Let Us Help You Find the Right Waterfront Home or Property
Let Us Help You Find the Right Waterfront Home or Property
Waterfront Map Search
Blue Waterfront

The Waterfront Real Estate Experts

Blue Waterfront is a division of:
Prudential Gallo, REALTORS®

Lewes Office

16712 Kings Highway
Lewes, DE 19958
Sales: (302)645-6661 • (800) 321-3839
sales@prugallo.com
Rentals: (302)645-6697 • (800) 768-2289
lewesrentals@prugallo.com

Rehoboth Beach Office

702 Rehoboth Avenue
Rehoboth Beach, DE 19971
Sales: (302)227-6101 • (800) 321-2268
sales@prugallo.com
Rentals: (302)227-6554 • (800) 997-5529
rehoboth@prugallo.com

Let us help you!



A History of Rehoboth Beach

One of the first to discover Rehoboth Beach, Delaware was an unknown English sea captain from Jamestown, who was following the maps of Captain John Smith the explorer. This sailor was exploring some of the inland Bays along the Delaware Coast when he and his men rowed a boat ashore for fresh water. He found a flat peninsula covered by dwarf pines and scruffy dunes, no higher than 10-12 feet from sea level. He called it “Rehoboth” from Genesis xxvi: 22 - the Broad Places.

Paul and Peter Marsh

One of the original settlers was a man named Paul Marsh who entered into the colonies around 1689. He quickly established himself as a man of means. He patented some land in Somerset County near the Manokin Bay on the Chesapeake and joined the lower house of the Maryland assembly. He called his first plantation, Marshy Hope. Later he purchased several hundred acres in Deale County (now Sussex) near Lewes. A grandson, Peter Marsh, acquire about 600 acres southeast of Whorekill (now Lewes). Peter Marsh was a planter and cultivated the land to grow crops which he transported to Philadelphia. Peter Marsh’s house built in 1739 was one of the first structures in Rehoboth. Today it houses the Art League, an association that promotes the arts and offers exhibitions and classes on the old Marsh Estate.

There are many descendants of the original Paul Marsh in Sussex County. Most have landholdings along Angola Neck which was the location of the great Marsh and Robinson Plantations.

Comegy’s, Hayes and Quillen

Along the coast to the south, in an area now between Silver Lake and Dewey Beach, Robert West bought some land from the Marsh Family in 1855. In partnership with Joseph Comegys (later a Delaware Chief Justice) and Manlove Hayes, a state senator from Dover, the parties incorporated a company to develop about 135 acres of land south of Silver Lake into what was called to be called “Rehoboth City”. The plan never got off the ground because of the Civil War.

A second partnership resurrected the Rehoboth City vision as the “Rehoboth Association” and bought another 500 acres with plans to purchase the Dodd Farm as a second stage. This plan also languished until the West heirs sold an option to Joseph McSweeney and Captain Nathaniel Quillen to be part of a community called “Rehoboth By The Sea”. This development of cottages on leased land finally got underway in 1925 and is now controlled by the Redefer and Judge Families. 

Church Camp

“….It came to him in a dream. Robert W. Todd, a Methodist Episcopal minister from Wilmington St. Paul’s Church, had visited an ocean retreat along the Jersey Coast when he had a bout with Tuberculosis. The fair skies, the salt air and the mesmerizing waves had greatly restored his health…” He was determined to find a place for a summer church camp along Delmarva - so obsessed was he that he saw the place in a dream; a wide strip of clear white sand on the Delmarva Peninsula, located between two bays where tall grasses grew in the high dunes and shellfish crawled in the surf. One morning while staying in a lodge in Dewey Beach on the oceanside, he walked north toward Cape Henlopen, along the shore. By mid-morning he had found the site from his dream.

In 1871 he purchased from farmers the 414 acres; the place along the ocean and named it “Rehoboth”. The Rehoboth Beach Camp Meeting Association of the Methodist Episcopal Church, a tract of 414 acres, was formally established on January 27, 1873.

The original camp was located in west Rehoboth along a creek in an area called “the encampment grounds”. With the arrival of the railroad in 1877 the camp meeting site was moved closer to the water, along Baltimore Avenue. Church members stayed near the shore in small wooden structures called “tents”. The first town lots laid out in a fan shape along the water, between two lakes, Lake Gerar to the north and Newbold Lake to the south.

By 1890, Rehoboth was not only a church camp but an established town along the ocean. Church camps continued for decades, with Sunday service in the Tabernacle Tent on the beachside.

Prohibition and the Rum Runner

Prohibition increased commerce along the Inland Bays. There were many small wharfs along the western section of the Indian River Bay where the Rum Runner could secretly unloaded and store their cargo - later to be delivered to speakeasies in Rosedale and Oak Orchard. Local legend says that during the Prohibition Era, one could leave Reverend Todd’s Tabernacle in Rehoboth and drive a horse and buggy south one mile (Dewey Beach) where a businessman opened another big tent serving whiskey and beer - good drink to quench one’s thirst on a hot August day.

Based on information from Sussex County Association of REALTORS®, Inc., which neither guarantees nor is in any way responsible for its accuracy. All data is provided 'AS IS' and with all faults. Data maintained by Sussex County Association of REALTORS®, Inc. may not reflect all real estate activity in the market.

Prudential Gallo, REALTORS® is a real estate licensee in the State of Delaware. SCAOR # SCAOR07036.

Copyright 2008 Sussex County Association of REALTORS®, Inc.

site design: Inclind Inc.
CSS2.1 XHTML