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  1. 1631 – Delaware becomes an early Dutch Settlement. 1631- A fort is built on the first Dutch Settlement on Cape Henlopen on Lewes Creek, in the Zwaanendael Colony. 1638 – Swedish colony of ‘New Sweden’ is the first permanent European settlement in Delaware. 1643 – Governor Johan Björnsson Printz administers the colony until 1653.

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  2. The Delaware Colony, officially known as the three "Lower Counties on the Delaware", was a semiautonomous region of the proprietary Province of Pennsylvania and a de facto British colony in North America. Although not royally sanctioned, Delaware consisted of the three counties on the west bank of the Delaware River Bay.

  3. The. small state of Delaware made large contributions to the achievement of American independence. Although offi-cially part of Pennsylvania during the colonial period, the “Lower Counties” of New Castle, Kent and Sussex retained a separate identity and, after 1704, their own governing assembly.

  4. www.smplanet.com › teaching › colonialamericaThe Colonies | Delaware

    Delaware sits in a desirable and strategic location at the mouth of the Delaware River on the western shore of Chesapeake Bay. Delaware struggled for its place on the colonial map, but it was a colony destined for mighty deeds. When the time came to fight for independence of the thirteen colonies, Delaware boldly answered the call.

  5. The Delaware colony was founded in 1638 by European colonists from the Netherlands and Sweden. Its history includes occupations by the Dutch, Swedish, British—and the colony of Pennsylvania, which included Delaware until 1703.

  6. Charter of Delaware. Originally part of William Penn's colony of Pennsylvania, the Lower Counties of what would become Delaware were difficult to govern, as Delaware's economy and geography were much more like those of the Chesapeake Bay colonies than those of Pennylvania. After merging the colonies' governments failed, Penn allowed the Lower ...

  7. Mar 14, 2016 · As a result, the 1760s and 1770s witnessed a rise in discontent and discord within the colony (some argue that Virginian dissenters suffered some of the worst persecutions in antebellum America). 4. In the Carolinas, New York, New Jersey, and Delaware, Anglicans never made up a majority, in contrast to Virginia.

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