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The Dutch
first settled Delaware in 1631, although all of
the original settlers were killed in a disagreement
with local Indians. Seven years later, the Swedes
set up a colony and trading post at Fort Christina
in the northern part of Delaware. Today, Fort Christina
is called Wilmington. In 1651, the Dutch reclaimed
the area and built a fort near present day New Castle.
By 1655, the Dutch had forcibly removed the Swedes
from the area and reincorporated Delaware into their
empire. In 1664, however, the British removed the
Dutch from the east coast.
After
William Penn was granted the land that became Pennsylvania
in 1682, he persuaded the Duke of York to lease
him the western shore of Delaware Bay so that his
colony could have an outlet to the sea. The Duke
agreed and henceforth, Penn's original charter included
the northern sections of present-day Delaware, which
became known as "The Lower Counties on the
Delaware".
The decision
by the Duke angered Lord Baltimore, the first proprietary
governor of Maryland, who believed he had the rights
to it. A lengthy and occasionally violent 100-year
conflict between Penn's heirs and Baltimore's heirs
was finally settled when Delaware's border was defined
in 1750 and when the Maryland/Pennsylvania and Maryland/Delaware
borders were defined as part of the Mason-Dixon
Line in 1768.
Shortly
after the incorp-oration of the "Lower Counties"
into Pennsylvania, the sparsely populated region
grew isolated from the bustling city of Philadelphia,
and began holding their own legislative assemblies,
though they remained subjects of the Pennsylvania
governor. It wasn't until 1776, however, that Delaware
had a government completely independent from Pennsylvania.
In 1787, Delaware became the first colony to ratify
the U.S. Constitution, and hence became America's
first state.
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