Villages of Brandywine Hundred, New Castle County, Delaware


Since Brandywine Hundred sustains a
suburban relation to Wilmington and Philadelphia, no large towns
have been built within its bounds. Nevertheless, the points
named below are centers of interest in the localities in which
they are located, which make them worthy of notice in these
pages.
Rockland has a picturesque location on the
Brandy-wine, five miles from Wilmington, and is situated on both
sides of the stream. Its principal activity is the paper-mill of
Jessup & Moore, whose employees constitute a large proportion of
the population. There are about two hundred inhabitants.
Methodist and Presbyterian Churches are maintained. Alexander
Colquohoun is the merchant of the village.
Talleyville
is a small but pleasantly located hamlet on the Concord Pike,
one and a half miles from the Pennsylvania line, and derived its
name from the Talley family, early residents in this locality.
Among its business interests was a public-house, called the
"Spread Eagle," which has been discontinued. William Day had a
store and kept the Talleyville post-office in a building which
has been converted to private uses. Later the office was kept at
the house of Rev. John Talley, a local minister. After this the
office was discontinued and Graceville post-office established
near Grace Church. Within the past few years Talleyville
post-office was re-established with John McCray as postmaster,
and a daily mail supplied. Below this place John Fraim is
engaged in merchandising. There are also several mechanic shops
and a fine grange hall.
Since the spring of 1886 Dr. Francis
Harvey Day, who graduated from the University of Pennsylvania
that year, has been a medical practitioner at this place, having
his office on the homestead, which has been in the possession of
the family six generations. Dr. Williams and others also
practiced medicine at this point.
The "Blue Ball" inn, on the Concord
Pike, below Talleyville was one of the best known public-houses
in the hundred. Its history antedates the century, but no
authentic account of the time it was first opened can be given.
In 1809 George Miller was the keeper, and public elections were
there held. At this time it was a fair-sized stone house, whose
capacity was taxed to accommodate the teamsters going to
Brandywine Mills. Robert Galbraith and Isaac Anderson were later
keepers. Many years ago the building was enlarged and converted
into a farm-house, thus removing this old landmark.
Above Talleyville, where Naaman's Creek
road crosses Concord Pike, James Dutton was the keeper of a
popular old-time inn, before 1820 and later. In subsequent years
this became the property of Oliver H. Perry, who very much
enlarged the house and preserved its popularity until his death.
It is still kept for tavern purposes, but the former
public-house of Thomas C. Smith, in the same neighborhood, is
now a common farm residence. East from this was formerly
Graceville post-office.
Beaver Valley is a hamlet
on Beaver Run where that stream crosses the Pennsylvania line.
The place is also locally known as Chandler's Hollow, being
situated in a deep vale, through which flows the run to mingle
its waters with those of the Brandywine, a short distance below.
The improvement of the mill-sites of this small but precipitous
stream gave this locality much importance in former years, but
the failing water-power has caused these interests to decline.
Half a century ago a woolen-mill was operated above the hamlet,
which was swept away by a freshet August 5, 1843, and the power
has since been idle. Daniel Ferris and others improved the next
lower power, which is now in use to operate the manila
paper-mill of Frank Tempes. The capacity is small, but a good
quality of paper is produced. A small woolen-mill was on the
next power, but in the course of years Stephen Broadbent there
manufactured Turkey carpets. The building was next occupied as a
clover-mill, but, about thirty years ago, was used as a plow
factory by William Morrison, Amor Jeffries, Horace Mousley and
others. The water-power was made to operate a trip hammer and
other heavy work, the plows being finished at a cooperating
factory in Pennsylvania. This industry was discontinued about
fifteen years ago.
The flouring mills of Joseph Brinton and
Isaac Smith occupied the lower sites and were well known in the
early part of the century. The mill so long owned by the Smith
family is now the property of William P. Talley, and though not
operated extensively, is still a public convenience. Above it,
in Pennsylvania, was Twaddell's Forge, which was in operation as
early as 1780. Smith's bridge, across the Brandywine at this
point, was built on piers in 1816. Six years later a freshet
swept it away. It was rebuilt and again swept away in 1828.
Amor Chandler had the first store at
Beaver Valley. In 1835 Charles and Martin Palmer were in trade.
Lewis Talley followed later and with some partners manufactured
shoes in connection with the store. John Chandler was also in
trade, and since 1876, A. H. Chandler has been a merchant here.
These merchants have also been postmasters of the Beaver Valley
office. The hamlet has about a dozen houses and shops.
Hanby's Corners, on the
Naaman's Creek road, two and a half miles from Claymont, is a
hamlet of six or eight buildings. Richard G. Hanby here made the
first improvements of a business nature, building mechanic
shops. Alfred D. Hanby engaged in merchandising, but the store
was discontinued ten years ago, and there is but little to
distinguish the place from a farming community.
Grubb's Corners are a mile
south of the above place and not quite three miles west from
Grubb's Landing, on the Delaware. In this immediate neighborhood
are Grubb's mills. At the hamlet are a few houses, shops and an
Odd Fellows' Hall. In the latter Thomas Phillips has
merchandised since 1882 and kept Grubb's post-office since 1884.
The first improvements of a business nature were the mechanic
shops of Samuel Grubb and others of that family.
Gruhb's
Landing, on the Delaware, was one of the
first shipping points in the hundred. Here sloops touched and
carried away the produce of the early settlers, bringing in the
simple commodities at that time in use in a sparsely inhabited
country. It was originally the property of John Grubb, who lived
on the banks of the river, a short distance below, until his
death in 1757. In the times of the Revolution British sloops
sometimes landed here and on one occasion a cannon-ball was
fired from the deck of a sloop which passed through the walls of
the old "Practical Farmer" inn. For some time a wharf was
maintained at the landing, but it has long since ceased to be
used by the public. The property is now known as the summer
residence of Colonel John H. Taggart, but the name is
perpetuated in the flag station of the Philadelphia and
Wilmington Railroad here located. Nearby is Holly Oak station,
on the same railroad, where fishing clubs have erected a number
of buildings for the accommodation and diversion of their
members.
The "Practical Farmer" Inn, on the hill
over-looking Grubb's Landing, was a very noted tavern one
hundred years ago. It was erected before the middle of the last
century. From its midway location, on this turnpike, it became
one of the most popular stopping-places for stages and teams
between Chester and Wilmington, and had the patronage of many
noted travelers of that period. After the steam packet came in
more general use, the character of the inn changed somewhat,
becoming the centre of local gatherings, such as horse-races and
"watermelon fairs." The latter were occasions of orgies and
hilarities, which often continued several days, and were
participated in by many Jerseymen and Pennsylvanians. The latter
brought cattle to be sold or exhibited and loads of whiskey were
on hand to be exchanged for the watermelons of the Jerseymen,
who seemed to have had a peculiar fondness for the distilled
grain of the Keystone farmers. The horse-races, on the course in
the old Indian field, attracted thousands of people; and here
some of the best horses of the country were speeded. The track
was one and a quarter miles long and cedar trees grew on the
outside, giving it an attractive appearance. It was obliterated
nearly half a century ago.
In 1803 the inn was the property of a
Mrs. Trevans, the widow of a refugee from the Island of San
Domingo, who lived in a mansion on the opposite side of the
road, but it soon after passed into the hands of James Grubb,
Esq., who was a popular landlord. In time it became the property
of his son, James, and while owned by him the old building was
destroyed by fire, July 4, 1872. The present inn was then
erected by him, but it possesses little of the fame of the old
house. South from the "Practical Farmer" was the "Swan Inn" of
Charles Truitt, by occupation a piano-maker. After his death his
daughter, Ann, had charge of this place, which she made popular
by the dinners she provided. Henry Williamson was a later
landlord. The house has long since been used as a residence.
Glaymont is a hamlet, post-office and
station on the Philadelphia and Wilmington Railroad, where the
turnpike crosses Naaman's Creek. The latter name was applied to
the locality until 1852, when the present title was
appropriately selected. The soil here is of a clayey nature and
the surrounding country is beautifully undulated, affording many
fine sites for suburban homes, which have been well-improved by
citizens of Philadelphia. The scenic beauty of the Delaware in
the Glaymont neighborhood is net excelled by any other point in
the county. Much of the land below the station was long owned by
William, John and Enoch Gray, but their fine farms have been
subdivided and the old landmarks can no longer be traced. Near
Naaman's Creek are several old buildings, antedating the period
of the Revolution, One is a part of the present Frank Ford place
and was long the home of General Abraham Robinson. General
George Washington was a frequent guest at this house, and, it is
said, that on the occasion of one of his visits, he was so much
pleased with a new seedling pear that it was named for him, and
that thus originated the celebrated Washington pear. "Mad
Anthony" Wayne was also a guest of the Robinson family. About
1800 this property and the brick mansion, erected in 1790, on
the opposite corner, belonged to Colonel Thomas Robinson, and
were soon after sold by him. The latter house has since been
modernized.
The history of the old mill at this
place dates from the beginning of the eighteenth century, as in
the survey of the circle line in 1701. The grist-mill and house
of Jasper Yeates are shown as being on Naaman's Creek at this
place. A part of the present building was put up in 1749 by
Samuel Hendrickson, and appears to have been originally a
one-story stone. Later, and at different periods, two stories of
brick were added. Before the water-power became so feeble the
mill was extensively operated. Large quantities of grain were
brought from long distances, and having been converted into
flour, were loaded on sloops lying on tide-water at the mill and
taken to the Philadelphia market; and to facilitate this work a
brick warehouse was erected on the creek. From 1835 on, Robert
and George W. Churchman carried on business extensively,
operating also a large lumber mill. The latter has been
abandoned, but the grist-mill, supplied with improved machinery,
is still in operation. Among the former industries of this place
were the old mill of the Robinson family, at a point higher up
Naaman's Creek, where ruins of the dam may still be seen, and
the quarrying and shipment of blue stone. The former has long
since passed away, and work on the latter was also suspended
many years ago.
George W. Churchman, for a
third of a century the most prominent lumber merchant in the
State of Delaware, was born at Darby, Pa., May 12, 1811, and
died in Wilmington, February 24, 1871. He was of the sixth
generation in direct line of descent from John Churchman, a
native of Saffrin Waldren, in Sussex, England, who, in 1692, at
the age of seventeen years, immigrated to America and settled in
Pennsylvania under William Penn. The distinguished mathematician
and philosopher, John Churchman, born 1753 and died in 1805, was
a descendant of the same John Churchman. His brother, George
Churchman, was a noted minister among a Society of Friends, and
was the first person to make a complete map of the peninsula
comprising Delaware and the Eastern Shore of Maryland.
George W. Churchman, the subject of this
sketch, grew to manhood at Darby, Pa. He was the second son of
Caleb and Martha Churchman. Their other children were: John S.,
Frances, Ann, Rebecca, Henry L., Sally and Martha. Their father
was a farmer and cattle dealer; he also owned a bark-mill at
Darby and was a neighbor and intimate associate of Stephen
Girard.
George W. Churchman early in life
acquired many of the excellent business methods of that great
financier. After leaving school he engaged in business at Darby
with his father, until he reached the age of twenty-one years.
In 1832 he purchased the historic saw and grist-mill property at
Naaman's Creek, now the site of Claymont, and the same year
moved to Delaware and took charge of his mills. He engaged in
the manufacture of lumber, and also bought in much of the grain
from the surrounding country and ground it into flour for the
trade. He prospered in all his business operations, and soon
enlarged and improved the entire mill property, making it the
most complete industry of the kind in the State.
In 1838 he became interested in the
development of the lumber interests of Central Pennsylvania. He
purchased large tracts of timber-land in Cameron and Clearfield
Counties, in that State, and at once began operations. He spent
much time in the lumber region, superintending the work of
felling the trees, hewing the logs into square timber and
forming the rails which were conveyed down the Susquehanna. He
was very successful in this business and soon made a fortune,
all of which was lost by a freshet on the Susquehanna, the
entire production of one year having floated down the river.
Much of his valuable timber lands were yet uncleared and his
credit was good. He went diligently to work, and within a very
few years recovered from his disaster. He continued with great
success in the business and, at the time of his death, owned
pine and hemlock timber lands in Central Pennsylvania to the
value of two hundred thousand dollars.
The preparation of this timber for the
market was an exceedingly interesting and profitable business,
and in the early years of George W. Churchman's career was one
of the chief industries of the great State of Pennsylvania. The
timber came out of the mountain districts down the small streams
in rafts to Lock Haven, then the greatest lumber market in the
United States. From this point they were floated in charge of
pilots, with the current down the Susquehanna to Marietta, where
new pilots took charge and safely steered them through the
dangerous rapids of the river to Peach Bottom. From thence other
men piloted them to Port Deposit, the place of delivery, and the
head of tide-water on the Susquehanna. From this point the rafts
were towed down the Chesapeake Bay, up Elk River into Back
Creek, where they were made into "dockings'' of sufficient size
and length to readily pass through the Delaware and Chesapeake
Canal and its locks, to Delaware City and thence up the river.
Nearly all rafts were sold by their owners at Lock Haven or
Marietta, both of which were lively business towns, during the
rafting season of the early spring months of each year. George
W. Churchman prepared thousands of rafts on his lands in
Pennsylvania, and sold them to the trade in New York,
Philadelphia, Wilmington and elsewhere. The rafts sold in New
York were towed up the Delaware to Bordentown, and from thence
taken through the Delaware and Raritan Canal to their place of
destination. A large amount of his own timber he conveyed in
rafts to his saw-mill on Naaman's Creek, and there manufactured
them into lumber on orders from nearly all of the leading
ship-builders and manufacturing establishments in Wilmington and
the surrounding country. He also sold square timber and lumber
to the Philadelphia and Chester market.
His extensive business operations
brought him into close relation and intimacy with a great many
prominent business men of Pennsylvania, Delaware and Maryland,
in all of which States he was known as an upright man of the
highest honor and most sterling integrity. His indomitable
energy, rare tact and comprehensive knowledge of the lumber
trade made him one of the most prominent business men of his day
in Delaware. In 1867 he moved to Wilmington, though he continued
his interest in his timber trade until his death.
He was one of the organizers and became
a director of the Mechanics' Bank of Wilmington, and was one of
the promoters in the establishment of the First National Bank of
Wilmington, which institution he lent his best influence, to
further its growth and development.
In politics George W. Churchman was
originally a stanch Whig, and later was the founder of the
Know-Nothing party in Brandywine Hundred. When the Republican
Party was organized, he became an earnest advocate of its policy
and principles, and continued a member of that party through the
remainder of his life.
The lottery business, which bad long
been conducted in Delaware, contained many obnoxious features to
the citizens of the State. Mr. Churchman was one of the foremost
in advocating the passage of the law to abolish it In November,
1858, with that object in view, he became a candidate for the
Legislature to represent Brandywine Hundred, with the avowed
purpose of attempting to secure the passage of the required
legislation. A bill was introduced and during the same session
was passed, accomplishing the object desired. The efforts of Mr.
Churchman in this work were appreciated by the people, and in
1860 he was re-elected to the same office and served as a member
of the Legislature of Delaware during the first two years of the
Civil War.
He was a member of the Society of
Friends, and inherited the strong traits and marked
characteristics of that religious people. With all his neighbors
and associates, of all political parties or religious sects, he
was universally popular and very highly esteemed. Especially was
this the case in Brandywine Hundred, where he spent most of his
useful life. He was instrumental in securing the establishment
of a post-office and railway station at Naaman's Creek (now
Claymont) and erected nearly all of the first houses in the
village.
George W. Churchman was married January
31, 1838, to Ann Eliza Shull, of Delaware County, Pa. Their
children were; Caleb, Frederick A., William H., George, Maria S.
and Charles (deceased).
Amos H. Slaymaker and Benjamin Hartley
merchandised many years ago at this place. Joseph McNamee was
long successfully in trade, and was succeeded by George W. Lodge
and others. This old and well-known stand is now occupied by
Robert Casey, Jr. Claymont post-office is kept at the station by
E. N. Baldwin, holding his appointment since 1885. The railroad
through Claymont was completed in 1838, but a regular station
was not established until many years later.
Since 1845 Dr. J. T. M. Cardeza has been
a practicing physician in the hundred, and has been located at
Claymont the past forty years. He graduated from the University
of Pennsylvania in 1842, as also did his son. Dr. J. D. M.
Cardeza, in 1877, and has been associated in practice with his
father since that time. Since 1850 the elder Dr. Cardeza has
been engaged in the collection of geological and numismatic
specimens, having, in 1887, one of the finest collections in the
State. He has separate buildings containing scores of casts and
thousands of specimens, whose value has been placed at twelve
thousand dollars.
At
Claymont
were fought several duels of historic note, and which created
unusual interest at the time of their occurrence. The most
important was fought Sunday morning, March 21, 1830, by William
Miller, an attorney from Philadelphia, and Midshipman Charles G.
Hunter, of the United States navy. The place was on the present
Ford farm, near the State line. Miller fell mortally wounded,
and his death was greatly deplored, since he had been drawn into
the contest by his friendship for one of the principals of the
quarrel. Hunter was dismissed from the navy by order of
President Jackson, but was subsequently restored to his former
rank, and distinguished himself by his service in the Mexican
War. Nevertheless, his life seemed blasted, and he died a
dis-appointed man. He also acted in the duel out of friendship's
sake, and the fact that he had no enmity against poor Miller
caused many of the leading men of the country to condone his
offense and to unite in a petition for his restoration. Miller
was at that time one of the most promising young lawyers of the
city of Philadelphia, and very respectably connected.
The next duel was fought near where the
turnpike crosses the State road, on the 4th of June, 1843, by
General James Watson Webb, of New York City, and the Hon. Thomas
F. Marshall, of Kentucky. This was brought about by a political
quarrel in Congress, and had been anticipated some time before
it occurred. Both parties cherished bitter and hostile feelings,
and met with a purpose to do deadly work. Webb was wounded in
such a way that the fight could not be prolonged beyond the
first fire, much to the disgust of Marshall, who insisted upon
having another shot. Through the intervention of friends the
principals retired with their sense of honor partially
satisfied, and, in time, the breach was still farther healed.
Another duel was fought on the State
line, near the large beech tree, on June 9, 1845, by Washington
Keith and Morris Meredith, both of Philadelphia. At the first
fire each was wounded, though not fatally, when a settlement was
effected, and they retired nominally friends.
The
Edgemoor
Buoy Depot, of the Fourth District, is on the Delaware,
below du Font's wharf. The improvements were begun in 1880, and
completed two years later, some of them being transferred to
this point from the Christiana lighthouse. They consist of a
wharf four hundred feet long, on which is a fog-bell and
light-house of the fifth order; a depot building fifty by one
hundred and forty feet; and a keeper's residence, on three acres
of land. This is occupied by W. W. Simmons. The buoy depot was
opened in 1881, and placed in charge of Capt. N. L. Henderson,
who is still in control of the interests connected with it. This
yard is the general depot of the district, which has forty-two
lights within its bounds, placed from Barnegat, N. J., to the
Virginia coast. About three hundred buoys are kept in stock at
the depot of Edgemoor, some of them being sixty feet in length.
The general supplies of oil and wood are also here kept, making
it one of the most important stations of the kind on the coast.
Du Font's wharf, next above the Buoy
Depot, was established in the early part of the present century.
But it has been important for a less period of time on account
of the immense quantities of powder shipped from the du Pont
works, about five miles distant. After 1825 several brick
magazines were erected, from which the vessels transporting the
powder were laden.
These are still in use, but on account
of better shipping facilities near the works, most of the
transportation has been diverted to those points.
New Castle
County

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

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