Good Times and Quiet Moments in Kent County, Delaware

By Travel Writers

May 8, 2021 8 min read

By Victor Block

The sounds of slot machines vie for attention with excited cries of winners at gambling tables nearby. Meanwhile, silence reigns at farms where horses rather than tractors pull plows. Welcome to Kent County, Delaware.

Dover, the state capital, retains the charm that William Penn envisioned when he laid it out in 1683. The graceful Dover Green surrounds the inviting public square. This is where a Continental Regiment was mustered during the Revolution and where townspeople gathered in 1776 to hear the newly penned Constitution read.

The First State Heritage Park encompasses The Green and links a number of important sites. Guided walking tours focus on stories of The Green, Revolutionary heroes, and tales of slavery and freedom.

The Old State House, completed in 1791, served as Delaware's Capitol for more than 140 years until it was replaced in 1933. An audio-visual presentation and tour bring to life the people who once deliberated within the walls of the graceful Georgian-style structure.

I enjoyed another immersion in history provided by a costumed interpreter playing the part of James Booth Jr., who was chief justice of Delaware from 1841 to 1855. He explained that although Delaware was a slave state, residents were divided over the issue.

Around the corner from the Old State House is the tiny John Bell House, which dates from the mid-1700s. It was owned by three generations of a family that operated taverns around The Green. The little wooden structure now serves as an interpretive center and the starting point for tours.

After taking in your fill of early Americana, it's time to set your sights on the eclectic offering of other attractions in and around Dover. A short stroll leads to the Johnson Victrola Museum, which is as fascinating in its way as the town's history lesson. That tale began with a Delawarean named Eldridge Johnson, who in 1901 founded the Victor Talking Machine Co. After perusing collections of more than 100,000 old records, antique phonographs and memorabilia that trace the history of recorded sound I was amused by an assortment of early hand-cranked "talking machines" with oversized listening horns.

I also enjoyed intriguing stories related during a guided tour. These included the source of popular sayings: "Put a sock in it," referring to when people literally stuffed a sock into the listening horn of a Victrola to quiet the sound, and "Put a lid on it," which evolved when record-players were later placed in cabinets whose lid could be closed.

An introduction to a more contemporary chapter of history is available at farmers' markets that take place in and around Dover. Spence's Bazaar offers the appeals of a rambling open-air shopping experience and encounters with representatives of a local Amish community. Dressed in their distinctive "plain people" attire, the Amish sell fresh-baked breads and pies, homemade fudge and other hard-to-resist, diet-busting foods.

Drives through the countryside provide other encounters with the Amish lifestyle. Tiny shops and tidy farms line narrow, winding roads. I paused to chat with an amiable young man guiding a six-horse team that pulled a plow.

The main feature at Shady Lane Selection is a large collection of quilts, one of which Salina Yoder was working on when I arrived, using a foot-pedal-powered sewing machine. After viewing the colorful assortment of bright coverlets and comforters, I spotted a sign that suggested, "When life gives you scraps, make quilts."

Even as a non-fan of automobile racing I found a tour of the Dover International Speedway more interesting than I had anticipated. The "Monster Mile," as it is known, hosts automobile races each year on what's billed as "the fastest 1-mile car track in the world." Guided tours include a garage where retired Sprint Cup race cars are parked after their career of tooling around at speeds approaching 200 miles an hour.

Come evening, many visitors to the area join locals who head for two full-service casinos. Both the Harrington Raceway and Casino and Dover Downs Hotel and Casino offer the complete range of table games of chance and skill as well as the usual array of slot machines, plus dining and entertainment options.

Even this long list of attractions and activities doesn't exhaust the possibilities. The somewhat oddly named Air Mobility Command Museum, which is housed in a World War II hangar, is home to more than two dozen aircraft. They include an open-cockpit biplane and a retired jumbo jet whose passengers included U.S. presidents and vice presidents and Queen Elizabeth II.

The Bombay Hook National Wildlife Refuge encompasses 16,000 acres of habitat for waterfowl, songbirds, shorebirds and other wildlife. Close-up animal encounters are available for those who set out on gentle walking trails or who prefer drive-by sightings from their car.

The section of the Delaware Bayshore Byway that traverses Kent County meanders through marshlands that skirt Delaware Bay and leads to small fishing villages. A personal favorite was Leipsic, a tiny hamlet where working boats used for fishing, crabbing and oystering often are tied up at the dock. I received a lesson in crabbing from two watermen as they unloaded bushel baskets of the crawly crustaceans they had just retrieved from the traps they tend.

Museums and history-rich buildings have much to offer those who visit Kent County. But for me, chatting with amiable watermen as they unload the day's catch and watching a young Amish man steer a horse-powered plow were among experiences that provided the most lasting memories.

WHEN YOU GO

For more information: www.visitdelawarevillages.com

 An Amish boy plows a field with a team of horses instead of a tractor in Kent County, Delaware. Photo courtesy of James Mattil/Dreamstime.com.
An Amish boy plows a field with a team of horses instead of a tractor in Kent County, Delaware. Photo courtesy of James Mattil/Dreamstime.com.
 A flight trainer is on display at the Air Mobility Command Museum in Dover, Delaware. Photo Courtesy of Jocelyn Quick/Dreamstime.com.
A flight trainer is on display at the Air Mobility Command Museum in Dover, Delaware. Photo Courtesy of Jocelyn Quick/Dreamstime.com.
 At the First State Heritage Park in Dover, Delaware, visitors enjoy a walking tour of The Green. Photo courtesy of Kent County Tourism Corp.
At the First State Heritage Park in Dover, Delaware, visitors enjoy a walking tour of The Green. Photo courtesy of Kent County Tourism Corp.

Victor Block is a freelance writer. To read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

An Amish boy plows a field with a team of horses instead of a tractor in Kent County, Delaware. Photo courtesy of James Mattil/Dreamstime.com.

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