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2 Brandywine Hundred Deanery. 3 Central New Castle Deanery. 4 Eastern Shore Deanery. ... Newman Center at the University of Delaware, founded as personal parish in ...
Brandywine Hundred is that portion of New Castle County that lies north of the Christina River and east of Brandywine Creek, excepting that portion in the south included in Wilmington Hundred. Its northern boundary follows a portion of the 12 mile arc drawn around the town of New Castle. It was one of the original hundreds in Delaware created ...
Newark Union Church and Cemetery is a historic meetinghouse and burial ground in Brandywine Hundred, Delaware near Carrcroft. [1] Established in 1687, the cemetery is four acres in size and contains approximately 950 graves, including seven men who fought in the American Revolution and members of some the earliest settlers of the Brandywine Hundred.
While their names still appear on all real estate transactions, they currently have no meaningful use or purpose except that non-renewable rental agreements for 120 days or less for dwellings located in Broadkill Hundred, Lewes-Rehoboth Hundred, Indian River Hundred and Baltimore Hundred are not subject to the Delaware Landlord-Tenant Code. [1]
Lower Brandywine Presbyterian Church Cemetery 39°48′18″N 75°36′44″W / 39.80500°N 75.61222°W / 39.80500; -75.61222 ( Lower Brandywine Presbyterian Church Cemetery (Wilmington
Lombardy Hall is located in Brandywine Hundred north of Wilmington, Delaware, on the east side of Concord Pike (United States Route 202, north of its junction with Foulk Road (Delaware Route 261). It is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story stone structure, with a slate side gable roof and brick chimneys. The main facade is five bays wide, with a center entrance ...
John Grubb (1652–1708), member of the Pennsylvania Provincial Assembly and one of the original settlers of the Brandywine Hundred that became Claymont, Delaware is buried at St. Martin's Church; John Larkin, Jr., businessman and first mayor of Chester, donated two acres of land adjacent to the church in 1879 for use as a cemetery. [13]
The Talleys were a prominent family in the Brandywine Hundred and provided the namesake of the community. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] In 1928, the Talleyville Fire Company was formed. [ 5 ] The William Hicklen House was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.