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Delaware holds a distinctive place in American history as the first state to ratify the United States Constitution, earning it the designation "The First State." Located on the Mid-Atlantic coast of the United States, Delaware comprises three counties: New Castle, Kent, and Sussex. The state covers an area of approximately 1,982 square miles, making it the second-smallest state by area after Rhode Island. Delaware's population of roughly 1 million residents makes it one of the least densely populated states east of the Mississippi River. The state's history spans from Indigenous Lenape and Nanticoke settlements through European colonization by Dutch and English settlers, the American Revolution, and its evolution into a modern center of commerce and industry. Today, Delaware serves as a major hub for corporate business due to its favorable legal climate, while maintaining significant historical sites and cultural institutions that reflect its colonial and Revolutionary War heritage.
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Delaware holds a distinctive place in American history as the first state to ratify the United States Constitution, earning it the nickname "The First State." Located on the Mid-Atlantic coast, Delaware is bordered by Pennsylvania to the north, New Jersey to the northeast across the Delaware River, Maryland to the west and south, and the Atlantic Ocean to the east. The state comprises three counties: New Castle in the north, Kent in the center, and Sussex in the south. Delaware covers approximately 1,982 square miles of total area, with a land area of roughly 1,954 square miles, making it the second-smallest state by area after Rhode Island.<ref>{{cite web |title=Delaware QuickFacts |url=https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/DE |work=U.S. Census Bureau |access-date=2024-01-15}}</ref> Delaware's population reached 989,948 in the 2020 U.S. Census, and estimates by 2023 placed it above one million residents — making it one of the most densely populated states in the nation, not one of the least.<ref>{{cite web |title=Delaware QuickFacts |url=https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/DE |work=U.S. Census Bureau |access-date=2024-01-15}}</ref> The state's history spans from Indigenous Lenape and Nanticoke settlements through European colonization by Swedish, Dutch, and English settlers, the American Revolution, and its evolution into a modern center of commerce and corporate law. Today, Delaware serves as a major hub for corporate business due to its favorable legal climate, with more than 60% of Fortune 500 companies incorporated within its borders, while maintaining significant historical sites and cultural institutions that reflect its colonial and Revolutionary War heritage.


== History ==
== History ==


Delaware's recorded history begins with the arrival of European explorers in the early 17th century, though Indigenous peoples, particularly the Lenape and Nanticoke nations, inhabited the region for thousands of years before colonization. The first permanent European settlement was established by Swedish settlers in 1638 at Fort Christina, located near present-day Wilmington along the Delaware River. The Swedish settlement, known as New Sweden, remained relatively small but culturally significant, introducing log cabin construction and other Scandinavian cultural elements to North America.<ref>{{cite web |title=History of New Sweden Colony |url=https://delaware.gov/facts/history/ |work=Delaware.gov |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref> The territory changed hands several times during the colonial period, coming under Dutch control in 1655 and subsequently English control in 1664. Under English rule, Delaware became part of Pennsylvania and later separated as a distinct colony in 1776, though it remained under the same proprietor until full independence.
=== Indigenous Peoples ===


Delaware played a crucial role in the founding of the United States, particularly through the ratification of the Constitution. On December 7, 1787, Delaware became the first state to ratify the United States Constitution, a historic moment that established the constitutional framework for the nation. This action was facilitated by the state's relatively small population and the broad consensus among Delaware's delegates regarding the need for a stronger federal union. The state's early commitment to the Constitution reflected both practical political considerations and a philosophical alignment with nationalist principles. During the American Revolutionary War, Delaware contributed troops and resources to the Continental cause, though the state itself experienced relatively limited direct military conflict compared to other Mid-Atlantic colonies. The presence of the Delaware River made the region strategically important, and figures such as Caesar Rodney, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, became prominent in the revolutionary struggle.
Long before European contact, the region now called Delaware was home to two principal Indigenous nations: the Lenape and the Nanticoke. The Lenape, also known as the Delaware people, occupied territory throughout the Delaware River valley and much of present-day New Jersey and eastern Pennsylvania. They lived in semi-permanent villages, practiced agriculture alongside hunting and fishing, and organized themselves into loosely affiliated clans. The Nanticoke occupied the southern portions of the Delmarva Peninsula, including much of present-day Sussex County. European colonization brought devastating disruption through disease, displacement, and treaty dispossession; by the 18th century, most Lenape had been pushed westward, eventually settling in Ohio, Indiana, Kansas, and Oklahoma. The Delaware Tribe of Indians and the Delaware Nation, both federally recognized tribes, trace their ancestry directly to the original inhabitants of the Delaware River valley.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lenape History |url=https://www.delawaretribeofindians.nsn.us/history/ |work=Delaware Tribe of Indians |access-date=2024-01-15}}</ref>


The 19th century witnessed Delaware's transformation from an agricultural society into an industrial one, with the Du Pont family's powder mills becoming central to the state's economy and identity. Eleuthère Irénée du Pont de Nemours, a French immigrant, established the E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company in 1802 along the Brandywine River, which initially produced gunpowder for military and industrial use. The company's success and expansion throughout the 19th and 20th centuries fundamentally shaped Delaware's economic development and attracted workers from Europe and other regions. Wilmington grew from a modest town into a significant industrial center, with the Du Pont Company becoming one of the world's largest chemical manufacturers. The state's industrialization brought both prosperity and social challenges, including labor disputes and environmental concerns that would characterize later eras of Delaware's development.<ref>{{cite web |title=DuPont Company History in Delaware |url=https://whyy.org/articles/dupont-delaware-history/ |work=WHYY |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
=== Colonial Era ===


== Geography ==
Delaware's recorded European history begins with the arrival of Henry Hudson in 1609, sailing under Dutch sponsorship, followed by English captain Samuel Argall, who named Delaware Bay and the river after Thomas West, the third Baron De La Warr and governor of Virginia. The first permanent European settlement was established by Swedish colonists in 1638 at Fort Christina, located at the confluence of the Christina River and the Delaware River, at the site of present-day Wilmington. The settlement, known as New Sweden, remained small but introduced horizontal log construction techniques to North America — a building method that Swedish and Finnish settlers had practiced in Scandinavia and that spread widely through the American frontier in subsequent centuries.<ref>{{cite web |title=Fort Christina |url=https://www.nps.gov/nr/travel/delaware/chr.htm |work=National Park Service |access-date=2024-01-15}}</ref>
 
New Sweden changed hands when Dutch forces under Peter Stuyvesant captured the colony in 1655, incorporating it into the Dutch territory of New Netherland. English forces then seized the region in 1664, making it part of the Duke of York's proprietary holdings. In 1681, King Charles II granted William Penn a charter for Pennsylvania, and Penn received the "Lower Counties on the Delaware" — essentially present-day Delaware — as a separate grant in 1682 from the Duke of York. The Lower Counties operated under Pennsylvania's proprietorship but maintained a separate assembly beginning in 1704. They remained under Penn family proprietorship until declaring independence in 1776, at which point Delaware established itself as a fully independent state with its own government, though for practical purposes it had functioned as a distinct political unit for decades before that.<ref>{{cite book |last=Munroe |first=John A. |title=History of Delaware |edition=5th |publisher=University of Delaware Press |year=2006 |isbn=978-0874139099}}</ref>
 
=== Revolutionary War and Constitutional Ratification ===
 
Delaware played an outsized role in the founding of the United States relative to its size. Caesar Rodney (1728–1784), one of Delaware's three delegates to the Continental Congress, made his famous overnight ride from Dover to Philadelphia on July 1–2, 1776, arriving in time to cast Delaware's decisive vote in favor of independence — breaking a two-to-one deadlock among the state's delegates and helping secure the unanimous adoption of the Declaration of Independence. Rodney rode approximately 80 miles through a summer storm despite suffering from asthma and facial cancer, and his ride has since become one of the enduring stories of the Revolutionary era. He signed the Declaration of Independence alongside Thomas McKean and George Read.<ref>{{cite web |title=Caesar Rodney |url=https://www.history.com/topics/american-revolution/caesar-rodney |work=History.com |access-date=2024-01-15}}</ref> Delaware's state quarter, issued in 1999, depicts Rodney on horseback in commemoration of the ride.
 
On December 7, 1787, Delaware became the first state to ratify the United States Constitution, with a unanimous vote of 30–0 at a convention in Dover. The speed and unanimity of Delaware's ratification reflected both the state's small size — which stood to benefit from equal representation in the Senate — and broad agreement among its delegates that a stronger federal government was necessary. Delaware's early and decisive action opened the ratification process for the remaining states.<ref>{{cite web |title=Delaware and the U.S. Constitution |url=https://archives.delaware.gov/highlights/constitution/ |work=Delaware Public Archives |access-date=2024-01-15}}</ref> During the war itself, Delaware contributed the Delaware Regiment to the Continental Army, a unit that earned a reputation for discipline and endurance at engagements including the Battle of Long Island in 1776, where the regiment suffered heavy losses while helping cover Washington's retreat. The regiment's performance earned Delaware soldiers the nickname "Blue Hen's Chickens," a reference to fighting gamecocks allegedly carried by the regiment's officers — a name that eventually gave Delaware the Blue Hen Chicken as its state bird.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Delaware Regiment in the Revolutionary War |url=https://www.battlefields.org/learn/articles/delaware-regiment |work=American Battlefield Trust |access-date=2024-01-15}}</ref>
 
=== 19th Century: Industrialization and the Civil War Era ===
 
The 19th century transformed Delaware from an agricultural society into an industrial one. The change began in 1802, when Eleuthère Irénée du Pont de Nemours, a French immigrant and trained chemist, established a black powder mill along the Brandywine River near Wilmington. The E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company grew steadily throughout the century, supplying gunpowder for the War of 1812, the Mexican-American War, and the Civil War. By the late 19th century, the company had become one of the largest industrial enterprises in the United States, and the Du Pont family's wealth and influence permeated Delaware's politics, economy, and civic institutions in ways that persisted well into the 20th century.<ref>{{cite web |title=DuPont Company History in Delaware |url=https://whyy.org/articles/dupont-delaware-history/ |work=WHYY |access-date=2024-01-15}}</ref> Wilmington grew alongside the company, attracting immigrant workers from Ireland, Italy, Poland, and other countries, and developing into a significant manufacturing center for ships, railroad cars, leather goods, and chemicals.
 
Delaware occupied an ambiguous position during the Civil War. A slave state that never seceded, it supplied soldiers to both the Union and Confederate armies, though its official stance was Unionist. Slavery had diminished considerably in Delaware by 1860 — the state's enslaved population was less than 1,800 — but the institution remained legal there until the Thirteenth Amendment abolished it nationally in 1865. Delaware was one of only two states to reject the Thirteenth Amendment when it was submitted for ratification; the state legislature didn't formally ratify it until 1901.<ref>{{cite web |title=Delaware and the Civil War |url=https://www.nps.gov/civilwar/search-battle-units-detail.htm?battleUnitCode=UDE0001RI |work=National Park Service |access-date=2024-01-15}}</ref> Fort Delaware on Pea Patch Island in the Delaware River served as a Union military prison during the war, holding Confederate prisoners of war under harsh conditions. Pea Patch Island takes its name from local folklore: one story holds that a ship carrying a cargo of peas ran aground on a shoal in the river, and the peas sprouted and accumulated silt until they formed an island. Whether true or not, the story has circulated in the region for generations.
 
=== Patty Cannon and Delaware's History of Slavery ===
 
One of the darkest chapters in Delaware's history involves Patty Cannon, a criminal who operated along the Delaware-Maryland border in the early 19th century. Cannon ran a gang that kidnapped both enslaved Black people who had escaped to freedom and free Black residents of Delaware and Maryland, transporting them south to be sold into slavery. Her tavern and house straddled the state line between Delaware and Maryland in the area of Johnson's Crossroads (present-day Reliance), a location chosen deliberately because it allowed her to evade law enforcement by slipping across the border when authorities from one state approached. The gang's crimes included murder; human remains were discovered buried on Cannon's property after her arrest in 1829.<ref>{{cite book |last=Giles |first=Ted |title=Patty Cannon: Woman of Mystery |publisher=Easton Publishing |year=1965}}</ref>


Delaware's geographic location on the Mid-Atlantic coast has profoundly influenced its development and strategic importance throughout American history. The state lies between 38° and 40° north latitude and extends approximately 96 miles from north to south while averaging only 30 miles in width from east to west. The Delaware River forms the state's eastern boundary and serves as a crucial waterway for commerce and transportation. The Atlantic coast, extending roughly 115 miles, includes barrier islands, marshlands, and sandy beaches that have become important for tourism and recreation. The state's terrain is predominantly flat to gently rolling, with the highest point reaching only 450 feet above sea level in New Castle County, characteristic of the Atlantic Coastal Plain physiographic province.
Cannon died in jail in Georgetown, Delaware, in 1829, before she could be tried, reportedly by self-administered poison. Her skull was preserved and eventually donated to the Delaware State Archives; for decades it was kept at the Dover Public Library, reportedly stored in a pink hat box, where it was occasionally displayed. The skull was later removed from public exhibition due to legal restrictions on displaying human remains. In Sussex County, Cannon's name was used for generations as a cautionary figure — local parents reportedly warned children that Patty Cannon would take them if they misbehaved. A residential development in Sussex County was at one point named after her, a naming choice that drew criticism in later years. Her story remains a significant, if often overlooked, part of Delaware's history of slavery and racial violence.<ref>{{cite web |title=Patty Cannon, Kidnapper |url=https://www.delawarepublic.org/history/patty-cannon |work=Delaware Public Media |access-date=2024-01-15}}</ref>


The state encompasses diverse ecological zones, including freshwater and brackish marshes, maritime forests, and coastal areas that support significant wildlife populations. The Delaware Bay, formed by the Delaware River estuary, creates important habitat for migratory birds and supports commercial fishing industries that have operated for centuries. The state's numerous streams and tributaries, including the Brandywine and Christina Rivers in the north, have historically served as sources of water power for mills and industrial facilities. Modern Delaware faces environmental challenges including sea-level rise and coastal erosion, which threaten both developed areas and natural habitats. The state's geography has made it vulnerable to Atlantic hurricanes and nor'easters, events that have periodically impacted settlement patterns and influenced construction practices. Climate data indicates Delaware experiences a humid subtropical climate in its southern regions and humid continental climate in the north, with average temperatures ranging from approximately 35°F in winter to 75°F in summer.
== Geography ==


== Economy ==
Delaware's location on the Mid-Atlantic coast has shaped its development throughout its history. The state lies between 38° and 40° north latitude and extends approximately 96 miles from north to south while averaging only 30 miles in width. The Delaware River and Delaware Bay form the state's eastern boundary, serving as crucial waterways for commerce since the colonial period. The Atlantic coast extends roughly 28 miles of ocean-facing shoreline, backed by barrier islands, marshlands, and sandy beaches that draw visitors from across the Mid-Atlantic region.


Delaware's modern economy is characterized by its prominence in corporate law and finance, alongside traditional manufacturing, agriculture, and tourism sectors. The state's favorable corporate charter laws have attracted thousands of companies to incorporate in Delaware, regardless of whether they maintain physical operations within the state. This legal advantage generates substantial revenue for the state government through incorporation fees and corporate taxes, making it a central feature of Delaware's economic structure. Major corporations across diverse industries, from technology firms to financial institutions, maintain Delaware incorporations, contributing to the state's reputation as a global business center. This economic foundation has made Delaware less dependent on traditional manufacturing than many neighboring states, though industrial production remains significant.<ref>{{cite web |title=Delaware Corporate Law and Business Climate |url=https://delawareonline.com/business/corporate-law/ |work=Delaware Online |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
Delaware's northern boundary with Pennsylvania follows the arc of the "Twelve-Mile Circle," a curved boundary drawn at a radius of twelve miles from the courthouse in New Castle — one of the few curved state boundaries in the United States. This unusual border dates to the original colonial land grants and creates New Castle County's distinctive shape. The state's terrain is predominantly flat, part of the Atlantic Coastal Plain, with the highest point reaching 448 feet above sea level at Ebright Azimuth in New Castle County. The northern portion of the state, where the Piedmont physiographic province meets the Coastal Plain, has slightly more rolling terrain than the flat southern counties.


Traditional economic sectors continue to contribute substantially to Delaware's economy and employment base. Agriculture, particularly in Sussex County, maintains significance through poultry production, particularly broiler chickens, which generates hundreds of millions of dollars annually. The agricultural sector also includes grain cultivation, vegetable production, and horse farming, activities that connect Delaware to its rural heritage while adapting to modern agricultural practices. Tourism represents another important economic component, with visitors drawn to Delaware's beaches, particularly Rehoboth Beach and Bethany Beach in Sussex County, which serve as vacation destinations for residents of the Mid-Atlantic region. The hospitality and service industries associated with tourism provide substantial employment opportunities, particularly during summer months. Manufacturing, though less dominant than historically, continues through chemical production, food processing, and specialty manufacturing operations. The Port of Wilmington and the Port of Delaware provide significant container and cargo handling capacity, supporting regional commerce and creating port-related employment. Financial services, including banking and insurance operations, maintain a notable presence, with some major financial institutions headquartered in Wilmington.
The Delaware Bay, formed by the Delaware River estuary, creates critical habitat for migratory shorebirds, particularly during the annual horseshoe crab spawning season in May and June, when tens of thousands of red knots, ruddy turnstones, and other shorebirds stop along Delaware Bay beaches to feed on crab eggs. The Brandywine and Christina Rivers in northern Delaware historically powered dozens of mills and continue to shape Wilmington's geography. The Chesapeake and Delaware Canal, completed in 1829 and subsequently widened and deepened over the following century, cuts across the northern Delaware peninsula connecting the two bays and remains one of the busiest waterways in the nation for commercial shipping.<ref>{{cite web |title=Chesapeake and Delaware Canal |url=https://www.nap.usace.army.mil/Missions/Civil-Works/Chesapeake-Delaware-Canal/ |work=U.S. Army Corps of Engineers |access-date=2024-01-15}}</ref>


== Notable People ==
The state is divided into three counties that differ significantly in character. New Castle County in the north is the most urbanized, containing Wilmington — the state's largest city — along with the state's major corporate and financial infrastructure. Kent County in the center is home to Dover, the state capital, and maintains a more agricultural and small-city character. Sussex County in the south is the largest county by area and the fastest-growing, driven by beach tourism and a substantial poultry industry. Locals sometimes refer to Sussex and lower Kent County as "Lower Slower" — a phrase that captures the region's more relaxed, rural character compared to the congested north.


Delaware has produced numerous individuals who achieved prominence in American politics, science, business, and culture. Caesar Rodney (1728–1784) stands as perhaps Delaware's most famous Revolutionary War figure, serving as a signer of the Declaration of Independence and playing crucial roles in state governance during the founding era. Rodney's famous midnight ride to Philadelphia to cast Delaware's decisive vote for independence has become part of American revolutionary mythology, commemorated on Delaware's state quarter. Thomas McKean, another signer of the Declaration of Independence, represented Delaware and later served as Chief Justice of Pennsylvania, demonstrating the interconnected nature of early American leadership. The Du Pont family, beginning with Eleuthère Irénée du Pont, transformed Delaware through industrial development and accumulated substantial influence in state affairs that persisted through the 20th century.<ref>{{cite web |title=Caesar Rodney and Delaware's Revolutionary Heroes |url=https://delaware.gov/facts/notable-figures/ |work=Delaware.gov |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
Lewes, Delaware's oldest city, sits at the mouth of Delaware Bay in Sussex County. The city's name is pronounced "Loo-iss" — not "Lewis" or "Leez" — following the pronunciation of Lewes, the English town in East Sussex after which it was named. The mismatch between spelling and pronunciation catches many visitors off-guard. Lewes was established in 1631 by Dutch colonists under David de Vries, making it the site of the first European settlement in Delaware, though that original settlement was destroyed by the Lenape the following year. The town later developed under English rule and today preserves a number of colonial and Federal-period buildings.<ref>{{cite web |title=History of Lewes, Delaware |url=https://www.historiclewes.org/history/ |work=Historic Lewes |access-date=2024-01-15}}</ref>


Delaware's contribution to American culture includes figures in literature, sports, and entertainment. Howard Pyle (1853–1911), a renowned illustrator and author, established an art school in Wilmington that influenced American illustration and children's literature. Biden family political prominence through former President Joe Biden, who served as a U.S. Senator from Delaware for 36 years before becoming Vice President and subsequently President, demonstrates Delaware's ongoing national political significance. Other notable Delawareans have contributed to science, medicine, and business, though the state's relatively small population has generally produced fewer nationally recognized figures compared to larger states. The state has nonetheless maintained cultural institutions and educational facilities that have nurtured talent and created environments for achievement in various fields.
Delaware's climate is humid subtropical in the south and humid continental in the north, with average temperatures ranging from roughly 35°F in winter to 75°F in summer. The state's low elevation and coastal exposure make it vulnerable to Atlantic hurricanes, nor'easters, and rising seas. Sea-level rise poses a particular threat to Sussex County's barrier beaches and Delaware Bay shoreline marshes, which face increased flooding and erosion.


== Attractions ==
== Economy ==


Delaware's historical and recreational attractions draw visitors interested in colonial history, Revolutionary War sites, and coastal recreation. The First State National Monument, designated in 2014, encompasses multiple historical sites including Fort Delaware, a Civil War-era fortification located on Pea Patch Island in the Delaware River. The monument also includes the Woodlawn area in Wilmington, significant to early American independence movements, and Ryfield in Dover, representing agricultural heritage. Fort Delaware served as a military prison during the Civil War and now functions as a museum and historical interpretation site managed by the state park system. Visitors can access the fort by ferry, experiencing period displays and educational programs related to 19th-century military history.
Delaware's modern economy rests on an unusual foundation: corporate law. The state's General Corporation Law, first enacted in its modern form in 1899, offers companies a flexible legal framework, a specialized court system called the Court of Chancery that handles corporate disputes without juries, and a well-developed body of case law that provides predictability for businesses. As a result, more than 60% of Fortune 500 companies are incorporated in Delaware, regardless of where their physical operations are located.<ref>{{cite web |title=Why Businesses Choose Delaware |url=https://corp.delaware.gov/whycorporations_web.pdf |work=Delaware Division of Corporations |access-date=2024-01-15}}</ref> Incorporation fees and corporate franchise taxes generated approximately $1.3 billion in fiscal year 2022, representing roughly a quarter of the state's total revenue — a remarkable figure for a state of Delaware's size. This legal advantage has made Delaware less dependent on traditional manufacturing than neighboring states and given it a fiscal stability unusual among small states.


Delaware's beaches constitute the state's most economically significant tourist attractions, with Rehoboth Beach, Bethany Beach, and South Bethany offering sandy shores, boardwalks, commercial establishments, and recreational facilities. The Delaware Bay shoreline includes Cape Henlopen State Park, offering natural habitat and recreational opportunities including hiking, fishing, and camping. The Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library near Wilmington showcases American decorative arts, and the Delaware Art Museum in Wilmington maintains significant collections of American and regional art. Historic Old Town Wilmington features colonial-era architecture, including the Old Court House, and serves as a cultural center with galleries, restaurants, and shops. The Nemours Estate, a historic mansion built by Alfred I. du Pont, represents gilded-age architecture and gardens and operates as a museum under the Nemours Foundation.
Traditional economic sectors remain important. Sussex County's poultry industry is the largest agricultural sector in the state, producing hundreds of millions of dollars in broiler chickens annually. Companies including Perdue Farms and Mountaire Farms maintain significant operations in Sussex County, and the poultry industry is the dominant employer in parts of the county. Agriculture in Delaware also includes grain cultivation, soybean production, and vegetable farming. The state's nursery and greenhouse industry has grown in recent decades as suburban development in New Castle County created demand for landscaping products.


{{#seo: |title=Delaware History Facts | Delaware.Wiki |description=Delaware history encompasses Indigenous settlement, Swedish colonization, American Revolution leadership including Caesar Rodney, industrial development, and modern prominence in corporate law. |type=Article }}
Tourism, driven primarily by Sussex County's beaches, represents another major economic sector. Rehoboth Beach, known as the "Nation's Summer Capital" due to its proximity to Washington, D.
[[Category:Cities in Delaware]]
[[Category:Delaware history]]

Revision as of 04:54, 10 April 2026

```mediawiki Delaware holds a distinctive place in American history as the first state to ratify the United States Constitution, earning it the nickname "The First State." Located on the Mid-Atlantic coast, Delaware is bordered by Pennsylvania to the north, New Jersey to the northeast across the Delaware River, Maryland to the west and south, and the Atlantic Ocean to the east. The state comprises three counties: New Castle in the north, Kent in the center, and Sussex in the south. Delaware covers approximately 1,982 square miles of total area, with a land area of roughly 1,954 square miles, making it the second-smallest state by area after Rhode Island.[1] Delaware's population reached 989,948 in the 2020 U.S. Census, and estimates by 2023 placed it above one million residents — making it one of the most densely populated states in the nation, not one of the least.[2] The state's history spans from Indigenous Lenape and Nanticoke settlements through European colonization by Swedish, Dutch, and English settlers, the American Revolution, and its evolution into a modern center of commerce and corporate law. Today, Delaware serves as a major hub for corporate business due to its favorable legal climate, with more than 60% of Fortune 500 companies incorporated within its borders, while maintaining significant historical sites and cultural institutions that reflect its colonial and Revolutionary War heritage.

History

Indigenous Peoples

Long before European contact, the region now called Delaware was home to two principal Indigenous nations: the Lenape and the Nanticoke. The Lenape, also known as the Delaware people, occupied territory throughout the Delaware River valley and much of present-day New Jersey and eastern Pennsylvania. They lived in semi-permanent villages, practiced agriculture alongside hunting and fishing, and organized themselves into loosely affiliated clans. The Nanticoke occupied the southern portions of the Delmarva Peninsula, including much of present-day Sussex County. European colonization brought devastating disruption through disease, displacement, and treaty dispossession; by the 18th century, most Lenape had been pushed westward, eventually settling in Ohio, Indiana, Kansas, and Oklahoma. The Delaware Tribe of Indians and the Delaware Nation, both federally recognized tribes, trace their ancestry directly to the original inhabitants of the Delaware River valley.[3]

Colonial Era

Delaware's recorded European history begins with the arrival of Henry Hudson in 1609, sailing under Dutch sponsorship, followed by English captain Samuel Argall, who named Delaware Bay and the river after Thomas West, the third Baron De La Warr and governor of Virginia. The first permanent European settlement was established by Swedish colonists in 1638 at Fort Christina, located at the confluence of the Christina River and the Delaware River, at the site of present-day Wilmington. The settlement, known as New Sweden, remained small but introduced horizontal log construction techniques to North America — a building method that Swedish and Finnish settlers had practiced in Scandinavia and that spread widely through the American frontier in subsequent centuries.[4]

New Sweden changed hands when Dutch forces under Peter Stuyvesant captured the colony in 1655, incorporating it into the Dutch territory of New Netherland. English forces then seized the region in 1664, making it part of the Duke of York's proprietary holdings. In 1681, King Charles II granted William Penn a charter for Pennsylvania, and Penn received the "Lower Counties on the Delaware" — essentially present-day Delaware — as a separate grant in 1682 from the Duke of York. The Lower Counties operated under Pennsylvania's proprietorship but maintained a separate assembly beginning in 1704. They remained under Penn family proprietorship until declaring independence in 1776, at which point Delaware established itself as a fully independent state with its own government, though for practical purposes it had functioned as a distinct political unit for decades before that.[5]

Revolutionary War and Constitutional Ratification

Delaware played an outsized role in the founding of the United States relative to its size. Caesar Rodney (1728–1784), one of Delaware's three delegates to the Continental Congress, made his famous overnight ride from Dover to Philadelphia on July 1–2, 1776, arriving in time to cast Delaware's decisive vote in favor of independence — breaking a two-to-one deadlock among the state's delegates and helping secure the unanimous adoption of the Declaration of Independence. Rodney rode approximately 80 miles through a summer storm despite suffering from asthma and facial cancer, and his ride has since become one of the enduring stories of the Revolutionary era. He signed the Declaration of Independence alongside Thomas McKean and George Read.[6] Delaware's state quarter, issued in 1999, depicts Rodney on horseback in commemoration of the ride.

On December 7, 1787, Delaware became the first state to ratify the United States Constitution, with a unanimous vote of 30–0 at a convention in Dover. The speed and unanimity of Delaware's ratification reflected both the state's small size — which stood to benefit from equal representation in the Senate — and broad agreement among its delegates that a stronger federal government was necessary. Delaware's early and decisive action opened the ratification process for the remaining states.[7] During the war itself, Delaware contributed the Delaware Regiment to the Continental Army, a unit that earned a reputation for discipline and endurance at engagements including the Battle of Long Island in 1776, where the regiment suffered heavy losses while helping cover Washington's retreat. The regiment's performance earned Delaware soldiers the nickname "Blue Hen's Chickens," a reference to fighting gamecocks allegedly carried by the regiment's officers — a name that eventually gave Delaware the Blue Hen Chicken as its state bird.[8]

19th Century: Industrialization and the Civil War Era

The 19th century transformed Delaware from an agricultural society into an industrial one. The change began in 1802, when Eleuthère Irénée du Pont de Nemours, a French immigrant and trained chemist, established a black powder mill along the Brandywine River near Wilmington. The E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company grew steadily throughout the century, supplying gunpowder for the War of 1812, the Mexican-American War, and the Civil War. By the late 19th century, the company had become one of the largest industrial enterprises in the United States, and the Du Pont family's wealth and influence permeated Delaware's politics, economy, and civic institutions in ways that persisted well into the 20th century.[9] Wilmington grew alongside the company, attracting immigrant workers from Ireland, Italy, Poland, and other countries, and developing into a significant manufacturing center for ships, railroad cars, leather goods, and chemicals.

Delaware occupied an ambiguous position during the Civil War. A slave state that never seceded, it supplied soldiers to both the Union and Confederate armies, though its official stance was Unionist. Slavery had diminished considerably in Delaware by 1860 — the state's enslaved population was less than 1,800 — but the institution remained legal there until the Thirteenth Amendment abolished it nationally in 1865. Delaware was one of only two states to reject the Thirteenth Amendment when it was submitted for ratification; the state legislature didn't formally ratify it until 1901.[10] Fort Delaware on Pea Patch Island in the Delaware River served as a Union military prison during the war, holding Confederate prisoners of war under harsh conditions. Pea Patch Island takes its name from local folklore: one story holds that a ship carrying a cargo of peas ran aground on a shoal in the river, and the peas sprouted and accumulated silt until they formed an island. Whether true or not, the story has circulated in the region for generations.

Patty Cannon and Delaware's History of Slavery

One of the darkest chapters in Delaware's history involves Patty Cannon, a criminal who operated along the Delaware-Maryland border in the early 19th century. Cannon ran a gang that kidnapped both enslaved Black people who had escaped to freedom and free Black residents of Delaware and Maryland, transporting them south to be sold into slavery. Her tavern and house straddled the state line between Delaware and Maryland in the area of Johnson's Crossroads (present-day Reliance), a location chosen deliberately because it allowed her to evade law enforcement by slipping across the border when authorities from one state approached. The gang's crimes included murder; human remains were discovered buried on Cannon's property after her arrest in 1829.[11]

Cannon died in jail in Georgetown, Delaware, in 1829, before she could be tried, reportedly by self-administered poison. Her skull was preserved and eventually donated to the Delaware State Archives; for decades it was kept at the Dover Public Library, reportedly stored in a pink hat box, where it was occasionally displayed. The skull was later removed from public exhibition due to legal restrictions on displaying human remains. In Sussex County, Cannon's name was used for generations as a cautionary figure — local parents reportedly warned children that Patty Cannon would take them if they misbehaved. A residential development in Sussex County was at one point named after her, a naming choice that drew criticism in later years. Her story remains a significant, if often overlooked, part of Delaware's history of slavery and racial violence.[12]

Geography

Delaware's location on the Mid-Atlantic coast has shaped its development throughout its history. The state lies between 38° and 40° north latitude and extends approximately 96 miles from north to south while averaging only 30 miles in width. The Delaware River and Delaware Bay form the state's eastern boundary, serving as crucial waterways for commerce since the colonial period. The Atlantic coast extends roughly 28 miles of ocean-facing shoreline, backed by barrier islands, marshlands, and sandy beaches that draw visitors from across the Mid-Atlantic region.

Delaware's northern boundary with Pennsylvania follows the arc of the "Twelve-Mile Circle," a curved boundary drawn at a radius of twelve miles from the courthouse in New Castle — one of the few curved state boundaries in the United States. This unusual border dates to the original colonial land grants and creates New Castle County's distinctive shape. The state's terrain is predominantly flat, part of the Atlantic Coastal Plain, with the highest point reaching 448 feet above sea level at Ebright Azimuth in New Castle County. The northern portion of the state, where the Piedmont physiographic province meets the Coastal Plain, has slightly more rolling terrain than the flat southern counties.

The Delaware Bay, formed by the Delaware River estuary, creates critical habitat for migratory shorebirds, particularly during the annual horseshoe crab spawning season in May and June, when tens of thousands of red knots, ruddy turnstones, and other shorebirds stop along Delaware Bay beaches to feed on crab eggs. The Brandywine and Christina Rivers in northern Delaware historically powered dozens of mills and continue to shape Wilmington's geography. The Chesapeake and Delaware Canal, completed in 1829 and subsequently widened and deepened over the following century, cuts across the northern Delaware peninsula connecting the two bays and remains one of the busiest waterways in the nation for commercial shipping.[13]

The state is divided into three counties that differ significantly in character. New Castle County in the north is the most urbanized, containing Wilmington — the state's largest city — along with the state's major corporate and financial infrastructure. Kent County in the center is home to Dover, the state capital, and maintains a more agricultural and small-city character. Sussex County in the south is the largest county by area and the fastest-growing, driven by beach tourism and a substantial poultry industry. Locals sometimes refer to Sussex and lower Kent County as "Lower Slower" — a phrase that captures the region's more relaxed, rural character compared to the congested north.

Lewes, Delaware's oldest city, sits at the mouth of Delaware Bay in Sussex County. The city's name is pronounced "Loo-iss" — not "Lewis" or "Leez" — following the pronunciation of Lewes, the English town in East Sussex after which it was named. The mismatch between spelling and pronunciation catches many visitors off-guard. Lewes was established in 1631 by Dutch colonists under David de Vries, making it the site of the first European settlement in Delaware, though that original settlement was destroyed by the Lenape the following year. The town later developed under English rule and today preserves a number of colonial and Federal-period buildings.[14]

Delaware's climate is humid subtropical in the south and humid continental in the north, with average temperatures ranging from roughly 35°F in winter to 75°F in summer. The state's low elevation and coastal exposure make it vulnerable to Atlantic hurricanes, nor'easters, and rising seas. Sea-level rise poses a particular threat to Sussex County's barrier beaches and Delaware Bay shoreline marshes, which face increased flooding and erosion.

Economy

Delaware's modern economy rests on an unusual foundation: corporate law. The state's General Corporation Law, first enacted in its modern form in 1899, offers companies a flexible legal framework, a specialized court system called the Court of Chancery that handles corporate disputes without juries, and a well-developed body of case law that provides predictability for businesses. As a result, more than 60% of Fortune 500 companies are incorporated in Delaware, regardless of where their physical operations are located.[15] Incorporation fees and corporate franchise taxes generated approximately $1.3 billion in fiscal year 2022, representing roughly a quarter of the state's total revenue — a remarkable figure for a state of Delaware's size. This legal advantage has made Delaware less dependent on traditional manufacturing than neighboring states and given it a fiscal stability unusual among small states.

Traditional economic sectors remain important. Sussex County's poultry industry is the largest agricultural sector in the state, producing hundreds of millions of dollars in broiler chickens annually. Companies including Perdue Farms and Mountaire Farms maintain significant operations in Sussex County, and the poultry industry is the dominant employer in parts of the county. Agriculture in Delaware also includes grain cultivation, soybean production, and vegetable farming. The state's nursery and greenhouse industry has grown in recent decades as suburban development in New Castle County created demand for landscaping products.

Tourism, driven primarily by Sussex County's beaches, represents another major economic sector. Rehoboth Beach, known as the "Nation's Summer Capital" due to its proximity to Washington, D.