pennsylvania in 1682, the land that later became the U.S. state of Delaware changed hands many times. Because of this, Delaware became a heterogeneous society made up of individuals who were diverse in country of origin and religion.[citation needed]

The first European exploration of what would become known as the Delaware Valley was made by the Dutch ship Halve Maen under the command of Henry Hudson in 1609. He was searching for what was believed to be a Northwest Passage to Asia. Hudson sailed into what now is the Delaware Bay. He named it the South River, but this would later change after Samuel Argall came across the mouth of the river in 1610, after being blown off course. Argall later renamed this waterway as the river Delaware, after Thomas West, Lord De La Warr, the second governor of Virginia.[4]

Follow-up expeditions by Cornelius May in 1613 and Cornelius Hendrickson in 1614 mapped the shoreline of what would become the colony and state of Delaware for inclusion in the New Netherland colony. Initial Dutch settlement was centered up the Delaware River at Fort Nassau at Big Timber Creek, south of what is now Gloucester City, New Jersey.

Neither the Dutch nor the English showed any early interest in establishing settlement on this land. It was not until 1629 that agents of the Dutch West India Company, Gillis Hossitt and Jacob Jansz, arrived to negotiate with the Native Americans to "purchase" land for a colony. (The Dutch always purchased land from the Native Americans, rather than take it by force, but the peoples had differing concepts of property and use. The Native Americans often considered the Dutch "payments" to be gifts in keeping with their Native custom, and expected to share use of the common land.) Hossitt and Jansz secured a treaty granting the Dutch a parcel of land running along the shore eight Dutch miles long and half a Dutch mile deep (roughly 29 by just under 2 US miles). This nearly coincided with the length of the coast of modern Sussex and Kent counties in Delaware.

In 1631 the Dutch sent a group of twenty-eight men to build a fort inside Cape Henlopen on Lewes Creek to establish the Zwaanendael Colony.[5] This first colony was intended to take advantage of the large whale population in the bay and to produce whale oil. A cultural misunderstanding with the Native Americans resulted in their killing of these 28 colonists before a year had passed.[5] Patroon David Pietersz. de Vries arrived shortly thereafter with an additional 50 settlers. Although he concluded a treaty with the Indians, de Vries, his partners in Holland, and the Dutch West India Company decided the location was too dangerous for immediate colonization. They took the additional settlers to New Amsterdam (New York) instead.

In March 1638, the Swedish colony of New Sweden was established as the first permanent European settlement in Delaware. The Kalmar Nyckel anchored at a rocky point on the Minquas Kill. Today this site is called Swedes' Landing; it is located in Wilmington, Delaware.[5] The New Sweden Company was organized and overseen by Clas Larsson Fleming, a Swedish admiral and administrator. Samuel Blommaert, a Flemish director of the Dutch West India Company who had grown frustrated with the company's policies, assisted the fitting-out.[6] The expedition was led, and had been instigated by Peter Minuit, the founding governor of New Netherland. He had been dismissed by the Dutch West India Company, which operated the colony as a concession. Minuit resented the company and was well aware that the Dutch had little settlement in the Zuyd (Delaware) river valley. New Sweden was a multicultural affair, with Finns, Dutch, Walloons (Belgians), and Germans, in addition to Swedes among the settlers.

The first outpost of the Swedish settlement was named Fort Christina (now Wilmington) after Queen Christina of Sweden. The Swedes introduced log cabin construction to the New World and the humble house form was later spread to the American backcountry by Scotch-Irish immigrants who entered the colony through the port of New Castle. Swedish colonial Governor Johan Björnsson Printz administered the colony of New Sweden from 1643 to 1653. He was succeeded by Johan Classon Risingh, the last governor of New Sweden.[4] The Dutch had never accepted the Swedish colony as legitimate, and the Dutch West India Company competed with the officials and backers of New Sweden. In 1651, New Netherland Governor Peter Stuyvesant had Fort Nassau dismantled and reassembled downriver of Fort Christina as Fort Casimir. This meant that the Dutch effectively encircled the Swedish colony. The Swedes abandoned Fort Beversreede, a short-lived attempt to establish a foothold at the end of the Great Minquas Path (in modern Philadelphia).

Three years later, the New Sweden colony attacked and seized Fort Casimir, renaming it Fort Trinity. The struggle finally came to an end in September 1655. With the Second Great Northern War raging in Europe, Stuyvesant assembled an army and naval squadron sufficient to capture the Swedish forts, thus re-establishing control of the colony. The Dutch renamed Fort Casimir/Trinity as New Amstel (later translated to New Castle). It became their center for fur trading with Native Americans and the colony's administration headquarters.[4] The area's European population grew rapidly.

English conquest edit

In 1664, after English Colonel Richard Nicolls captured New Amsterdam, Robert Carr was sent to the Delaware River settlements. He took over New Amstel, pillaging it and mistreating its settlers, some of whom he sold into slavery in Virginia.[7][8] Carr translated the name of the post from Dutch into English and it has been known since as New Castle.[5] Carr and his troops continued down the shore, ravaging and burning settlements, including a Mennonite utopian community led by Pieter Corneliszoon Plockhoy near present-day Lewes, Delaware. This effectively ended the Dutch rule of the colony and, for that matter, ended their claims to any land in colonial North America. The English took over New Netherland, renaming it New York. Delaware was thenceforth claimed by New York under a Deputy of the Duke of York from 1664 to 1682, but neither the Duke nor his colonists controlled it. The proprietors of Maryland took action to take advantage of this situation.[5]

Durham County, Maryland edit

Between 1669 and 1672, Delaware was an incorporated county under the Province of Maryland. When the Duke of York made use of his charter on behalf of courtier William Penn, through conveyances made by the governor of New York, there was a brief conflict of interest between the Catholic, Tory, and sometime Jacobite sympathizer Lord Baltimore with his friend the aforesaid Duke. A hard-fought court battle was subsequently relegated to a proprietary dispute between the Calvert and Penn families since both were held in favor by both the King and Prince James. By 1768, the Mason-Dixon line is said to have legally resolved vague outlines in the overlap between Maryland and Pennsylvania. By this boundary, Delaware was substantially awarded to Pennsylvania. Eventually, Delaware gained its own independence from Pennsylvania and fended off Maryland.

New Castle, Kent, and Sussex Counties, Pennsylvania edit

The area now known as Delaware was owned by William Penn, the Quaker owner of Pennsylvania. In contemporary documents from the early Revolutionary period, the area is generally referred to as "The Three Lower Counties on the Delaware River" (Lower Counties on Delaware) or by the names of the three counties.[9]

After William Penn was granted the province of Pennsylvania by King Charles II in 1681, he asked for and later received the lands of Delaware from the Duke of York.[4][10] Penn had a very hard time governing Delaware because the economy and geology resembled those of the Chesapeake Bay colonies more than that of Pennsylvania. The lowland areas were developed for tobacco plantations and dependent on enslaved Africans and African Americans for labor. Penn attempted to merge the governments of Pennsylvania and the lower counties of Delaware. Representatives from each area clashed strongly and, in 1701 Penn agreed to allow two assemblies to be elected and conduct their separate affairs. Delawareans would meet in New Castle, and Pennsylvanians would gather in Philadelphia.[5] Delaware, like Philadelphia and more so than Maryland, continued to be a melting pot of sorts. It was home to Swedes, Finns, Dutch, and French, in addition to the English, who constituted the dominant culture.

References edit

  1. ^ Purvis, Thomas L. (1999). Balkin, Richard (ed.). Colonial America to 1763. New York: Facts on File. pp. 128–129. ISBN 978-0816025275.
  2. ^ Purvis, Thomas L. (1995). Balkin, Richard (ed.). Revolutionary America 1763 to 1800. New York: Facts on File. p. 160. ISBN 978-0816025282.
  3. ^ "Colonial and Pre-Federal Statistics" (PDF). United States Census Bureau. p. 1168.
  4. ^ a b c d State of Delaware (A Brief History)[permanent dead link]. State of Delaware. Accessed March 18, 2017.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Faragher, John Mack, ed. (1990) The Encyclopedia of Colonial and Revolutionary America. New York: Sachem Publishing Associates, Inc., pp. 106–108.
  6. ^ A History of the Kalmar Nyckel and a New Look at New Sweden by John R.Henderson [1] July 6, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Scharf, John Thomas (1888). General history. L. J. Richards & Company. p. 67.
  8. ^ Gerrit van Sweeringen's account of the settling of the Dutch and Swedes at the Delawaare in: Pennsylvania archives. J. Severns & Company. 1877. p. 752.
  9. ^ Rodney, Richard S (June 1930). . Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. Historical Society of Pennsylvania. p. 209. Archived from the original on November 16, 2019. Retrieved November 16, 2019.
  10. ^ Rodney, Richard S (June 1930). . Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. Historical Society of Pennsylvania. pp. 211–214. Archived from the original on November 16, 2019. Retrieved November 16, 2019.

Sources edit

  • Johnson, Amandus. The Swedish Settlements on the Delaware, 1638–1664 (Philadelphia: Swedish Colonial Society, 1911)
  • Weslager, C. A. A Man and His Ship: Peter Minuit and the Kalmar Nyckel ( Kalmar Nyckel Foundation. Wilmington, Delaware. 1989)

39°44′17″N 75°33′29″W / 39.738°N 75.558°W / 39.738; -75.558

delaware, colony, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, april, 2012, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, n. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations April 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Delaware Colony in the North American Middle Colonies consisted of land on the west bank of the Delaware River Bay In the early 17th century the area was inhabited by Lenape and possibly Assateague Native American Indian tribes The first European settlers were Swedes who established the colony of New Sweden at Fort Christina in present day Wilmington Delaware in 1638 The Dutch captured the colony in 1655 and annexed it to New Netherland to the north Great Britain subsequently took control of it from the Dutch in 1664 In 1682 William Penn the Quaker proprietor of the Province of Pennsylvania to the north leased the three lower counties on the Delaware River from James the Duke of York who went on to become King James II Lower Counties onthe Delaware1664 1776FlagDelaware in 1757StatusColony of England 1664 1707 Colony of Great Britain 1707 76 CapitalNew CastleCommon languagesEnglish Dutch Munsee UnamiGovernmentDependent proprietary colonyProprietor 1664 1682Territory contested 1682 1718William Penn first 1775 1776John Penn last LegislatureGeneral AssemblyHistory Established1664 Independence1776CurrencyDelaware poundPreceded by Succeeded byNew Netherland DelawareToday part ofUnited StatesThe lower counties of Delaware were governed as part of the Province of Pennsylvania from 1682 until 1701 when the lower counties petitioned for and were granted an independent colonial legislature the two colonies shared the same governor until 1776 The English colonists who settled in Delaware were mainly Quakers In the first half of the 18th century New Castle and Philadelphia became the primary ports of entry to the new world for a quarter of a million Protestant immigrants from Northern Ireland referred to as Scotch Irish in America and Ulster Scots in Northern Ireland Delaware had no established religion at this time With the start of the American Revolutionary War Delaware s assembly voted to break all ties with both Great Britain and the Province of Pennsylvania forming the state of Delaware Contents 1 Dutch and Swedish settlements 2 English conquest 3 Durham County Maryland 4 New Castle Kent and Sussex Counties Pennsylvania 5 References 6 SourcesDutch and Swedish settlements editHistorical populationYearPop 1670700 16801 005 43 6 16901 482 47 5 17002 470 66 7 17103 645 47 6 17205 385 47 7 17309 170 70 3 174019 870 116 7 175028 704 44 5 176033 250 15 8 177035 496 6 8 177437 219 4 9 178045 385 21 9 Source 1670 1760 1 1774 2 1770 1780 3 From the early Dutch settlement in 1631 to the colony s rule by Pennsylvania in 1682 the land that later became the U S state of Delaware changed hands many times Because of this Delaware became a heterogeneous society made up of individuals who were diverse in country of origin and religion citation needed The first European exploration of what would become known as the Delaware Valley was made by the Dutch ship Halve Maen under the command of Henry Hudson in 1609 He was searching for what was believed to be a Northwest Passage to Asia Hudson sailed into what now is the Delaware Bay He named it the South River but this would later change after Samuel Argall came across the mouth of the river in 1610 after being blown off course Argall later renamed this waterway as the river Delaware after Thomas West Lord De La Warr the second governor of Virginia 4 Follow up expeditions by Cornelius May in 1613 and Cornelius Hendrickson in 1614 mapped the shoreline of what would become the colony and state of Delaware for inclusion in the New Netherland colony Initial Dutch settlement was centered up the Delaware River at Fort Nassau at Big Timber Creek south of what is now Gloucester City New Jersey Neither the Dutch nor the English showed any early interest in establishing settlement on this land It was not until 1629 that agents of the Dutch West India Company Gillis Hossitt and Jacob Jansz arrived to negotiate with the Native Americans to purchase land for a colony The Dutch always purchased land from the Native Americans rather than take it by force but the peoples had differing concepts of property and use The Native Americans often considered the Dutch payments to be gifts in keeping with their Native custom and expected to share use of the common land Hossitt and Jansz secured a treaty granting the Dutch a parcel of land running along the shore eight Dutch miles long and half a Dutch mile deep roughly 29 by just under 2 US miles This nearly coincided with the length of the coast of modern Sussex and Kent counties in Delaware In 1631 the Dutch sent a group of twenty eight men to build a fort inside Cape Henlopen on Lewes Creek to establish the Zwaanendael Colony 5 This first colony was intended to take advantage of the large whale population in the bay and to produce whale oil A cultural misunderstanding with the Native Americans resulted in their killing of these 28 colonists before a year had passed 5 Patroon David Pietersz de Vries arrived shortly thereafter with an additional 50 settlers Although he concluded a treaty with the Indians de Vries his partners in Holland and the Dutch West India Company decided the location was too dangerous for immediate colonization They took the additional settlers to New Amsterdam New York instead In March 1638 the Swedish colony of New Sweden was established as the first permanent European settlement in Delaware The Kalmar Nyckel anchored at a rocky point on the Minquas Kill Today this site is called Swedes Landing it is located in Wilmington Delaware 5 The New Sweden Company was organized and overseen by Clas Larsson Fleming a Swedish admiral and administrator Samuel Blommaert a Flemish director of the Dutch West India Company who had grown frustrated with the company s policies assisted the fitting out 6 The expedition was led and had been instigated by Peter Minuit the founding governor of New Netherland He had been dismissed by the Dutch West India Company which operated the colony as a concession Minuit resented the company and was well aware that the Dutch had little settlement in the Zuyd Delaware river valley New Sweden was a multicultural affair with Finns Dutch Walloons Belgians and Germans in addition to Swedes among the settlers The first outpost of the Swedish settlement was named Fort Christina now Wilmington after Queen Christina of Sweden The Swedes introduced log cabin construction to the New World and the humble house form was later spread to the American backcountry by Scotch Irish immigrants who entered the colony through the port of New Castle Swedish colonial Governor Johan Bjornsson Printz administered the colony of New Sweden from 1643 to 1653 He was succeeded by Johan Classon Risingh the last governor of New Sweden 4 The Dutch had never accepted the Swedish colony as legitimate and the Dutch West India Company competed with the officials and backers of New Sweden In 1651 New Netherland Governor Peter Stuyvesant had Fort Nassau dismantled and reassembled downriver of Fort Christina as Fort Casimir This meant that the Dutch effectively encircled the Swedish colony The Swedes abandoned Fort Beversreede a short lived attempt to establish a foothold at the end of the Great Minquas Path in modern Philadelphia Three years later the New Sweden colony attacked and seized Fort Casimir renaming it Fort Trinity The struggle finally came to an end in September 1655 With the Second Great Northern War raging in Europe Stuyvesant assembled an army and naval squadron sufficient to capture the Swedish forts thus re establishing control of the colony The Dutch renamed Fort Casimir Trinity as New Amstel later translated to New Castle It became their center for fur trading with Native Americans and the colony s administration headquarters 4 The area s European population grew rapidly English conquest editIn 1664 after English Colonel Richard Nicolls captured New Amsterdam Robert Carr was sent to the Delaware River settlements He took over New Amstel pillaging it and mistreating its settlers some of whom he sold into slavery in Virginia 7 8 Carr translated the name of the post from Dutch into English and it has been known since as New Castle 5 Carr and his troops continued down the shore ravaging and burning settlements including a Mennonite utopian community led by Pieter Corneliszoon Plockhoy near present day Lewes Delaware This effectively ended the Dutch rule of the colony and for that matter ended their claims to any land in colonial North America The English took over New Netherland renaming it New York Delaware was thenceforth claimed by New York under a Deputy of the Duke of York from 1664 to 1682 but neither the Duke nor his colonists controlled it The proprietors of Maryland took action to take advantage of this situation 5 Durham County Maryland editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Between 1669 and 1672 Delaware was an incorporated county under the Province of Maryland When the Duke of York made use of his charter on behalf of courtier William Penn through conveyances made by the governor of New York there was a brief conflict of interest between the Catholic Tory and sometime Jacobite sympathizer Lord Baltimore with his friend the aforesaid Duke A hard fought court battle was subsequently relegated to a proprietary dispute between the Calvert and Penn families since both were held in favor by both the King and Prince James By 1768 the Mason Dixon line is said to have legally resolved vague outlines in the overlap between Maryland and Pennsylvania By this boundary Delaware was substantially awarded to Pennsylvania Eventually Delaware gained its own independence from Pennsylvania and fended off Maryland New Castle Kent and Sussex Counties Pennsylvania editThe area now known as Delaware was owned by William Penn the Quaker owner of Pennsylvania In contemporary documents from the early Revolutionary period the area is generally referred to as The Three Lower Counties on the Delaware River Lower Counties on Delaware or by the names of the three counties 9 After William Penn was granted the province of Pennsylvania by King Charles II in 1681 he asked for and later received the lands of Delaware from the Duke of York 4 10 Penn had a very hard time governing Delaware because the economy and geology resembled those of the Chesapeake Bay colonies more than that of Pennsylvania The lowland areas were developed for tobacco plantations and dependent on enslaved Africans and African Americans for labor Penn attempted to merge the governments of Pennsylvania and the lower counties of Delaware Representatives from each area clashed strongly and in 1701 Penn agreed to allow two assemblies to be elected and conduct their separate affairs Delawareans would meet in New Castle and Pennsylvanians would gather in Philadelphia 5 Delaware like Philadelphia and more so than Maryland continued to be a melting pot of sorts It was home to Swedes Finns Dutch and French in addition to the English who constituted the dominant culture References edit Purvis Thomas L 1999 Balkin Richard ed Colonial America to 1763 New York Facts on File pp 128 129 ISBN 978 0816025275 Purvis Thomas L 1995 Balkin Richard ed Revolutionary America 1763 to 1800 New York Facts on File p 160 ISBN 978 0816025282 Colonial and Pre Federal Statistics PDF United States Census Bureau p 1168 a b c d State of Delaware A Brief History permanent dead link State of Delaware Accessed March 18 2017 a b c d e f Faragher John Mack ed 1990 The Encyclopedia of Colonial and Revolutionary America New York Sachem Publishing Associates Inc pp 106 108 A History of the Kalmar Nyckel and a New Look at New Sweden by John R Henderson 1 Archived July 6 2008 at the Wayback Machine Scharf John Thomas 1888 General history L J Richards amp Company p 67 Gerrit van Sweeringen s account of the settling of the Dutch and Swedes at the Delawaare in Pennsylvania archives J Severns amp Company 1877 p 752 Rodney Richard S June 1930 Early Relations of Delaware and Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography Historical Society of Pennsylvania p 209 Archived from the original on November 16 2019 Retrieved November 16 2019 Rodney Richard S June 1930 Early Relations of Delaware and Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography Historical Society of Pennsylvania pp 211 214 Archived from the original on November 16 2019 Retrieved November 16 2019 Sources editJohnson Amandus The Swedish Settlements on the Delaware 1638 1664 Philadelphia Swedish Colonial Society 1911 Weslager C A A Man and His Ship Peter Minuit and the Kalmar Nyckel Kalmar Nyckel Foundation Wilmington Delaware 1989 Portals nbsp British Empire nbsp Monarchy nbsp North America 39 44 17 N 75 33 29 W 39 738 N 75 558 W 39 738 75 558 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Delaware Colony amp oldid 1181446307, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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