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・ Delaware festivals
・ Delaware Field House
・ Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens
・ Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football
・ Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football, 1889–99
・ Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football, 1900–09
・ Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football, 1990–99
・ Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens men's basketball
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・ Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens men's soccer
・ Delaware First Nation
・ Delaware General Assembly
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・ Delaware General Corporation Law
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Delaware Governor's Mansion
・ Delaware gubernatorial election, 1992
・ Delaware gubernatorial election, 1996
・ Delaware gubernatorial election, 2000
・ Delaware gubernatorial election, 2004
・ Delaware gubernatorial election, 2008
・ Delaware gubernatorial election, 2012
・ Delaware gubernatorial election, 2016
・ Delaware gubernatorial elections
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・ Delaware Heights, Delaware
・ Delaware Historical Society
・ Delaware House of Representatives
・ Delaware Independent School Conference
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Delaware Governor's Mansion : ウィキペディア英語版
Delaware Governor's Mansion

The Delaware Governor's Mansion, also known as Woodburn or Governor's House, is the official residence of the Governor of Delaware and the governor's family. It is located in Dover, and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places as "Governor's House" in 1972.〔
==History==
The land Woodburn stands upon was granted to David Morgan and his heirs in 1684 by the Swedish crown. In the 1780s Charles Hillyard III purchased the land at a sheriff's sale for $110. In 1790 he constructed the home that would be called Woodburn.〔 and ''(Accompanying six photos )''〕
The house was inherited by Mary, Hillyard's daughter, and her husband, Martin W. Bates. Bates was a doctor, merchant, lawyer and a U.S. Senator. In 1820 Bates leased Woodburn to the Governor, Jacob Stout, the first time Woodburn was used as the executive's residence.
Bates sold the house in 1825 to Daniel & Mary Cowgill. Cowgill, devoted abolitionist and a Quaker, freed his family's slaves and allowed them to meet in the great hall at Woodburn. The house remained in the family for years until it was sold in 1912 to Daniel O. Hastings. In his ownership the brick front porch, pillars on the south facade, a reflecting pool and numerous interior modifications were completed. He sold the house in 1918 to retired Philadelphia dentist Frank Hall, who also completed more renovations of the interior. In Hall's residency, a young guest named Jessica Irby visited the house; she would later live in the house as the wife of a governor of Delaware.
Upon the Hall's death in 1953 there was a proposal to secure the house as the governor's mansion but it was disapproved by the legislature. The property was divided in two, with a school purchasing the majority of the land and Thomas Murray purchasing the house and a surrounding acre and a half.
The proposal of a residence for the governor was revived in 1965 when Governor Charles L. Terry, Jr. and his wife, Jessica Irby-Terry, secured Woodburn for the state. The house was refurbished by Mrs. Terry with period pieces dating from the house's construction. The decoration was completed a year later and an open house was held in February 1966. Woodburn has served as the official residence ever since.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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