Last year, Sandy, Morgan and I were able to visit Norway and see our dear friend Ellen and her daughter Lena in Oslo. Part of my heritage are some of my ancestors came from Sweden and it has always been a friendly joke between Ellen and myself.
This weekend, Sandy and I decided to go down to Wilmington, Delaware and visit the Kalmar Nykel, which is a reconstruction of one of the vessels that landed in what is now Wilmington in 1638, carrying the first settlers for Nya Svierge, or New Sweden. The colony only lasted until 1655, when the Dutch came and took over the place. But the Swedish influence on the area, including a swath of land all the way up to Philadelphia is still extant, especially in the Swedish Lutheran churches.
A monument at Fort Christina, well, the location where it stood. A stone's throw from Old Swedes Church, it was erected in 1938 by the Swedish government in honour of the founding of the colony.
Inside the Copeland Center, there is a painting by Patrick O'Brian of the Kalmar Nykel which tells of its fate off of Scotland during the First Anglo-Dutch War.
But in the meantime...maybe there's something I could paint up between the Dutch, the Swedes, and maybe some First Nations or Pirate marauders...hmmm....
How cool! My maternal grandparents' old (Episcopal) church in Douglasville, PA began as a Swedish Lutheran congregation. Christmas Eve services in the original unheated, unpowered chapel by candlelight, often with snow on the ground in the 1970s and early 80s, were always especially nice.
ReplyDeleteKind Sunday Evening Regards,
Stokes
Looks like a nice place to visit and imbibe some local history, shame you couldn't get on board the ship!
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