Sunday, October 11, 2015

Kirby & Holloway

There is a large neon sign from the 1950s, standing alongside U.S. 13 in Dover, Delaware, which marks the spot where a classic restaurant once stood. Today, it is an empty parking lot with the footprint of a building where the restaurant once was surrounded by a chain linked fence. The Kirby & Holloway Family Restaurant, opened in 1948, was a gathering place for citizens of, and visitors to, Dover. For more than sixty-five years, the restaurant had been a place where families could celebrate a special occasion or a night out. Servicemen from Dover Air Force Base would come in for a good meal. A fire on 2 February 2014 gutted the building. It was devastating for the community, and even elicited comments even from a United States Senator who claimed that it was a loss for the entire state.

Shortly after the fire, the Historic Commission declared the undamaged sign to have cultural and historic significance. Although he vowed to rebuild, the owner Jim Gray passed away a few months afterwards, leaving the family to decide what to with the Delaware institution. By July 2015, it was clear that the building could not be saved and demolition began. Given the cost of rebuilding, and the emotions of trying to rebuild a business that Mr. Gray had spent so much time nurturing, there is hesitation what to do next. The family hopes to have a decision by the second anniversary of the fire in February 2016. 

Saturday, October 10, 2015

Holy Trinity (Old Swedes) Church


Not many people think of Sweden as a major player in the development of colonial North American; however, from Philadelphia, through southern New Jersey, into northern Delaware, Swedish immigrants came to the New World and established thriving communities. The relationship between the Swedes and the native Lenape Indians was generally good and the colony was generally accepting of all people. Although there is a major museum in Philadelphia, and a few smaller museums in the region, the history of Swedish colonies is virtually unknown to most Americans. During our visit to the church, one of the guides noted that Swedes had been in the region long before William Penn came.

Holy Trinity Church of Wilmington, Delaware, located along the banks of Brandywine Creek and the Christina River, is evidence of that Swedish-American history. The congregation of the church dates back to 1640. The current stone church was built in the burial grounds of Fort Christina beginning in 1697, at the direction of Eric Björk a young pastor sent from Sweden by the King. The church was dedicated on Holy Trinity Sunday, 4 July 1699, making it the only 17th-century church still operating as a congregation in the United States.