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Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Randolph Peters and His Nurseries

Possibly Randolph Peters' House
There has always been something on the 1868 Beers map that intrigued me, but about which I had never found any information (although that could be due, in large part, to the fact that I never really tried all that hard). Down in the very lower, left-hand corner, just north of White Clay Creek and between the Roseville and Curtis Mills, is something that says "Fruitland Nursery". I had tried in the past to look up the Fruitland Nursery, but with little (OK, no) success. It wasn't until I attacked it from a different angle that I learned what this was, and found that it was only a part of a larger operation that extended far beyond the borders of Mill Creek Hundred.

I had actually intended to do a post about the house seen above, which is located on the south side of Old Paper Mill Road, about a half mile east of Paper Mill Road. Old Paper Mill Road once connected all the way over to Possum Park Road, right where Old Possum Park Road now joins up with the rerouted road. Although this house certainly dates to at least the early 1800's, I wasn't able to find much about it in a quick search -- at least not before I was sidetracked into a different direction. Once I looked through the census and discovered who the "R. Peters" was who was listed below the Fruitland Nursery, it all fell into place.

The name on the map was Randolph Peters (1822-1885), who was born in Pennsylvania, but moved from New Jersey to the Newark area in 1857. He, along with his wife, Sarah, and four children, settled on a farm east of the Curtis Paper Mill and began the cultivation of fruit. It's not clear which house they lived in, although the one above was certainly there at the time and appears to be the only one close that's included on both the 1849 and 1868 maps. By 1868, there are three houses listed for Randolph, and one for his son William. (Presumably, two, or probably by that time, all three of Randolph's, were used by workers in the orchards.) By this time, though, Peters had greatly expanded his business operation.

After only four apparently peachy years (sorry) of growing fruit trees (specializing in pear and peach trees), Randolph Peters bought another property a couple miles south of Wilmington, where in 1861 he established the Great Northern and Southern Garden and Nursery. I'm not quite as familiar with the area over there in New Castle Hundred, but as best as I can tell, Peters' nursery was in Minquadale, about where Gracelawn Cemetery is now. He moved his family over there after buying the property, and the Minquadale location seems to be his primary location after that.


However, he did retain possession of the MCH orchards, and these ads from 1867 all list Newark as his address. In this article, it's stated that Peters had ten thousand pear trees growing on the slope of the hill -- a hill that likely included all of what is today the community of Nonantum Mills as well as the Newark Reservoir. Since I can't seem to find any other references to "Fruitland Nursery", it's not clear whether this was the original name of Peters' business, or if this was a name given after the Great Northern and Southern was founded. Whatever it was, it seems to have been highly regarded and produced very high quality trees. On this page you can find a farmer in California bragging about selling peach trees from "the celebrated nursery of Randolph Peters, of Delaware."

Peters continued to grow his business until his death in 1885. After that, his family held on to the nursery for a few years, but by the late 1890's the New Castle Hundred property had been sold to a man named Paul Gillis. As to the MCH property, the 1893 map shows the house on the south side of the road as belonging to what looks like L. McCormack. The property north of the road appears to say "Estate S.C. Peters". Presumably this means Randolph's widow Sarah A. C. Peters, and the estate must refer to him, since she was very much alive. In 1900, Sarah was living in Cheswold, Kent County with her youngest daughter Georgie and son-in-law Joseph Smith.

The only other mentions I can find to this property are several like this one, which notes that the estate was used by the University of Delaware in the late 1880's and early 1890's for experiments in different crop treatments. Oddly, these list it as belonging to the Randolph Peters Nursery Company, but these are the only references to that business name I could find. One report specifically states that it has, "one of the oldest, largest, and best pear orchards in the state." Interesting to know that such an orchard once sat right outside of Newark, in the far corner of Mill Creek Hundred.

8 comments:

  1. Scott, thanks a lot for your research and this article. This year I write a daily blog (in German) on old apple sorts, and on July 25th it is the Randolph apple. Creighton Lee Calhoun mentions it in his book "Old Southern Apples", and he tells a short story about this Randolph Peters. So, it's great to have an additional puzzle piece.

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    1. Sorry Scott, for unknown reasons my name did not show up: Michael from Cologne, Germany

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  2. Scott,
    Is it possible you answered your own blog question about the name Bossom Park with this blog? Image ten thousand trees on a spring day in full Blossom.
    Paul Arnold

    Fyi, old paper mill road is still very visible in the woods. More curves than the map depicts. Any idea if this was originally called Paper Mill road?

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    1. On what -- the post or the comment above? Because I could probably come up with more info about both.

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  4. The house in the picture was owned by my great great grandfather, Levi Mccormick. He bought the house sometime after the end of the civil war in the late 1860’s. His son owned it after him and my Grandfather was born in that house. Levi fought with the 4th Delaware volunteers in company E. made up of mostly Mill Creek hundred men Levi bought the house after getting home from the war.

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    1. Thanks for checking in, Pete! I'm not sure if I knew there were still direct-descendant McCormicks around. After being contacted by the current owner of the house (who is very interested in its history), I did more research on the property last year and did a new post, with much more information. You can find it here: https://mchhistory.blogspot.com/2019/06/the-levi-mccormick-house.html, or look up McCormick, Levi House on the Index page.

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