Shipwrecks of the Delaware Coast: Tales of Pirates, Squalls & Treasure
By Pam George
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About this ebook
Discover the thrilling, mysterious history of the shipwrecks found beneath the waves of Rehoboth Beach.
Under the hot summer sun, vacationers stroll the Rehoboth Beach boardwalk, chewing saltwater taffy and listening to the gulls' raucous cackle. Few realize that under the sparkling water rests a graveyard. Horrific nor'easters, treacherous shoals and simple human error caused the demise of countless ships, giving birth to legends of treasure and terror. There is De Braak, rumored to hold millions of dollars in gold; the Mohawk, which burned like a torch in the Delaware Bay; and the vessels that fell victim to the Great White Hurricane, which froze dead men to the mast. Journey with local author Pam George as she deftly picks her way through the history of Delaware's most intriguing and mysterious shipwrecks.
Pam George
Pam George regularly writes about maritime history for Delaware Beach Life, Delaware Today and Coastal Sussex Weekly. She also writes on food, health, technology, travel and business for such publications as Fortune, Christian Science Monitor, Antiques Roadshow Insider, US Airways magazine and My Midwest. Raised in Devon, Pennsylvania, she now lives in Wilmington, Delaware, with her husband, Steve. As a result, she knows the difference between going to the beach (Delaware) and going "down the shore" (Jersey). This is her first book.
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Shipwrecks of the Delaware Coast - Pam George
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INTRODUCTION
To witness Delaware’s shared legacy with the sea, stand on Lewes Beach, the khaki-colored stretch of sand that fronts the Delaware Bay. In the distance, two classic-looking lighthouses rise from the breakwaters that once provided shelter for ships during the frequent storms that ravage the area. A freighter lumbers along the horizon, headed to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, located less than ninety miles up the river, while a tug chugs toward the Port of Wilmington.
Time the visit right, and you will catch one of the black-and-white ferries as it makes the seventeen-mile voyage from Lewes to Cape May, New Jersey. Since July 1, 1964, the ferry service has linked Cape Henlopen, Delaware, to Cape May, two geographical landmarks known for centuries as the Delaware capes.
What you will not see, however, is the graveyard that exists below the white-capped waves. Brigs, barks, schooners, tugs, tankers and destroyers are embedded in the mud and the sand. When the tide in the Delaware Bay turns, a cloud of sediment swirls up like a tornado, blanketing the wrecks in blackness. The capricious current has been known to tear the masks off divers’ faces and the respirators from their mouths.
Some of the ships’ names are well known to historians, divers and artifact-seekers: the Faithful Steward, the Elizabeth Palmer, the USS Jacob Jones and De Braak. Some are so well documented that historians know personal details about many of the passengers who lost their lives. Others, though, are shrouded in mystery.
With few navigational tools and poor weather prognostication, schooners like the John Proctor were often at the mercy of storms and dangerous coasts. The schooner sunk off Cape Henlopen in 1901. Courtesy of the Delaware Public Archives.
The cause of other wrecks stems from inclement weather, human error and interference, war and what is widely recognized as a treacherous coastline liberally laced with shoals, rocks and shifting currents.
It is hard to estimate just how many wrecks are strewn along the Delmarva coast. In the country’s early days, there were no accurate records, and sailing vessels simply disappeared. But the advent of steam power and better navigation did not prevent shipwrecks. Battleship and liner, tug and tanker, menhaden fishing boat and trawler—the ships that met their demises off the coast of Delaware are now united in a silty slumber.
But the mystique that swirls around them lives on, creating legends that will survive long after their battered remains have disintegrated into the sand.
PART I
HOPE, COURAGE AND
CALAMITY IN THE
NEW WORLD
DIAMOND IN THE ROUGH
Today, Delaware is often called the Small Wonder
and the Diamond State.
For the latter nickname, some credit Thomas Jefferson, who once referred to the state as a jewel among the thirteen original colonies, due to its central and strategic location. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, Delaware’s location was seen as a major advantage to whichever country held the title to the land, and the Dutch, the Swedes and the English would all take turns claiming it.
The nickname Small Wonder
could refer to the state’s business-friendly climate, tax-free shopping or blend of rolling parks, historic and cultural attractions and beaches. In the colonial days, however, Delaware’s attraction stemmed from its access to important maritime trade routes. The state’s entire eastern border hugs the water. To the south, the towns cozy up to the Atlantic Ocean. The coast then dips inward around Cape Henlopen to welcome the Delaware Bay before stretching northward along the Delaware River, a vital portal to the towns of Wilmington, Delaware; Philadelphia and Chester, Pennsylvania; and Camden and Trenton, New Jersey.
Initially, Delaware’s maritime potential was overlooked in one explorer’s haste to find a northwest passage to China and the Indies. Henry Hudson, an English navigator employed by the Dutch East India Trading Company, discovered the Delaware River and the Delaware Bay on August 28, 1609. The waters near what is now Cape Henlopen were too shallow for his ship, the Halve Maen (Half Moon), so he meandered northward to discover the river that would later carry his name. At that time, the Dutch called the Delaware River the South River
and the Hudson River the North River.
The challenge of exploring the South River and the bay made an impression on Hudson, who later recommended that anyone who wanted to explore the shoreline around the bay needed a small vessel to carefully navigate its coast.
The next year, Captain Samuel Argall of Virginia sailed his pinnace to the entrance of the Delaware Bay and named the thumb of land there Cape La Warr in honor of Sir Thomas Charles West, Lord de la Warre, then governor of the colony of Virginia. Delaware would later become the name of the bay, the river and the land to the west of those waters.
In 1629, representatives of the Dutch West India Company, which was formed in 1621, purchased a tract of land in Delaware from the native people in exchange for cloth, axes, adzes, beads and various other goods. Samuel Godyn of Amsterdam had the rights to settle the new territory, and he put David Pietersz de Vries of Hoorn in charge. De Vries, in turn, instructed Captain Peter Heyes of De Walvis (The Whale) to establish a whaling colony in the area.
On December 12, 1630, De Walvis set sail from Holland with twenty-eight men. As the ship unfurled its sails, cutting through the frothy waves in the Atlantic, the would-be colonists were undoubtedly full of hope and a sense of adventure.
The ship arrived near present-day Cape Henlopen in 1631, and the men set up camp near Lewes Creek, which Heyes dubbed Hoornkill. (The name was later corrupted into Whorekill or Horekill.) They built a palisade, a dormitory and a cookhouse on a site christened Swanendael or, as an alternative spelling, Zwaanendael, which means Valley of Swans,
and their compound was named Fort Oplandt. In September, Heyes and De Walvis departed for Amsterdam, leaving the men well on their way toward being established. They had cattle and building supplies. All they lacked was luck. None would survive a year.
When De Vries landed De Walvis near Swanendael in 1632, he was met with a brutal sight. The bones of the men and the cattle were randomly strewn about the settlement in a violent chaos, and the buildings had been burnt to the ground.
One account, later given to De Vries by a Native American, credited the catastrophe to a tin coat of arms that the colonists had mounted on a pillar. An admiring chief took the emblem to make pipes. When the colonists complained, the tribe executed the alleged thief to appease them. Horrified, the colonists rebuked the tribe, and their admonishment insulted the slain chief’s friends. They took revenge, slaughtering every single colonist and destroying the property.
The ever practical De Vries made peace with the tribe and sailed on. Thus the Delaware Bay was again abandoned to the Indians, and no people but they broke the solitude of its shores or trod the melancholy, blood-stained and desolate ground of the ‘Valley of Swans’ the site of Delaware’s first settlement, for many years,
writes J. Thomas Scharf in History of Delaware: 1609–1888.
Not for long. It was Sweden’s turn next. A disillusioned William Usselinx withdrew from the Dutch West India Company to help King Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden start a trading company. Unfortunately, the king was preoccupied with the Thirty Years’ War in Europe, and colonization efforts languished until 1637, when the New Sweden Company engaged Peter Minuit to direct a Swedish expedition.
In 1638, Minuit sailed the Kalmar Nyckel (Key of Kalmar) up the Delaware River to what is now Wilmington and set up a Swedish colony with twenty-four settlers of Swedish, Finnish, German and Dutch descent. (A black freedman joined them aboard the companion ship, Fogel Grip.) The Kalmar Nyckel would make a total of four crossings. The Dutch remained active. Peter Stuyvesant, governor of New Netherland, established Fort Casimir in 1651 on the site of present-day New Castle. The Swedes captured the fort in 1654, but Stuyvesant in 1655 conquered all of New Sweden.
Soon, areas from the Schuylkill River near Philadelphia down to the Delaware Bay were primarily composed of Dutch, Swedish and Finnish settlers. The English, however, were right across the river in New Jersey and creeping northward from Virginia and Maryland. As the colonies expanded, settlers needed more goods. It was easy to see the advantage of controlling the Delaware River.
In 1664, the English seized Dutch holdings on the Delaware. The Dutch recaptured the colony in 1673, but the tables turned in 1674 when the English took it back. The Duke of York (later James II) annexed the region to New York, and in 1682 the deed to the Delaware area was later transferred to William Penn, who arrived in New Castle in 1682. Under Penn’s direction, Delaware was divided into three counties, stacked on top of one another due to the state’s vertical shape. Sussex resides at the bottom, followed by Kent and then, near the border of Pennsylvania, New Castle County. Collectively, they were known as the lower counties
in Penn’s expansive territory. As time went on, the lower counties felt disconnected from those in the north. Their allegiance was more with the English Crown than with Penn. They wanted to elect their own representatives, who were not necessarily aligned with Penn’s interests.
In 1704, the three lower counties formed their own legislative assembly, under Penn’s approval. But the laws still required his signature. It was not until June 15, 1776, that Delaware officially announced its independence—both from England and Pennsylvania. It was a bold move for a colony with just four thousand residents. The state commemorates the date each year with Separation Day.
The mélange of countries that contributed to Delaware’s early history is easy to spot. In Lewes, the Zwaanendael Museum, modeled after the town hall in Hoorn, the Netherlands, stands out next to the town’s many colonial and Victorian structures. Historic New Castle, which fronts the Delaware River, has many preserved areas crisscrossed with brick sidewalks. Here visitors can tour the Dutch House, built in the seventeenth century. The Christina River, named for Queen Christina of Sweden, curls around Fort Christina in Wilmington, where a replica of the Kalmar Nyckel, the state’s goodwill ambassador, docks when it is home.
The historical remnants are today’s tourist attractions, indelible imprints of those who helped shape the state. Yet some intrepid settlers and their predecessors would leave behind another legacy: the remains of their countries’ ships under the waves off the dangerous Delaware coast.
A PATH FRAUGHT WITH PERIL
Without proper navigational tools and accurate weather forecasting, the sailing ships that first navigated these waters were playing a game of chance. Between perilous shoals, pirates, privateers, human error and unpredictable weather, it seemed the odds were stacked against them. But for those who made a living on the water, it was danger be damned.
To fuel the ruling European country’s economy, its colonists by law had to purchase supplies from the