19th Century Travel Guide for Travel between Philadelphia and Baltimore Helpful for Local History Researchers

The Stanton Railroad Station
The Stanton Railroad Station, From the Philadelphia, Wilmington, and Baltimore Railroad Guide via Hathi Trust http:hathitrust.org

When we hit the road these days for a trip to some unfamiliar destination, we often consult travel directories and guidebooks. These handy sources, whether online or on the printed page, are packed with information about a place, providing details for sightseeing and accommodations

They were there in the 19th century too, filling the need of itinerant types for information to orient them to things on their journey to unfamiliar places.  While there are a number of works available from the 1800s for the Delmarva Peninsula, I recently worked with two as I prepared for a Delaware Humanities forum talk for the Newark Historical Society.

My talk was about the social history of railroading in Delaware and I was reorienting it to matters more of interest to the heritage group’s members. So I surfed over to the Digital Library of America, an excellent portal for starting online searches.  That search yielded the sought after reference, the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Guide published in 1856 by Charles Dare.  This little volume was designed, the author said, to communicate information that was most interesting to passengers over the route.  Dare updated his first publication with a second issue in 1877.

The handy guide described for the traveler the route from Philadelphia to Baltimore, providing pages of details about the destinations on the upper Delmarva Peninsula, such as Claymont, Bellevue, Wilmington, Newport, Stanton, Newark, Elkton, North East, Charlestown and the Susquehanna River crossing. As the miles rolled by on those long ago journeys the guide described items of interest for sightseers and provided practical destination information on local accommodations.

There are also plenty of sketches. The author offered a special thanks to D. C. Baxter for his work, the transformation of “photographs of scenery upon the route into well-executed wood engravings.”  The maps were done by J. E. Larkin.

Just as this guide was handy to people living in the 19th century, the modern day researcher will find it helpful for understanding places along the road.  Fortunately these rare books have been digitized by academic libraries and are now readily available for on demand use.  I purchased a copy of the original work from a rare book dealer in New England probably 30 years ago.  Otherwise it would have taken a time consuming trip to a special collections or large academic library.

But as digitization expands our easy contact with heritage-related materials, it helps advance our understanding and appreciation of our past as practically everyone has the ability to conveniently access rare materials.  The physical copy of the e-resource I was using is located at the Harvard University Library.

Proposed railroad bridge between Perryville and Havre de Grace
Proposed railroad bridge between Perryville and Havre de Grace. Source: Philadelphia, Wilmington, and Baltimore Railroad Guide, via www.hathitrust.org
The Newark Train Station.\
The Newark Train Station. Source: Philadelphia, Wilmington, and Baltimore Railroad Guide, via www.hathitrust.org

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.

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