Old Commercial Maps for Delaware & Maryland Available from Philadelphia Free Library

McLear and Kendall Carriage Factory hesamere 1882
McLear & Kendall Carriage Factory, French Street, Wilmington, by the Hexamer General Survey. Source: Philadelphia Free Library

While digging up some historical records on a Delaware property earlier this week, I discovered a large body of helpful online maps published by the Philadelphia Free Library. This urban institution has substantial online collections, including a large holding of maps.

The resources that helped with my investigation was the Hexamer General Survey collection. Between 1866 and 1895, Ernest Hexamer sketched out detailed plates on nearly 3,000 industrial and commercial properties in the Greater Philadelphia area.  These meticulous illustrations included breweries, textile mills, printers, car works, dye and chemical plants, planning mills, and much more.  The renderings were created for fire insurance underwriters and are similar to the Sanborn Maps, which are available for many Delmarva communities.

Hexamer was a German immigrant, according to the blog, Hexamer Redux. “He began his career creating insurance maps in New York City.  In 1856, he moved to Philadelphia and established the fire insurance map business in the city.”

For researchers on the upper part of the Delmarva Peninsula, there are a many industrial plates from Wilmington, as well as New Castle and Cecil counties. The Star Bone Phosphate Works at Rothwell Landing is the only one for Kent County, DE.  Companies such as the Jackson & Sharp’s Delaware Car Works, Bancroft and lots of others are represented in the records.

In addition to floor plans similar to architectural drawings lots of additional details are provided. There are notes about the construction, fire protection, occupancy, and other elements of interest to an insurance carrier.  Many include perspective sketches of the actual building, which is great.

This will be a valuable resource for many Delmarva researchers. Thank you Philadelphia Free Library for providing this excellent resource.

 

providence mill hexamer 1890
Providence MIll, Wm. M. Singerly, 1890 by Hexamer General Survey; Source: Philadelphia Free Library.
new castle mills hexamere phila free library 1886
New Castle Mills, New Castle, DE., 1887 by Hexamer Surveys. Source: Philadelphia Free Library

 

jackson and sharp phila free library hexamore 1872
Jackson and Sharp Rail Works, 1872, by Hexamer General Survey. Source: Philadelphia Free Library

 

Research Treasures Reside in Delmar Public Library Collection

If you are researching local or family history on the Delmarva Peninsula, there are many fine libraries from Wilmington down to Cape Charles that can help.  Some are large, university affiliated repositories, while others are non-profit, stand-alone institutions located in some of the region’s small towns.  Traveling from one end of Delmarva to the other, I often find evidentiary traces to the past in these places so I will highlight a few of the smaller collections that can help you puzzle together narratives from the past.

The railroad town of Delmar, at the southern tip of Delaware, has one of these great assets.  The community, promoting itself as the “little town that is too big for one state,” is located in two states, the boundary line going right down the center of the business district.  It has always had a strong historical connection to the locomotive as the settlement got its start when the Delaware Railroad reached here in 1859.

In the center of the divided town on Bi-State Blvd, there is the Delmar Public Library, a welcoming place with a patron-oriented staff and excellent resources.  Its large collection of books and serials, should make any bookworm happy, but there is much more.  There are clusters of computers, free wi-fi, just about all the services one expects to find in a solid institution. They also have active children and teen programs and all of this seems to make it a strong community center that engages residents.

But in addition to these resources, the library also has a valuable special collection of unique railroad materials.  There are dozens of rare, one-of-a-kind, photographs; notebooks of newspaper clippings compiled over generations; various pieces of ephemera, such as railroad tickets and shipping documents; and other unique items of historical interest.

I was delighted to find some photos that I hadn’t seen as they were relevant to an investigation I was working on.  Just when you think a piece of evidence linking something to the past has been lost to time, there it is in some special collection and that was my experience at the Delmar Public Library.

Be sure to check out this unique special collection if you’re doing some digging into the past around these parts, especially if it relates to the railroad.  You will find an excellent small town library that engages its patrons, takes care of reader needs, has unique special collections, and is a community gathering place.

railroad delmar library 02