| Though DELAWARE
has its beautiful spots - including some of the mid-Atlantic's best
beaches - its tourist boards have their work cut out. Most of the
images potential visitors have of the state are negative: Delaware
is known for the massive chemical plants of the DuPont Corporation
and Dover Air Force Base , as well as for tolerating shady business
practices - half of America's largest companies have their official
bases in this tiny state, thanks to its permissive tax, banking and
incorporation laws. The upside of this is that there's no sales tax,
which certainly makes shoppers happy.
To downplay
the state's dubious contemporary image, Delaware's promoters emphasize
its past - for example, as the first ex-colony to ratify the Constitution,
it claims the title of America's First State Dutch whalers established
a settlement at the mouth of the Delaware Bay in 1631, and soon
afterwards the Swedes built a larger colony at present-day Wilmington
. The two groups fought amongst themselves until the British took
over in 1664. Delaware was part of neighboring Pennsylvania - Philadelphia
is only ten miles north of the present, arching state border - until
hiving itself off in 1776.
Much of Delaware's
fortunes (and misfortunes) since then can be traced directly to
the du Pont family , who, fleeing the wrath of revolutionary France,
set up a gunpowder mill that became the main supplier of conventional
explosives to the US Government. After World War I, the du Ponts
went public and made millions in the stock market frenzies of the
Roaring Twenties, since which time the company has diversified,
its labs inventing such modern essentials as nylon and cellophane.
The du Ponts
built huge mansions for themselves in the Brandywine Valley north
of Wilmington, near the perfectly preserved old colonial capital,
New Castle , on the Delaware Bay just five miles south of I-95.
Further south, Dover , the capital, may not detain you long, but
beyond it the small and amiable resorts of Lewes and Rehoboth Beach
mark the northern extent of over twenty miles of unspoiled Atlantic
beaches.
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