A New Park in Delaware Honors the ‘People of the Tidewater’

Will Parson, Chesapeake Bay Program • March 15, 2022

Tidewater Park incorporates local culture and history into Laurel’s waterfront redevelopment

Animal-shaped play elements at Tidewater Park in Laurel, Del., will introduce visitors to Nanticoke legends. The park is part of a large-scale waterfront redevelopment in Laurel called The Ramble. Photo: Will Parson/Chesapeake Bay Program


Overlooking a tributary of the Nanticoke River in Laurel, Del., a new park is taking shape, designed to honor some of the region’s first inhabitants.

 

Tidewater Park was dedicated in October 2021 with a ceremony attended by members of the Nanticoke Indian Tribe. Members of the tribe consulted on the project, which developed over several years as a joint project that included the University of Delaware, Delaware Sea Grant (DESG), and the town of Laurel.

 

“Nanticoke actually means ‘people of the tidewater,’” said Sterling Street, coordinator of the Nanticoke Indian Museum, who consulted on the project along with Ragghi Calentine, the tribe’s storyteller, and others, in order to determine which Nanticoke legends would be included among the play elements at the park.

 

Already, a giant wooden beaver, a turtle, and other elements have been installed. The turtle connects to the creation story for the Nanticoke, Street said.

 

One of the elements still to be added to the park will represent the origin of our modern-day crow. According to the legend, the crow “originally was rainbow-colored and had a pretty singing voice,” Street said. But then it lost its colors and acquired its present-day hoarse voice. Eventually, visitors to the park will be met by a towering rainbow crow, its wings spread wide.

 

“I thought it was unique for a park playground for kids and that, you know, it gives them a place to play, but it also is a learning experience for them,” Street said. It will introduce visitors to things that “they would have never known if this park wasn't there, because these are things that aren't taught in school.”

 

Tidewater Park is part of a larger waterfront redevelopment project called The Ramble, which is revitalizing downtown Laurel and increasing tourism by reconnecting communities to the water and local parks. The project has also added green space and a kayak launch along Broad Creek, as well as wetlands and green infrastructure to manage stormwater.


Sterling Street, coordinator of the Nanticoke Indian Museum, poses in Millsboro, Del. The museum includes artifacts from the Nanticoke and other tribes in the broader region. Photo: Will Parson/Chesapeake Bay Program


A Deeper Dive into Nanticoke History

 

While Tidewater Park will serve as an introduction to the Nanticoke, travelers may be inspired to learn even more at a museum in nearby Millsboro. Since 1984, the Nanticoke Indian Museum has operated out of a building that once functioned as the Nanticoke schoolhouse.

 

On display are local artifacts, such as arrowheads that date to roughly 10,000 B.C., as well as chronicles of the vibrant modern history of the Nanticoke tribe. A wall of posters, for example, honors Nanticoke veterans who served in World War II and other conflicts.

 

“Our people have served in every war that ever was in the United States,” Street said. “From the Revolutionary War on up until now.”

 

About 2,000 members of the Nanticoke Indian Tribe live in Delaware’s Sussex County and across the United States. Events at the museum include Heritage Day, usually held in May, and Native American Day in November. And every year, Nanticoke dancers perform at the Nanticoke Riverfest, typically held in Seaford in July.

 

Though dispersed geographically, the tribe’s connection to the Nanticoke River remains strong.

 

“The river in the spring and summer was our livelihood,” Street said. “One of our themes for one of our pow wows was ‘water is life’ —because that’s what sustains us.”

 

 

Will Parson produces digital stories for the Chesapeake Bay Program. He studied ecology and evolution at University of California, San Diego. He reported on water and the environment as a graduate student at Ohio University's School of Visual Communication, and worked at newspapers in New England before landing in Maryland.



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