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WILMINGTON

Volume 21 · 191 words · 1860 Edition

a town and river-port of the United States of N. America, Delaware, at the junction of the Christiana Creek with the Brandywine, 2 miles above the mouth of the latter in the Delaware, 28 miles S.W. of Philadelphia, and 70 E.N.E. of Baltimore. It stands partly at the foot and partly on the slope of a hill, is re- gularly laid out with broad straight streets, and is gene- rally well built of brick. The principal public buildings are a town hall, a large hospital, a handsome Roman Catho- lic college founded in 1847, and numerous churches be- longing to different denominations. Wilmington has several boarding-schools, newspaper offices, and banks. But it is as a manufacturing town that it chiefly deserves notice. The whole of its establishments are estimated to produce annually, on an average, goods valued at L990,000. Among the more important items that make up this sum are iron and iron goods of all sorts, L277,000; flour and meal, L244,000; leather of various kinds, L142,000; and cotton, L110,000. Ship-building is also carried on to a large extent; and there is a considerable trade and navi- gation. Pop. (1853) 16,163.