The Hendrickson House about 1900. The house stood where Crum Creek meets the Delaware River on property now owned by Boeing Vertol Co. The house was built c.1670 by Jacob Hendrickson.
NOTE: The Hendrickson House stood out of the way at Crum Creek and the Delaware River for years. From c. 1915 till 1957 it was on property owned by the Baldwin Locomotive Works. Baldwin even paid to have the house restored in the 1920's. In 1957 Baldwin sold the property to Boeing Vertol which was moving to Ridley Twp. Boeing offered the Hendrickson House to the State of Pennsylvania and plans were made to move the house to Governor Printz Park in Essington. The state of Pennsylvania moved very slow and Boeing offered it to any museum etc. that would move the house and take care of it. In a surprise move, Delaware State came and removed the house to Fort Christiana State Park. Local historians were outraged that Pennsylvania let the house slip away.
The Hendrickson House
by Christine Morley
The old Hendrickson
house, locally known as the old Swedish house, stands on the east bank of Crum
Creek on a tract of ground in Eddystone, formerly owned by the
Baldwin-Lima-Hamilton Corporation.
Recently, a transfer of part of the tract for the purpose of industrial
development has aroused anxiety among people in the community who are
interested in the preservation of old landmarks.
Their anxiety arises
from its present need of extensive repairs, and from its location in a region
devoted to industrial uses, which makes its fate uncertain. Although the Baldwin Company restored it in
the 1920’s, time has taken its toll and the ancient structure is likely to
disintegrate unless some way can be found to save it.
In a pamphlet
issued by the Baldwin Company in 1928, this description is given of the old
house as it appeared before the restoration:
“The house was of stone with a
projecting hip-roof, and the overhang was pierced with loopholes through which
muskets could be fired in case of an Indian attack. The window sashes were hand-fashioned and the
shingles split from slabs eighteen inches wide.” It adds that sash and shingles were replaced
with new.
The house is
two-storied, built of field-stone, and has a shingled hip roof with a chimney
at each end. A rather misleading
inscription may be seen about ten feet up from the ground at one end of the
building. Scratched on two stones, one
above the other, it reads: “Built
1620” This is misleading for there are
no records of settlers in this area at that time. Moreover, if any Dutch or Swedish trader had
built a house with a date stone, he would not have used the English word
“built.”
The house has a
cellar with an arched opening for air and light. There are two rooms side by side on the first
floor, each with a fireplace. On the
second floor is one large room, reached by a perpendicular ladder built inside
a shaft beside the chimney in the larger of the two first floor rooms. Pieces of wood are nailed to one wall of the
shaft near the top, to provide hand holds for anyone climbing the ladder, which
ends at the floor level of the upper room.
There the climber must step off the top of the ladder or scramble off on
hands and knees.
This is truly a
primitive dwelling without provision for comfort or convenience except the
fireplaces, and a well with a pump which was near the back door when the house
was restored.
The land was
surveyed to Jacob Hendrickson in 1678, according to the Upland Court
record. Hendrickson first came to the
Delaware river in 1646 as a soldier under the Dutch commissary, Andries Hudde,
who carried on a long series of disputes with Governor Printz, growing out of
the conflict of Dutch and Swedish claims to the river and the right to trade
with the Indians.
Dr. George Smith in
his “History of Delaware County” suggests that Hendrickson “spied out the
beauty and richness of this land” while he was here as a soldier, and made it
his permanent home after his term of service had expired. As it was not uncommon for a man to build a
house before he obtained title to the land, it seems probable that Hendrickson
built his dwelling while the Dutch controlled the area from 1655 to 1664.
The writer had the privilege
of visiting this house in 1953 and afterward sent a letter of inquiry to the
American Swedish Historical Museum in Philadelphia, asking some questions about
the history of the house.
The reply contained
the following statements from Dr. Amandus Johnson, Colonial expert of the
Museum:
“Hendrix (Hendrickz, Hendrickzen,
Hendrickson) was a Dutchman, for a time employed by the Dutch West India
Company. He was the first to obtain this
grant, though it was a part of New Sweden originally. Date scratched on stone in house is incorrect
(1620). First section of house was built
between 1656 and 1664 and added to later.
Finished in its present form about 1682 or the end of 17th
century. Architecture is Dutch.”
Since Dr. Johnson is
an acknowledged authority on the early Colonial settlements in Pennsylvania,
these notes are helpful in establishing the history of the Hendrickson
house. It is to be hoped that some way
may be found to save this dwelling from further decay or possible
destruction. Such relics may not seem
valuable in themselves but they are links with the past and part of our
heritage which we should cherish, for, once destroyed, they cannot be
replaced.
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