Delaware must do more to honor John Dickinson and his legacyDave Graham

As the page has turned on celebration of Black History Month, perhaps it’s time to properly recognize Delaware's unsung hero — patriot John Dickinson. 

As background, in front of the Smyrna Town Hall is a large, beautiful bronze statue of seven-term Smyrna mayor George C. Wright, Jr. purchased by the state of Delaware. There is also a George C. Wright Jr. Park in Smyrna. 

In addition, Mayor Wright was employed as the second highest-ranking federal employee at Dover Air Force Base.

As fully-deserved as Mayor Wright’s honors are, there is someone else Delawareans should honor as well.

The state of Delaware has never allocated funds to erect a statute to John Dickinson, Dover's colonial patriot and "Penman of the Revolution."

Dickinson, who owned a plantation south of the current Dover Air Force Base, was notable as a patriot who freed his Black slaves between 1777 and 1786.

During this year's legislative session, our Delaware lawmakers could pass a law to fund and commission the creation of a bronze statue to commemorate John Dickinson. 

And then, on July 4, 2027, our 251st Independence Day, a proper ceremony could dedicate John Dickinson’s statue located in a renamed John Dickinson Park on Mirror Lake near Dover, Delaware's ironically named Division Street.

Dave Graham, of Smyrna, was a candidate for governor in the 2020 Republican primary. A member of the Delaware Sons of the American Revolution, in his youth Mr. Graham served in the U.S. Army as a three-stripe sergeant with the First Armored Division in Germany.


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