
Home of Allen McLane in Smyrna Delaware
Posted by:
barbybig
N 39° 18.036 W 075° 36.529
18S E 447505 N 4350312
Quick Description: For many years this home was the property of Colonel Allen McLane, statesman and hero of the American Revolution.
Location: Delaware, United States
Date Posted: 4/16/2008 11:00:26 AM
Waymark Code: WM3KJE
Views: 28
Long Description:For many years this home was the property of Colonel Allen McLane,
statesman and hero of the American Revolution.
Born in Philadelphia August 8, 1746, McLane had moved to
Delaware by 1769. His military career began when he was
commissioned as an officer in the state militia in 1775. After the
outbreak of the Revolution, McLane volunteered to raise a company
of troops, investing much of his inheritance in accompanying
expenses. During the course of the war he was an active participant
in many major engagements including Long Island, White Plains,
Trenton, Princeton, and the siege of Yorktown. His bravery and
enterprise were rewarded in 1777 when he received his captain’s
commission from General Washington. He was one of the first to
suspect the loyalty of Benedict Arnold, and is said to have played
a significant role in convincing the French to blockade the
Chesapeake in 1781. He was a member of the Order of Cincinnati. For
many years he was active in the affairs of church and state,
serving as Speaker of the state Housing of Representatives, member
of the Privy Council, Judge of the Court of Common Pleas, and U.S.
Marshall for Delaware. He was delegate at Delaware’s historic
Constitution Ratification Convention in 1787, and a long-time
advocate of the Methodist Church.
Following his return from the war it is believed that the McLane
family rented a home at the southwest corner of Mt. Vernon and
Market Streets. On December 23, 1785, Allen McLane “Merchant”
received a deed from Thomas Wilds for a parcel of land including
the lot where his house stands. Among the members of the family
moving to the home was McLane’s infant son Louis, later a
distinguished member of Congress, Minister to England, and United
States Secretary of State. McLane maintained homes here on his farm
until he moved to Wilmington following his appointment as Port
Collector in 1797. He retained ownership of this property until
selling it in 1828, one year prior to his death.