Town of Leipsic, Little Creek Hundred, Kent County, Delaware


Early Settlement
In the old records there is the
conveyance of a tract of land called the "Weald" by Edward
Boesll to James and George Gano and Jacob Stout, April 30, 1723.
The "Weald" contained 300 acres, and had been patented
originally to John Hillyard October 10, 1687. Shortly after the
conveyance to Stout and Gano, Stout laid out the town of Fast
Landing, the name being given for the reason that it was the
only fast ground above the bay. January 24, 1814, an attempt was
made to name the place Vienna, and the bill had passed the
Legislature, but on January 28th, of the same year, the present
name of Leipsic was given it, as it was a great shipping-point
for furs. Hon. Jacob Stout, who lived there in a house which
still stands on the bend of the road from Dover to Morton, was
instrumental in giving the place its name. The town in 1836 was
one of the most important on the Peninsula. The wharves were
hives of industry and the boat-yards employed, large numbers of
men. Large quantities of lumber, grain and oysters were shipped
to all parts of the world. Daniel Palmer, Charles Harper &
Brother and Robert H. More kept large general stores in the
town. As many as twenty- four vessels loaded at one time at the
wharves. The boat-builders were James G. Waples, Wilson L.
Cannon and George Parris. The latter had a saw-mill and several
granaries. Mr. Cannon is still living in Dover. He began
building boats in 1886. Among the vessels built by him were the
"Louis," "Mary" and "Fairman" (lost on the Irish coast), and in
1854 he closed his yard, after building the last vessel launched
at the town. February 2, 1839, the Leipsic Navigation Company
was organized to improve the creek, with W. L. Cannon as
president; Wm. Collins, secretary; and Joseph P. Palmer,
treasurer. Three canals were cut, at a cost of two thousand
eight hundred dollars, to shorten the distance to the bay. The
Smyrna, Leipsic and Philadelphia Steamboat Company was
incorporated February 3, 1839, but did not organize until 1853,
when W. L. Cannon was made president, B. F. Chatam secretary and
John McClary treasurer.
The company first ran the steamers
"Diamond State" and "Lamokin," but the management has now-passed
into other hands, which placed on the route the "Maid of Kent
and "David Reed." The domestic trade of the town is quite large,
and a profitable business is done in the shipping of marsh hay,
grain and oysters.
Merchants
John W. Fenimore, merchant at Leipsic,
was born in Burlington County, New Jersey, March 1, 1830. His
grandfather, John W. Fenimore, was an officer in the Revolution,
and after the war lived and died near Burlington. George W.
Fenimore, his son, and the father of the subject of this sketch,
married Eliza Scott. She died in 1837, leaving three sons and
one daughter, and he married his second wife, Mary Reeves, in
1839. He soon thereafter bought a farm of two hundred and eighty
acres in Little Creek Hundred, near Dover. The following year,
1841, they moved to Delaware and began the cultivation of the
farm, on which there was then a small orchard of five hundred
peach trees. He immediately set out another orchard of ten acres
and shipped the first crops to Philadelphia by boat from Short's
Landing on Smyrna Creek. He had just began to prosper as a
general farmer and fruit-grower when he died, in 1844, and the
farm was sold by the administrator a few years after to R. B.
Jump, of Dover.
John W. Fenimore, their son, attended
school at Leipsic and Smyrna, and then learned the trade of
bricklayer and plasterer and diligently followed it until 1862,
when he was appointed by the Levy Court collector for Little
Creek Hundred. He served in that position for three years. In
1865 he bought out the store of Samuel Hargadine at Leipsic,
then kept in a building immediately south of his present store
building. As a merchant Mr. Fenimore prospered and his trade
increased. He added to the business the purchase and sale of
grain, coal, lime, fertilizers and general produce. He has since
successfully continued the mercantile business and runs a
steamboat from Leipsic to Philadelphia, making three trips a
week in summer and two in winter to facilitate his own business
and for the general trade of the community.
Mr. Fenimore represented Little Creek
Hundred in the Levy Court of Kent County four years. Since 1877
he has been a trustee of the poor, was made treasurer of the
County Board of Trustees of the Poor the same year and has since
continued in the same responsible position. He served as school
commissioner for several years. He owns a farm of two hundred
acres of valuable land adjoining Leipsic.
Mr. Fenimore was married October 24,
1852, to Margaret Taylor, daughter of Henry Taylor, of Kent
County, a descendant of one of the oldest families in the
county. The children of this marriage were Matilda, married to
William Hazel, now in business at Dover; John W. Fenimore, Jr.,
in business with his father at Leipsic, married to Jennie
Wilson, of Kent County; Arthur married to Ida Clements in the
spring of 1885, both dying of typhoid fever within four weeks in
the fall of the same year. The two youngest sons, Henry and
George Fenimore, live with their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Fenimore
are members of the Methodist Protestant Church at Leipsic.
The post-office was established in 1836
with Robert H. More postmaster, who has been followed by Gilbert
Crisfield, George Spicer and James D. Moore.
The Leipsic Canning Factory
is the largest in the State. It was started in 1873 by Samuel W.
Hall, of Dover, with a capital invested of fifty thousand
dollars and a capacity of one million cans and employment for
one hundred and twenty-five hands. In 1874, I. M. Lavin
purchased the factory and since his death it has been conducted
by his sons, under the firm-name of I. M. Lavin's Sons. Captain
J. H. Fleming started his phosphate factory in 1877 and has been
running since that time with a capacity of two hundred tons a
year. The Hoffecker Mill, four miles from Dover, on Little
Creek, is one of the oldest in the county, having been built in
the early part of the present century.
Leipsic now has about four hundred
inhabitants. It was incorporated as a town in 1852, and the
first commissioners were Alexander Laws, George W. Spicer and
Westcott Campbell. David Crockett surveyed the town limits and
Thomas P. Wall was the first alderman. The town records are
missing from 1852 to 1803. The following is a list of officials
since the latter date:
Aldermen |
Thomas Walls 1863-73
James P. Lamb 1875-74
Thomas P. Walls 1874 |
Henry M. How 1875
Thomas P. Walls 1876-82
H. M. How 1883 |
Thomas P. Walls
1884
Henry M. How 1885
Wm. F. T. Hudson 1887 |
Town
Clerks |
Edward E. Palmer 1863-64
H. M. How 1865
Morris Conoway 1870
H. M. How 1873
James Elderdice 1874 |
James P. Lamb 1875
H. M. How 1876
H. Raymond 1878
Thomas Reed 1879
H. M. How 1881 |
Robert Collins
1883
G. E. Putter 1884
James Story 1885
John White 1886
H. Raymond 1887 |
Town
Commissioners |
James Snow 1863
John Marley 1863
Thos. Kirkley l863
John Marley 1864
H. T. Hoffecker 1864
R. M. Hopkins 1864
Rees Taylor 1866
P. Campbell 1866
W. H. Morris 1866
P. Campbell 1866
Jas. Boggs 1866
John Parker 1866
Samuel Hargadine 1867
Wm. Freestone 1867
John Parker 1867
Wm. Freestone 1868
Peter Campbell 1868
John G. Scotten 1868
Robt M. Hopkins. 1869
J. W. Wilson 1869
Chas. Padlay 1869
H. T. Hoffecker 1870
John Parker 1870
Wm Fox 1870
H. T. Hoffecker 1871 |
John Parker 1871
Wm. Fox 1871
H. T. Hoffecker 1872
John Parker 1872
Samuel Marshall 1872
Peter Campbell 1873
Robert Rawley 1873
Jae. Kirkley 1873
James Potter 1874
Thos. R. Boyer 1874
John Parker 1874
Thos. R. Boyer 1875
Farris Potter 1875
D. C. Hoffecker 1876
Wm. Freestone 1876
Thos. R. Buyer 1876
D. C. Hoffecker 1876
Wm. Freestone 1877
Wm. H. Rawley 1877
Jeff. L. Campbell 1877
Farris Potter 1878
Wm. H. Bawley 1878
Thomas Parker 1878
H. W. Stout 1879
Wm. H. Rawley 1879 |
John J. Werser 1879
H. M. How 1880
Wm. H. Barley 1880
W. W. Parvis 1880
Morgan Traux 1881
Wm. H. Rawley 1881
H. L. Wilson 1881
Robt. Rawley 1882
Wm. H. Bawley 1882
Wm. C. Ford 1882
P. Lynch 1883
R. P. Collins 1883
H. L. Wilson 1888
Wm. H. Rawley 1884
Jeff. D. Campbell 1884
M. Truax 1884
H. L. Wilson 1885
Thos. P. Walls 1885
R. O. P. Wilson 1885
John M. Knight. 1886
P. Campbell 1886
Samuel Marshall 1886
John M. Knight 1887
James Dillen 1887
Chas F. Hoffman 1887 |
Churches
The Muddy Branch Methodist
Episcopal Church was established about 1800, a short
distance from Leipsic, and was abandoned about 1837, when the
church was built in Leipsic through the efforts of Rev. John S.
Fury. The old building went into decay rapidly, and in 1849 the
only trace left was the graveyard. The building of 1837 is still
standing, and forms the main church of the Leipsic Circuit.
Prior to 1868 the Leipsic Church was a part of the Smyrna
Circuit. The ministers of the church will be found in the list
of ministers of the same circuit.
The Leipsic Methodist Protestant
Church was organized June 3, 1865, with W. M. Smith,
John G. Scotten, W. H. Moore, John Slaughter, Matthew
Hutchinson, Samuel Butler, B. F. Hamm, Isaac Slaughter, Rees
Taylor, Peter Campbell, Ferris Porter, T. P. Walls, George W.
Clothier and Henry Wilson as the first trustee? Two thousand
dollars were immediately raised for a church, and December 31,
1865, was fixed for the dedication of the new building. There
were present Rev. J. D. Valient (who preached the first sermon).
Rev. Thomas Downs, Rev. D. F. Ewell (minister in charge), and
Rev. J. B. Merritt. The weather was unfavorable, and the
dedication was postponed until January 28, 1865. Rev. J. B.
Murray preached the dedication sermon. The building is forty-six
by thirty-two feet, and cost $2300. Immediately upon opening the
church a revival meeting was begun, and eighty persons were
enrolled as members. The church was supplied with ministers from
the Kenton and Clayton churches until 1883, when a separate
station was established, and the following have preached here:
Revs. George Smith, J. D. Lucas, McM. Thomson and B. W. Kindley.
There is a graveyard attached to the church.
Rev. M. Marselles attempted to form an
Episcopal Congregation in Leipsic May 10, 1869,
and the following officials were elected for what was called
Immanuel Church: Senior Warden, Andrew Spear; Junior Warden, G.
W. Spicer; Vestrymen, Messrs. Clements, Eager, Wilson, Lamb,
Hoffecker, Hopkins and Denney. Bishop Lee confirmed a number of
persons as members; but the congregation was dissolved after a
few years.
Kent County

Source: History of Delaware, 1609-1888,
Volume I, by J. Thomas Scharf, L. J. Richards & Company,
Philadelphia, 1888.

|