Delaware Hundreds

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The Hundreds of Delaware
In colonial times (1862), townships were geographically divided into groups called Hundreds, patterned after the old English division of a county William Penn described it as settlements divided into sections of One Hundred Families. "A "hundred" is an old Saxon land division which is comprised ten tithings of ten freeholder families each, or 100 families." This usually consisted households with the average of 10 members each, the family plus servants. Originally there were 5 Hundreds in New Castle, 5 Hundreds in Kent, and 2 Hundreds in Sussex. As the population grew, so did the groups of Hundreds. By 1875 the Hundreds grew to be the present day Thirty five. Delaware is the only state that continues to use this division.
 * The Delaware_Maryland Divide and Hundreds Boundaries 1775-1830
 * Have You Ever Wondered ~ What is a Hundred?
 * Use of Hundreds
 * Boundaries of Counties and Hundreds
 * Baltimore Hundred Marker

History Of Delaware’s Hundreds
"A "hundred" is an old Saxon land division which is smaller than a county or shire and larger than a tithing. It comprised ten tithings of ten freeholder families each, or 100 families."
 * The Mill Creek Hundred History Blog

Maps
The State of Delaware has a color coded map of the Hundreds that is easily downloadable at The Hundreds of  Delaware
 * Maps of Delaware Hundreds

Hundreds of Sussex County
{| cellspacing="1" cellpadding="1" border="1" align="center" style="width: 633px; height: 75px;"
 * valign="middle" align="center" | Hundred
 * valign="middle" align="center" | Abbrev
 * valign="middle" align="center" | Estab
 * valign="middle" align="center" | Parent Hundred
 * valign="middle" align="center" | Primary Town
 * valign="middle" align="center" | Name Origin
 * valign="middle" align="center" | Current Name
 * valign="middle" align="center" | Current Name