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DELAWARE
  

whose delegates attended the Annapolis Convention (see Annapolis, Maryland), and it was the first (on the 7th of December 1787) to ratify the Federal constitution. From then until 1850 it was controlled by the Federalist or Whig parties. In 1850 the Democrats, who had before then elected a few governors and United States senators, secured control of the entire administration—a control unarrested, except in 1863, until the last decade of the 19th century. Although it was a slave state, the majority of the people of Delaware opposed secession in 1861, and the legislature promptly answered President Lincoln’s call to arms; yet, while 14,000 of the 40,000 males between the ages of fourteen and sixty served in the Union army, there were many sympathizers with the Confederacy in the southern part of the state.

In 1866, 1867 and 1869, respectively, the legislature refused to ratify the thirteenth, fourteenth and fifteenth amendments to the Federal constitution. The provision of the state constitution that restricted suffrage to those who had paid county or poll taxes and made the tax lists the basis for the lists of qualified voters, opened the way for the disfranchisement of many negroes by fraudulent means. Consequently the levy court of New Castle county was indicted in the United States circuit court in 1872, and one of its members was convicted. Again in 1880 the circuit court, by virtue of the Federal statute of 1872 on elections, appointed supervisors of elections in Delaware. The negro vote has steadily increased in importance, and in 1900 was approximately one-fifth of the total vote of the state. In 1901 the legislature ratified the three amendments rejected in former years. Another political problem has been that of representation. According to the constitution of 1831 the unit of representation in the legislature was the county; inasmuch as the population of New Castle county has exceeded after 1870 that of both Kent and Sussex, the inequality became a cause of discontent. This is partly eradicated by the new constitution of 1897, which reapportioned representation according to electoral districts, so that New Castle has seven senators and fifteen representatives, while each of the other counties has seven senators and ten representatives.

In 1889 the Republicans for the first time since the Civil War secured a majority in the legislature, and elected Anthony J. Higgins to the United States Senate. In that year a capitalist and promoter, J. Edward Addicks (b. 1841, in Pennsylvania), became a citizen of the state, and after securing for himself the control of the Wilmington gas supply, systematically set about building up a personal “machine” that would secure his election to the national Senate as a Republican. His purpose was thwarted in 1893, when a Democratic majority chose, for a second term, George Gray (b. 1840), who from 1879 to 1885 had been the attorney-general of the state and subsequently was a member of the Spanish-American Peace Commission at Paris in 1898 and became a judge of the United States circuit court, third judicial circuit, in 1899. Mr Addicks was an avowed candidate in 1895, but the opposition of the Regular Republicans, who accused him of corruption and who held the balance of power, prevented an election. In 1897, the legislature being again Democratic, Richard R. Kenney (b. 1856) was chosen to fill the vacancy for the remainder of the unexpired term. Meanwhile the two Republican factions continued to oppose one another, and both sent delegates to the national party convention in 1896, the “regular” delegation being seated. The expiration of Senator Gray’s term in 1899 left a vacancy, but although the Republicans again had a clear majority the resolution of the Regulars prevented the Union Republicans, as the supporters of Addicks called themselves, from seating their patron. Both the Regular and Union factions sent delegations to the national party convention in 1900, where the refusal of the Regulars to compromise led to the recognition of the Union delegates. Despite this apparent abandonment of their cause by the national organization, the Regulars continued their opposition, the state being wholly without representation in the Senate from the expiration of Senator Kenney’s term in 1901 until 1903, when a compromise was effected whereby two Republicans, one of each faction, were chosen, one condition being that Addicks should not be the candidate of the Union Republicans. Both factions were recognized by the national convention of 1904, but the legislature of 1905 adjourned without being able to fill a vacancy in the Senate which had again occurred. The deadlock, however, was broken at the special session of the legislature called in 1906, and in June of that year Henry A. Du Pont was elected senator.

Governors of Delaware
I. Swedish
Peter Minuit 1638–1640
Peter Hollander 1640–1643
Johan Printz 1643–1653
Johan Papegoga (acting)  1653–1654
Johan Claudius Rising 1654–1655
II. Dutch.
(Same as for New York.)
III. English.
(Same as New York until 1682.)
(Same as Pennsylvania 1682–1776.)
Presidents of Delaware
John McKinley 1776–1778
Caesar Rodney 1778–1781
John Dickinson 1781–1783
Nicholas Van Dyke 1783–1786
Thomas Collins 1786–1789
Governors
Joshua Clayton 1789–1796  Federalist
Gunning Bedford 1796–1797    ”
Daniel Rogers[1] 1797–1799    ”
Richard Bassett 1799–1801    ”
James Sykes[2] 1801–1802    ”
David Hall 1802–1805  Federalist
Nathaniel Mitchell 1805–1808    ”
George Truett 1808–1811    ”
Joseph Haslett 1811–1814    ”
Daniel Rodney 1814–1817    ”
John Clarke 1817–1820    ”
Henry Malleston[3] 1820    ”
Jacob Stout[4] 1820–1821    ”
John Collins 1821–1822  Democratic-Republican
Caleb Rodney[5] 1822    ”
Joseph Haslett 1822–1823  Democratic-Republican
Charles Thomas[6] 1823–1824    ”
Samuel Paynter 1824–1827  Federalist
Charles Polk 1827–1830    ”
David Hazzard 1830–1833  American-Republican
Caleb P. Bennett 1833–1836  Democrat
Charles Polk[7] 1836–1837    ”
Cornelius P. Comegys  1837–1841  Whig
William B. Cooper 1841–1845    ”
Thomas Stockton 1845–1846    ”
Joseph Maul[8] 1846    ”
William Temple[9] 1846–1847    ”
William Tharp 1847–1851  Democrat
William H. Ross 1851–1855    ”
Peter F. Causey 1855–1859  Whig-Know-Nothing
William Burton 1859–1863  Democrat
William Cannon 1863–1865  Republican
Gove Saulsbury[10] 1865–1871  Democrat
James Ponder 1871–1875    ”
John P. Cockran 1875–1879    ”
John W. Hall 1879–1883    ”
Charles C. Stockley 1883–1887    ”
Benjamin T. Biggs 1887–1891    ”
Robert J. Reynolds 1891–1895    ”
Joshua H. Marvil 1895  Republican
William T. Watson[11] 1895–1897  Democrat
Ebe W. Tunnell 1897–1901    ”
John Hunn 1901–1905  Republican
Preston Lea 1905–1909    ”
Simeon S. Pennewill 1909    ”
  1. Speaker of the senate. Filled unexpired term of Gunning Bedford (d. 1797).
  2. Speaker of senate. Filled unexpired term of Richard Bassett, who resigned 1801.
  3. Died before he was inaugurated.
  4. Speaker of the senate.
  5. Speaker of the senate, John Collins dying in 1822.
  6. Speaker of senate, Haslett dying in 1823.
  7. Speaker of senate.
  8. Speaker of senate, Stockton dying in 1846.
  9. Speaker of senate, Maul dying in 1846.
  10. As speaker of the senate filled the unexpired term of Cannon (d. 1865), and then became governor in 1867.
  11. President of senate, Marvil dying in 1895.