Milford
By Dave Kenton
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About this ebook
Dave Kenton
In Milford, Delaware, author Dave Kenton has collected images from the Milford Commission on Landmarks and Museums and the Milford Historical Society to showcase the spirit of a remarkable community. Kenton is commissioner of the Milford Museum and former president of the Milford Historical Society, and a realtor in Rehobeth, Delaware. This pictorial collection invites readers to view the rich heritage of the town, its way of life, and its people.
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Milford - Dave Kenton
Kenton).
INTRODUCTION
The earliest permanent settlers to establish roots in Milford came to Kent and Sussex Counties between 1664 and 1676 after the English took control of Delaware from the Dutch and Swedes. Most early settlers came from old Somerset and Accomac Counties in Maryland and Virginia where English families were staking claims to small land grants of 200 acres on Maryland and Virginia’s eastern shore. Other families moved north from Lewes after that town was founded in 1631 by the Dutch West India Company.
Henry Bowman obtained a patent from the Duke of York in 1680 to settle a 2,000-acre tract of land called Saw Mill Range
that now encompasses Milford. Alexander Draper settled in Slaughter Neck in 1677, Luke Watson was granted land in Cedar Neck in 1676, Mark Manlove moved to Milford Neck in 1677, and Isaac Mason settled along Canterbury Road about 1685.
Milford was settled at the headwaters of the Mispillion River at a location called Three Runs,
at the confluence of the Mispillion River and Bowman’s and Clark’s branches. These early English settlers were industrious millers, farmers, merchants, and sailors. Milford got its start as a landing site and trading post built by a mariner-turned-trader, Joseph Oliver. Oliver was born about 1727 in Slaughter Neck near the plantations of Alexander Draper and Nehemiah Davis. He migrated north to the Mispillion River headwaters and during 1771–1773 purchased a 115-acre tract of farmland on the north side of the Mispillion River, where he established his home and wharf.
In 1787, Oliver divided his farm into a town grid and began offering lots to newer settlers , costing from $3 to $8 per year under the old English system of ground rents. The first lots were sold along Northwest Front Street in December 1786 and January 1787. By 1790, Milford had more than 80 structures built on Oliver’s 115-acre farm extending from the river to the present location of Banneker School on North Street.
By 1791, Oliver had petitioned the General Assembly in Dover for a drawbridge over the Mispillion to be constructed along Kings Highway
leading from Kent to Sussex County. The bridge permitted traders and travelers easy access to Sussex County along the road leading to the court at Lewestown. At the same time in 1787 that Oliver was selling lots for his new village, Parson Sydenham Thorne, rector of the Savannah Church located three miles west of Milford, decided to relocate his church to a plot of land donated by Oliver along Church Street in Milford. Parson Thorne married a wealthy widow, Betty Crapper, and purchased the stately Silver Hill
mansion and 263-acre farm owned by the Cullen family. He soon built a gristmill just west of Oliver’s landing. Together, these two enterprising leaders assured the survival of Milford as a new town through their tireless efforts to bring business, culture, religion, and civility to a primitive area.
Milford obtained its town charter in 1807, the same year Joseph Oliver died. New merchants established stores, wharves, and granaries along North Walnut Street, extending the business district two blocks to the Mispillion River.
The Mispillion River was the primary avenue of trade throughout the 19th century and it is not surprising that Milford became a major shipbuilding town around 1790, with John Draper’s shipyard located on the north side of the Mispillion at Northeast Fourth Street where it meets the river. Between 1790 and 1815, William DuPrey operated another shipyard near New Wharf east of Milford, and by 1815, Nathaniel Hickman was building wooden sailing vessels farther east at his farm near Delaware Bay, known as Hickman’s Landing. By 1860 Milford boasted seven shipyards employing hundreds of carpenters, loggers, caulkers, and scroll workers.
Following the Civil War improvements in technology ushered Milford into the lucrative era of canning and fruit drying. Before the invention of refrigeration there was no efficient and safe method of preserving and transporting perishable vegetables and fruits to city markets in Wilmington, Philadelphia, and New York. The first boiler-powered fruit drying machines were introduced in 1870 and the effect on local farm products was immediate and dramatic. When the railroad finally reached Milford in August 1859, a new method of transportation provided a reliable alternative to steamboats and sailing ships. Milford grew to a town of 3,500 inhabitants by 1900. The town boasted new electric lighting installed in 1887 and a public water system completed in 1892.
In 1900, two local dentists brought a fledgling dental supply business to Milford after the death of the owner, Levin D. Caulk, in 1896. Drs. Frank and G. Layton Grier saw the need for new advancements in the development of synthetic porcelain for tooth repairs. They started a new manufacturing plant in Milford that expanded in 1908 and again in 1912 to become the most advanced research facility of its kind in the field of dentistry.
Drs. William (II) and Sam Marshall, guided by their mother, Mary Louise, led a drive with support from the Grier brothers to establish a hospital in Milford between 1907 and 1921. The Milford Emergency Hospital was incorporated in 1913. It was located at 110 Northwest Front Street in the former Purnell Lofland home; it was relocated across the street in 1921 in the remodeled Reynear Williams home. In 1938, the hospital was moved to its present location on Clark Avenue and was reincorporated as the Milford Memorial Hospital.
Milford and its local environs have been home to nine governors since 1787. Some of its most historic homes were built and owned by these community leaders over the past two centuries. Today, Milford claims the first woman governor in the history of Delaware, Ruth Ann Minner, elected in 2000.
As Milford enters the 21st century it has grown to a town of 7,500 citizens, proud of a heritage that extends back to the earliest period of European settlement. Delaware is one of the original 13 colonies and the first to ratify the federal constitution on December 7, 1787. The historic district, riverfront greenway, and civic-minded residents lend a quality of life to Milford that is not found in every small town. As Milford enters the 21 st century, it will continue to treasure its past and preserve the best examples of its early history. We hope this pictorial history of Milford will keep the past alive for the next generation proud to call Milford home.
——Dave Kenton
The 2001 Milford Historical Society Trustees are, from left to right, (front row) Ralph Prettyman, treasurer; Carolyn Humes; Marvin P. Schelhouse, president; Dave Kenton; Dr. Ed Hendel, secretary; Dawn Willis; and Susan Emory. Absent from the photo are Barbara Jones, F. Brooke Clendaniel, and Mort Whitehead (deceased).
One
EARLY LAND GRANTS AN D LANDMARKS 1676–1776
Milford was settled gradually after 1680 when Henry Bowman was granted a patent for a 2,000-acre plot called Saw Mill Range.
Between 1680 and 1787, when the first lots were plotted, many patents were granted in the eight-mile area surrounding Milford. Early mills were constructed and landings were established along the Mispillion River. The following diagrams, maps, plots, and photographs attempt to describe Milford during the colonial period prior to the American Revolution.
THE 1778 PLOT. The earliest detailed survey plot of the Saw Mill Range and South Milford was done to divide Levin Crapper’s plantation among the heirs following his death in 1775. This plot shows the location of King Highway