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Delaware

Delaware
(In Detail[?]) (Full size)
State nickname: First State

In Detail
Capital Dover
Area
 - Total
 - Land
 - Water
 - % water
Ranked 49th
6,452 kmē
5,068 kmē
1,387 kmē
21.5%
 
Population
 - Total (2000)
 - Density
Ranked 45th
783,600
155/kmē
Admittance into Union
 - Order
 - Date

1st
December 7, 1787
Time zone Eastern: UTC-5/-4
Latitude
Longitude
38°27'N to 39°50'N
75°2'W to 75°47'W
Width
Length
Elevation
 -Highest
 -Mean
 -Lowest
48 km
161 km
 
137 meters
18 meters
0 meters
ISO 3166-2:US-DE

Delaware is a state of the United States. It is known as the "First State" because it was the first of the 13 colonies to ratify the United States Constitution. Ratification occurred on December 7, 1787.

USS Delaware was named in honor of this state.

Table of contents

History

Europeans first settled in a Dutch trading post at "Zwaanendael" (or "Swaanendael," present-day Lewes -- pronounced "lewis," not "loos") in 1631. The area became "New Sweden" with a colony established by Swedes (led by Peter Minuit) around Fort Christina (now Wilmington) in 1638.

The name "Delaware" comes from the title of Sir Thomas West, Lord de la Warr, erstwhile governor of the colony of Virginia. The deed to the property that is now Delaware was granted to William Penn in 1682, by James, Duke of York (later, James II of England), and was part of the colony of Pennsylvania. In 1704 the "three lower counties" gained a separate legislature, and in 1710 a separate executive council.

Part of the Mason-Dixon line, surveyed by Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon between 1763 and 1767 to establish the boundary between Pennsylvania and Maryland, now forms the boundary between Delaware and Maryland, and some 80 of their original limestone markers remain.

Delaware was one of the thirteen colonies which revolted against British rule in the American Revolution. After the Revolution began in 1776, the three counties became "Delaware State," and in 1792 that entity adopted its first constitution, declaring itself to be the "State of Delaware."

The oldest black church in the country was chartered in Delaware by former-slave Peter Spencer in 1813 as the "Union Church of Africans," which is now the A.U.M.P. Church. The Big August Quarterly Spencer began in 1814 is still celebrated, the oldest such cultural festival in the country.

During the American Civil War, Delaware was a slave state that remained in the Union (Delaware voters voted not to secede on January 3, 1861). Eight months after the end of the Civil War, however, Delaware voted on February 18, 1865[?] to reject the 13th Amendment to the United States Constitution and so voted unsuccessfully to continue slavery beyond the Civil War. Delaware ratified the amendment on February 12, 1901--40 years after Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation.

Law and Government

Delaware's fourth and current constitution was adopted in 1897 and provides for executive, judicial and legislative bodies. The legislative body consists of a House of Representatives with 41 members and a Senate with 21 members. The executive branch is headed by the Governor of Delaware and the judicial branch provides for a hierarchy of courts with the state Supreme Court being the highest.

The present governor of Delaware is Ruth Ann Minner[?](Democrat). Delaware's U.S. senators are Joseph R. Biden[?] and Thomas Carper[?]. See: List of Delaware Governors Geography

Delaware is bounded to the north by Pennsylvania, to the east by New Jersey and to the west by Maryland. The largest city is Wilmington, and the capital is Dover. The large U.S. Air Force base at Dover serves as a morgue for American military persons who die overseas, in Europe or Africa, and sometimes for civilian U.S. government officers, too.

There is no broadcast-television station in Delaware, but there are cable-television stations and radio stations, and some of the out-of-state broadcast-television stations maintain small facilities in Delaware that can "upload" signals to the stations' main facilities. The northern part of the state is served primarily by stations in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and the southern part by stations in Maryland.

Economy

The state product output for 1999 was $34 billion, placing it 42nd among the states. The Per Capita Personal Income of 2000 was $31,255.

Delaware's agricultural output consists of poultry, nursery stock, soybeans, dairy products and corn. Its industrial outputs include chemical products, processed foods, paper products, rubber and plastic products, scientific instruments, and publishing.

Demographics

Area: 1,954 sq. miles
Population: 783,600 (2000)
Capital: Dover
Counties: 3 (see: Delaware counties)
Bird: Blue Hen Chicken
Flower: Peach Blossom
Tree: American Holly
Nicknames: First State, Diamond State, Blue Wonder

Education

Colleges and Universities

Professional Sport Teams

Delaware is the home of the Wilmington Blue Rocks[?] minor league baseball team.

Miscellaneous Information

Other Delaware Name Places

The Delaware River is a major river in the eastern United States, rising in New York State, forming the boundary between New Jersey and Pennsylvania, and emptying into Delaware Bay[?], which separates New Jersey from the state of Delaware.

Delaware Native Americans

Delaware is also the name of a Native American group (called in their own name Lenni Lenape) that was very influential in the dawning days of the United States.

See Also

Delaware corporation

External links



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