 |
 |
Our Pages

Another Glagow Area Rev War site threatened (11/1/09)

FOHG Position Paper on La Grange Record Plan Submission 8/24/08

Land Use Fails To Support Historic Review Board (2/22/08)

La Grange Facts Sheet (1/18/2008)

Developer refiles SLAPP suits against FoHG members (2/20/2007)

La Grange developer's SLAPP suit dismissed (2/7/07)

Follow the players in New Castle County development (5/30/06)

POSSIBLE TEST OF ANTI-SLAPP LAW IN DE (5/28/06)

Please help support the Friends of Historic Glasgow, DE!

Going, Going, Gone? (3/26/04)

Obituary for Anne Barczewski (1/8/06)

Larding the Lean Earth: Soil and Society in 19th C. America

Developer sues ex-owners of historic farm (1/15/06)

Historic Farm in Jeopardy (2/11/05)

Glasgow auction bids on history (7/13/03)

Open land isn't worth paying any price in competition (9/29/04)

La Grange Communities LLC development project plan # 20051045

SLAPP suit filed against LaGrange development opponents

West End Dairy founder, farmer dies at age 95 (1/7/06)

National Register: La Grange (1974)

Developer looks to add homes, shops, school to historic Glasgow

Petition to save Historic Glasgow

Press Release (9/13/05)

Delaware's history can be reduced to street names (8/30/05)

Preservationists must act fast to save historic farm (8/20/05)

School district is seeking to destroy historic farm (8/10/05)

1600 Artifacts Discovered At La Grange (7/25/05 Press Release)

LaGrange Press Release: Developer wants more time (5/8/05)

PLUS review – PLUS 2005-06-15; La Grange (Barczewski farm)

Capital of the Rebellion: Phila. and the Revolution. (8/26/1777)

Feinting Spell: Howe headquarters at Aikin's Tavern

Battle of Cooch's Bridge

Howes' headquarters are at Aitkens tavern; Cornwallis (9/9/1777)

Geo. Washington letter: Iron Hill, Coach's [Cooch's] Mill 1777

Geo. Washington's letter to Continental Congress (9/3/1777)

Aithim's Tavern [Aiken's Tavern], Crouch's Mills [Cooch's] 1777

Glasgow Regional Park welcomed (10/26/03)

Glasgow park gets under way (9/14/03)

Bidding for farm in NCCo hits snag (6/9/2003)

Glasgow park parcel could cost county $12 million (9/16/04)

Delaware's heritage is disappearing (12/3/03)

Citizens Work To Save Historic Landmarks (Glasgow) (3/8/04)

Friends of Historic Glasgow news (8/20/04)

Glasgow property is historic (10/5/04)

Historic farm sold to NCCo developer (2/4/05) - WRONG!

Christina Basin's importance is undeniable (7/18/04)

NCCo decides $12 million too much for 236-acre property 9/21/04

Where Green Trees, Not Greenbacks, Flourish (6/21/97)

La Grange Press Release: Battle to Save LaGrange (2/11/05)

National Register: Cooch's Bridge Historic District (1973)

National Register: Aiken's Tavern Historic District (1977)

HABS DE-216: La Grange Granary (aka.: Samuel H. Black Farm)

New Castle County Parcel View of La Grange (Barczewski farm)

Royal Farms developing Battle of Cooch's Bridge gateway (3/2/05)

Brooks House Historic Zoning Overlay (7/14/04)

Threatened by Cloverleaf - News Gazette article (5/30/73)

History of nepotism at historic Glasgow's expense (5/17/05)

|
 |
|
 |
 |
Metro New Castle County
Clubs & Organizations
|
Friends of Historic Glasgow (Delaware)
Glasgow property is historic (10/5/04)

News Journal Op/Ed article on LaGrange
By EARNEST N. DAVIS
10/05/2004
Recent News Journal articles concerning the 236-acre Barczweski farm's future have missed a major point about this property -- its historic value.
In 1777 the road that connected Elkton (then called Head of Elk) and Glasgow (then called Aiken's Tavern) ran through this property. In the early morning of Sept. 3, the vanguard of Gen. William Howe's British army advanced along this road from Elkton into Glasgow.
An eyewitness had seen Howe's 15,000 to 18,000- man army a few days before on its way to Elkton, "their bright guns and bayonets gleaming in the rays of the early August sun."
About a half-mile north out of Glasgow, on the road toward Newark (now Del. 896) a 1,100-man force began to meet resistance from roughly 1,000 regular soldiers and militiamen of Gen. George Washington's American army. The fighting lasted approximately two hours and covered roughly a 2-mile area. The British and their Hessian mercenaries won the day.
We now know this as the Battle of Cooch's Bridge.
The bulk of Howe's army followed the vanguard route and camped along a line extending roughly from the top of Iron Hill and down to Glasgow to Sept. 8. Aiken's tavern itself was Howe's headquarters. British army maps of the time clearly show the road from Elkton into Glasgow and the area where individual British units camped.
Much has changed in Delaware since 1777, but that long abandoned road still exists on the Barczewski farm. A representative of the National Park Service Battlefield Protection Program believes this property still contains entrenchments left by this army. The Battle of Cooch's Bridge was the only military engagement of the American Revolutionary War to take place on Delaware soil.
On Sept. 4, 1777, the day after the battle, Washington rallied his troops by telling them: "Who is either without ambition for the applause of their countrymen and all posterity as the defenders of their country and the procurers of peace and happiness to unborn millions in the present and future generations?"
We are the generations to which Washington referred. Once the full history of the Barczewski property is made known (and there is more to tell) the value of preserving it will become clear, If New Castle County government cannot find a way to preserve this property alone, then the state or national level should step in.
Earnest N. Davis, of Newark, is a member of Friends of Historic Glasgow.
Favorite Links
News Journal link
Privacy Statement
Neighborhood Link Terms of Use
© 1997 - 2006 Neighborhood Link, Inc.
|