New Castle-on-delaware (September/October 1990 | Volume: 41, Issue: 6)

New Castle-on-delaware

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September/October 1990 | Volume 41, Issue 6

New Castle, Delaware, may be the closest thing to a ghost town on the East Coast. It was never deserted, of course; no place in the East ever is. But it had a rich and turbulent history until about a century and a half ago, after which history turned and went elsewhere, leaving the place almost fossilized as the colonial capital and handsome Federal-era town it had once been.

Turn off Delaware Route 9—the usual noisy highway with its cluttered commercial strip—two miles south of the Delaware Memorial Bridge and you plunge into a warren of narrow streets lined with centuries-old houses. After several blocks you emerge on a village green platted by Peter Stuyvesant in 1655 and dominated at one end by an Anglican church built in 1703 and at the other by a 1732 courthouse where the colonial assembly governed, where the Declaration of Independence was read in 1776, and where the first constitution of the state of Delaware was drafted later the same year.

Arriving at New Castle is like stumbling on Williamsburg without the trappings. With its brick-sidewalked streets leading down to the water and its eighteenth-century houses and open places, it seems to have survived untouched by accident. That isn’t true, of course, but its restoration has been as low-keyed as it has been fastidious. The Delawareans who have preserved New Castle have kept quiet about a place that the armies of three European nations once battled over.

This spot along the Delaware River was first settled in 1651, when Peter Stuyvesant, recently established as governor general of New Amsterdam, sailed in with a small military force to rout some Swedes who had settled not far off around Wilmington. He built a fort on the future site of New Castle; the Swedes captured the fort in 1651, and in 1655 Stuyvesant returned, recaptured it, laid out streets for the town, named it New Amstel, and brought to a close forever the minor presence of Sweden in North America. In 1664, the year the British converted New Amsterdam into New York, a boatload of British took New Amstel by force and renamed it New Castle. The Dutch, like the Swedes, came back for one last fling at conquest in 1674 but held on for only a year.

Strolling through the town on a windy morning, I first ambled through the leaf-strewn village green, which reminded me of Harvard Square without its larger buildings or encroaching city. Alongside the green run a pair of tree-lined cobbled streets with a narrow lawn between them that served as the town marketplace as early as 1654. I stepped past the 1707 brick Presbyterian church—the site of a flea market that day—and turned onto Delaware Street at the head of the green.

The three-story brick courthouse on Delaware Street, which dominates the main square, was the center of colonial life in New Castle, the first capital of Delaware. I