Native Americans There is very little information about the Native Americans in and around Fenwick Island but the Nanticoke Tribe and Assateague Tribe are the tribes that inhabited the area. It is documented that the Nanticoke Tribe inhabited Strawberry Landing, which is just northwest of the town on Little Assawoman Bay, and the Assateague Tribe inhabited the area around Indian River, which is about 30 minutes by car north of the town. Little Assawoman Bay, just west the town, is named after an Algonkian name, Assawoman, that means "midway fishing stream." Both the Nanticoke and Assateague Tribes speak Algonkian.
The Dutch, New Netherland, and British capture In 1614 as the
Dutch were arriving in
North America and establishing the
colony of
New Netherland, they mapped out the coast of Delaware.
Cornelius Jacobsen May was the explorer who was sent out to map the Delaware coast. In his 1614 map of the coast he calls the area around Fenwick Island "Hindlopen," sometimes the name "False Cape" was also used. The
British gained control over Delaware in 1665 during the
Second Anglo-Dutch War after a bloodless surrender by the Dutch. The Dutch retook Delaware in 1673 during the
Third Anglo-Dutch War but the British then took Delaware back for the final time in 1674, both times also bloodlessly. In Fenwick Island there used to be many naturally forming inlets/channels that ran from the ocean into the bay, the believed conclusion is that these inlets are what the pirates used to get their ships into the bay. Local legend states that Cedar Island in Little Assawoman Bay was the pirates base of operations and a spot for the pirates to bury treasure. Regardless of the truth of the legend, Little Assawoman Bay and the Delaware coastal area as a whole was a well known place for pirates to hide from the law. Cedar Island has just about washed under the bay, as Seal Island did around 2010. Thomas Fenwick, a planter from England who settled in
Maryland, was the owner of the land during the years surrounding 1700 and the land was therefore named after him.
1932 Prohibition "Shootout" In 1932 Fenwick Island consisted of a few meeting grounds for camps including a hotel,
Fenwick Island Light, and some summer cottages built by
squatters. During an interrogation in
Dover, police found out about a future
rum-running operation in Fenwick Island.
Delaware State Police asked the
Coast Guard station nearby,
Indian River Life-Saving Station, to keep an eye out and before sunrise on the stormy morning of October 3rd a Coast Guardsmen patrolling the area spotted a wagon moving across the beach. Fenwick Island was thought to be empty as the camps were not in session at the time. Alarm was raised, the State Police got word, and they headed to the area. The police raised the island's
drawbridge as to not allow the run-runners to leave the island. Once the police arrived a
mothership could be seen offshore, highlighted by lighting flashes, and two smaller boats could be seen coming ashore. One small boat had already made it ashore but the other one tried to turn around, however the crew had trouble rowing in the stormy seas, abandoned the boat, and tried to swim. The Coast Guardsmen opened fire and got the men to come ashore. They then gave orders to the mothership but the ship fled for open water. The State Police and Coast Guardsmen opened fire on the ship with their rifles but the ship managed to get away. The police then followed the wagon tracks to the empty hotel where 200 cases of alcohol were found, totaled around $30,000 at the time. Five people were arrested during the incident. The event made national news for a short time and was a big discovery for the area. ==Education==