DelaFAQs
DelaFAQs
(Frequently Asked Questions)

Area

2,044 square miles
Most of Delaware is on the Atlantic Coastal plain.  The northern part of the state is on the Piedmont plateau, a hilly area between the Appalachian Mountains and the Atlantic coastal plain.  The dividing line runs east-west between the cities of Wilmington and Newark.

Length

96 miles

Width

39 miles

Highest
Elevation

442 feet above sea level (Ebright Road, north Wilmington)

Lowest
Elevation

Sea level

Statehood

Delaware declared its independence from Great Britain on June 15, 1776.  It thereby also became independent of Pennsylvania with which it had been connected since 1682.  It is known as the "First State" because on December 7, 1787, it became the first to ratify the U.S. Constitution.

Signers of the Constitution from Delaware

Signers of the Declaration of Independence from Delaware

Capital

Dover 

Counties

New Castle - north

Kent - center of Delaware, 11 miles south of the capital Dover

Sussex - the larges county, measuring 950 square miles

Origin of
Name
In 1610 explorer Samuel Argall named the Delaware River and Bay for the governor of Virginia, Thomas West, Lord De La Warr.  The state of Delaware takes its name from the river and bay.

Lord de la Warr 
Photo from the 
A.N. Sanborn Collection 

Government

Delaware's government consists of the General Assembly,  comprised of a Senate and House of Representatives, the Governor, and the judiciary. 

Who's who in state Government: - Click here to see a current listing

State Seal
This image is from a 19th century commemorative ribbon.  There are three dates on Delaware's state seal - 1704 reflects the establishment of Delaware's first General Assembly; 1776 for the Declaration of Independence from England; and 1787, the year that Delaware ratified the United States Constitution - making us the first state in the union! The current seal reflects the final changes made in 1907.
State Flag
Delaware adopted the current state flag on July 24, 1913.  The state seal is enclosed in a buff diamond on a colonial blue background.  Below the diamond is printed "December 7, 1787," the date that Delaware ratified the U.S. Constitution and became the first state.

 

State Bird

Blue Hen Chicken

The mascot of Delaware's Revolutionary War soldiers, a fighting game cock, was named the state bird in February, 1939.

Picture on left from The Sons of Delaware
1901 Banquet Program

State
Butterfly

Tiger Swallowtail
(Pterourus glaucus)
Adopted June 10, 1999
State Flower

peach blossom

Adopted on May 9, 1895, after farmers and schoolchildren petitioned the General Assembly.  Beginning in the early 1800s, Delaware became a leading producer of peaches until a blight called "the yellows" destroyed the orchards in the late 1800s.

 

 

State
Fossil

Belemnitella americana (ancestors of the modern squid).

State
Herb

Sweet Golden Rod
(Solidago odora)

Adopted June 24, 1996
Indigenous to Delaware; 
found throughout the state along coastal areas and by
marshes.

State Insect

ladybug

Adopted April 25, 1974, after state schoolchildren petitioned the General Assembly.

 

State Tree

American holly (Ilex opaaca Aiton)

Adopted by Act of the General Assembly and Governor on May 1,1939.  During the late nineteenth century until the 1930s, Sussex County became the leading producer of holly, used for Christmas decorations and wreaths.
State Fish

weakfish (Cynoscion genus)

Also known as the sea trout, yellow fin trout, squeteague and tide runner, the weak fish was adopted by the state legislature as state fish in 1981, in recognition of sport fishing's recreational and economic standing in the state of Delaware.

State Mineral

sillimanite, adopted March 24, 1977.

A white, brownish, greenish aluminum silicate (Al2SiO5), only found in rocks that have been under great pressure (metamorphic rocks).  In Delaware, you can find sillimanite in northwest areas such as Brandywine Springs and Hoopes Reservoir.

State Beverage

milk, adopted 1983

   

State Colors

Colonial blue and buff

State Song

Our Delaware

Written by George B. Hynson (words) and William M.S. Brown (music), published 1906.
It became the state song in 1925 by an act of the General Assembly.  The fourth verse was written by Donn Devine in a 1960 competition authorized by the by the General Assembly to add a fourth statewide verse to the ones for each county.

State Motto

"Liberty and Independence"

Nicknames

First State - first to ratify the Constitution.


Diamond State - Legend has it that Thomas Jefferson called Delaware a "jewel" among the states because of it's strategic location along the East Coast.

Blue Hen State - One form of entertainment during the Revolutionary War for Delaware soldiers was cock fighting.  It was so popular, Delaware Soldiers brought their own Blue Hens with them during their stay in the army.  The Blue Hen was noted for its fighting ability, and because of their bravery, the men of Captain Jonathan Caldwell's company was soon compared to this breed.

Small Wonder

Home of Tax Free Shopping

Peach State -the first state to produce peaches commercially.

Corporate Capital

Chemical Capital

State
Weather

Delawareans delight in four distinct weather seasons. Click on the picture at the left to check today's weather conditions.
 

Who?

The first known inhabitants of Delaware were two tribes of Native Americans, the Lenni Lenape and the Nanticoke.