Marshallton in the 1920's, Through the Eyes of a Girl -- Part I
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Marshallton, about 1905 |
We will begin our journey through Marshallton at the corner of New Street and Old Capitol Trail. There is a small brown building with a larger house next door. The small brown building was Hubert’s Grocery Store. What Anna Mae remembers most was the candy counter. The children loved going to the store and buying their penny candy. The mothers would give their lists to Mr. Hubert, who would gather the items. They would then load the groceries into their wagons and wheel them home. There were a handful of butchers in the area as well, but most of the time people would travel into Wilmington and buy their meat from Haldas. There were several grocery stores, the most noteworthy of which was the American Store. It was an early grocery store chain, and a forerunner of Acme. They began popping up in the late teens and early twenties. The original Marshallton location of the American store was on Greenbank Road in the red brick building that now houses Events Unlimited. I was told that Irwin Eastburn was the first to own and operate this location. The store was later moved to Old Capitol Trail where Big D’s Pizza place is currently.
Over near the intersection of Newport Road and Old Capitol Trail was the site of the annual carnival. They were not the carnivals we know today. It was a smaller event that featured entertainment, food and games to play with prizes. The Marshallton community would look forward to this each year, as well as the carnivals held a bit later by the fire company.
As we turned left onto Newport Road from Old Capitol Trail, Anna Mae pointed out her Grandmother’s house in which she was born, the house where the Mullen’s lived (Mr. Mullen was the postmaster, and for a time ran the post office out of his house), and an open lot where Mackison's ice cream parlor used to stand. Anna Mae reminisced of the jukebox that played while her brother danced, and walking over on Sundays to eat ice cream.
Bridge at the bottom of Duncan Rd., about 1905 |
As you cross the bridge over Red Clay Creek (the site of the original 18th century Hersey's Bridge) and make a right onto Greenbank Road (which some residents at the time called Mill Road), on your right was the end of the Peoples Trolley spur that came from Brandywine Springs Park. Anna Mae remembers the trolley coming to the end, stopping, and the trolley driver getting out to do something on the pole to reverse the Trolley car to go back the other way. The Peoples Trolley crossed over Greenbank Road, through the fields and towards the Cedars where there was a connection to the main line leading to Wilmington. Across from the trolley line was a row of houses. The reason Marshallton residents called Greenbank Road "Mill Road" was because up on the right was the Marshallton Mill, which at that time was a fiber mill. This is where Anna Mae’s father worked. Anna Mae only went through the mill with "Daddy" once, when she was a small child, and does not remember too much about it.
In Part II, we'll find out about another part of the Marshallton community, the founding of the fire company, and a local florist, among other things ...
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