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Inaugural event held in Washington, DC by the Business Network for Offshore Wind with partner Recharge to promote excellence in rapidly growing industry ....
PHOTO COURTESY OF HAZEL BRITTINGHAM May 4, 2021 Bill Heronemus sent along this photo, looking toward the northwest, of the Lewes-Rehoboth Canal in downtown Lewes in 1921. Hazel Brittingham supplied it to Bill who works with old photographs to restore and enhance them. This shows how rough and raw Lewes was a century ago. The Army Corps of Engineers excavated sections of marsh between Lewes Creek on the northwest end of the canal and Rehoboth Creek on the southeast end, and built formal inlets to connect Delaware Bay and Rehoboth Bay for commercial transportation primarily of farm crops. The canal project started in 1913 and first opened to boating traffic in 1916. ....
A friendly canal chat in Lewes in 1937 capegazette.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from capegazette.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
February 16, 2021 The aerial picture published as the historic photo in the Feb. 9 edition of the Cape Gazette (capegazette.com/node/215273) generated considerable interest. Because of the extent of the information, we decided to publish it again with comments from two readers. Bob Kotowski, long involved with Lewes Historical Society, provided the first response. The second response came from Earl Webb who originally provided the photo. Here are their responses: “Concerning the aerial photo of piers sent by Earl Webb and published on page 7 in the Feb. 9 Cape Gazette, I think I can help,” wrote Kotowski. “The large plant and pier in the foreground appears to be Otis Smith’s Fish Products Co. The other menhaden piers also likely were owned by Smith. As for the remaining piers, starting from the top of the photo: the Army Mine Pier (now Cape Henlopen fishing pier), remnants of the old Iron Pier, and at the bottom of the pic, the C ....