11-040 HARMONY STREET An "old Dutch map" referred to in the Duke of York's period, 1664 to 1681, and later during the Penn period beginning in 1682, seems to have established rights of way or "streets" between the Strand and the road- ways before the houses on the west edge of the town - now Third, Fourth and Fifth Streets, at that time known as Minquas or Mink, Beaver, and Otter Streets. The street that is now Harmony was known both as Harte and Mary Streets, and the "street to the free wharf". It led back from the wharf at the river side across the Strand, along the green, across Minquas and Beaver Streets to Otter. The wharf was built to provide a landing place for ships when the wharf of the old fort had been undermined by storms. The new wharf was there In the Duke of York's period and may have been started at the end of the Dutch period. Along the north side of Harmony Street from near the Strand west to Minquas or Third Street, was the large plot of meadows, orchard and wooded ground belonging to Alexander D'Hinojossa the last of the Dutch governors. When the English came in 16649 D'Hinojossa's plot was confiscated and given to Captain John Carr, who became the English commander on the Delaware. Carr received much other land Including additional marsh and meadow at the north end of town and a mile-wide strip of river shore south of the town extending from "the great creek" south of the Battery down to Tom's Creek. Having ample means, he bought other property, and built on public meeting was hold at the governor's house, to which, Fox writes In his journal, most of the people came. As George Fox's report of his visit to the Delaware region undoubtedly had great effect upon the dreams of William Penns this visit of the Quaker missionary and his fellow members of the Society of Friends, in their strange garb, had significance for the future of New Castle. It would be remembered just ten years later, when William Penn's ship arrived at the free wharfs and Penn himself in a broad quaker hat like that of George Fox, walked up Harmony Street to the Green, there to be given legal possession of the soil as the new governor and proprietor. The Green or "Market place where the bell hangs" was chosen in 1671 for the new blockhouse, which was to defend the town against Indian attack, much feared at the time, and also "for the public service as council house, prison and for other public purposes The building of the blockhouse was begun In 1671 or 1672, but was not finished until after 1675 when Captain John Carr was dead. Captain Carr's two houses with their plot of land, 120 feet deep along the north side of Harmony Street, were bought by John Moll In 1675. Moll complained in 1680, that Captain Cantwell had shown him by "the old Dutch map" where a street 60 feet wide was to go through this property (present Second Street). To this he agreed, but now, after cutting down his apple trees, giving up the sixty-foot strip and fencing both sides of the street, his quit rents were doubled. Plans for building a court house after William Penn came., dragged as had those for the blockhouse In the 1670's. In 1689, Penn ordered the bounds of the Green or Market Plains established and a warrant was issued for surveying a lot for the court house. The survey excluded the blockhouse site, which was conveyed first to Robert French about 1694. Later it was bought by Jasper Yeates from whom it was acquired by the builders of Immanuel Church. (The years between the survey and the disposal of the blockhouse site to private owners might place the building of the first part of the court house definitely before 1694, except for the fact that the courts had been accustomed to meet at taverns in the winter time anyway and could have continued to do so after the blockhouse with its second- floor court-room was abandoned.) When the church was built in what was formerly the market street on the edge of the green, and the church yard occupied the site of the former blockhouse with its dungeon underneath and court-room above, Harmony Street is referred to in bounds for property as "the street from the church to the free wharf." On the northwest corner of the Strand and Harmony facing the Strand, lived Johannes deHaes, son of Roeloff. His plot adjoined at the back the smaller Carr garden and house that became John Moll's. Johannes, a small boy when his father died about 1655, was a prominent citizen in Penn's time. He had inherited his mother's property including the plantation later known as Monkbarus (the Janvier place near the Broad Dyke recently, 1946, sold for a housing development). On the opposite corner where Immanuel Church house (Thomas House) now is, his son, Roeloff II, owned a house and lot in the early 1700's and at the other end of the block at Harmony and the Green, his daughter Rebecca inherited from him a similar plot which she and her husband sold to Patrick Reilly of the Tile house. On it had long been a stable. Near Roeloff's house, on the south side of the street, stood "the little brick house" of Colonel John French. Governor Lovelace, in the eventful year for New Castle, 1672, made the town a "corporation" by the name of a balywick, to be governed by a barley and six assistants. The barley's position was that of deputy governor and chief justice; his assistants were the justices who formed the court. Their jurisdiction included "all the plantations upon the Delaware river" and this now government was to establish English laws instead of the Dutch procedure which had so far continued. But the order was softened by the Governor's added statement, "according to the desire of the inhabitants." The new government was hardly under way when Dutch conquest abroad returned the Delaware river region to the Dutch. Governor Lovelace went back to England; the Dutch governor, Anthony Colve, put Peter Alrichs in command at Now Castle, with orders that a substantial new fort must now be built and that meanwhile all taxes were abolished! In November, 1674, the English were back in control and governor Edward Andros was appointed to continue the Duke of York's rule. It was during this whole period that Harmony Street was the center of traffic, the residence site of commanders, judges and some of the leading citizens, the traffic way to the new site of fort and government building on the green, of the hauling of supplies from the free wharf, of incoming personages, settlers, traders and other visitors. When the court house was built on the opposite side of the green, Harmony Street was less lively, except on Sundays when Presbyterians and Episcopalians In their Sunday best passed each other on the way to their separate places of Worship. For history of separate houses and buildings, see detailed sections of this report.