'Delaware Colony' was an
English colony in
North America.
Settlement
From the early
Dutch settlement in 1631 to the colony’s rule by
Pennsylvania in 1682, the land changed hands many times. Because of this Delaware became a very heterogeneous society made up of individuals who were both religiously and culturally diverse.
During his voyage in 1609 to find the
Northwest Passage to Asia for the
Dutch,
Henry Hudson sailed into what now is the
Delaware Bay. He would name it the South River, but this would later change after
Samuel Argall discovered the river in 1610 after being blown off course. Argall would later rename the river, Delaware, after his governor,
Lord De La Warr.
[1]
Neither the Dutch nor the English showed any true early interest in establishing any kind of settlement of this land. The first true attempt to settle the land came in 1631 when the Dutch sent a group of twenty eight men to build a fort inside Cape Henlopen on Lewes Creek.
[2] This first colony was established in order to take advantage of the large whale population and produce whale oil. However, the entire colony was massacred by the native Indians because of misunderstandings.
[3]
In 1638 the
New Sweden Company created the first permanent settlement of Delaware and created an outpost on the Minquan Kil.
[4] The outpost of the Swedish settlement was renamed after the queen of Sweden to be Fort Christina. A famous early governor was Colonel
Johan Printz who ruled the young colony for ten years until he was succeeded by
John Rising in 1654.
[5] The end of the Swedish rule came in 1655. Peter Stuvvesant came with a Dutch fleet and overthrew the Swedish forts, thus, establishing control of the colony. The town of New Amstel was established and was made the center for fur trading and the colony’s administration headquarters.
[6]
In 1664, after
James, Duke of York, captured
New Amsterdam, Sir Robert Carr was sent to the
Delaware River. He took over New Amstel and renamed it New Castle.
[7] This effectively ended the Dutch ruling of the colony and, for that matter, ended their claims to any land in colonial North America. Delaware was governed from New York by a Deputy of the
Duke of York from 1664 to 1682.
[8]
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.
[9] Penn had a very hard time governing Delaware because the population was made up of a diverse mixture of ethnicities. He attempted to merge the governments of Pennsylvania and the lower counties of Delaware. Representatives from both areas clashed heavily and in 1701 Penn agreed in having two separate assemblies. Delawareans would meet in New Castle and Pennsylvanians would gather in Philadelphia.
[10] Delaware continued to be a melting pot of sorts and was home to many ethnicities including the Swedes, Finns, Dutch, French, and some English.
Name
The area now known as "
Delaware" had no official name before 1776; it was administered by the proprietors of
Pennsylvania as part of their jurisdiction, even though it had a separate local assembly and courts. 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. The term "Lower Counties" refers to the fact that
New Castle,
Kent, and
Sussex were lower, or farther downstream, on the
Delaware River than the counties constituting Pennsylvania proper. The Delaware River itself was named for
Thomas West, Lord De La Warr, the second governor of Virginia.
Name: Delaware
Founder: Duke of York.
Notes
1. State of Delaware: The Official Website for the First State, "State of Delaware (A brief history)," http://www.state.de.us/gic/facts/history/delhist.shtml. [21 January 2007]
2. The Encyclopedia of Colonial and Revolutionary America. Ed. John Mack Faragher. 1990 Sachem Publishing Associates, Inc., New York. pp. 106-108
3. ''Ibid''., 107
4. ''Ibid''
5. "State of Delaware (A Brief History)".
6. ''ibid''
7. The Encyclopedia of Colonial and Revolutionary America, 107.
8. ''ibid''
9. ''ibid''; "State of Delaware (A Brief History)".
10. The Encyclopedia of Colonial and Revolutionary America. pp 108.