Posted: Dec. 7, 2015
DELAWARE DAY 2015
By Celia Cohen
Grapevine Political Writer
As any Delawarean knows, the day of Dec. 7 will live
in history.
It was the date in 1787 when Delaware started the
original 13 states on the way to nationhood as the first
one to ratify the U.S. Constitution.
To this day, the First State still loves its firsts.
Not only that, it is still recording them, 228 years
later. In observance of Delaware Day this Dec. 7, here
are seven firsts from 2015 in chronological order.
Republican First
Ken Simpler became the first new Republican in
statewide office in 20 years when he took his oath on
Jan. 6 as the state treasurer. As deep a Democratic blue
as Delaware is, Simpler could keep this distinction for
some time.
Judicial First
None of the state's major state courts -- the Supreme
Court, the Court of Chancery and the Superior Court --
had ever had a woman as the presiding judge, until Jan
Jurden was sworn in Jan. 6 in a private ceremony as the
president judge of Superior Court. Not only was Jurden
the first woman, but also the first gay presiding judge,
or at least the first one people knew of.
First Honor
Beau Biden was the first Delawarean ever to lie in
honor in Legislative Hall, when his flag-draped coffin
was brought into the chamber of the state Senate on June
4. After a brief memorial with the vice president
present, along with the governor and about 150 other
current and past state officials, the chamber was opened
to thousands of mourners who filed through.
There was only one other time in state history a
Delawarean lay in honor in the seat of government, but
it was in the Old State House on the Green in Dover in
1841, nearly a century before Legislative Hall was
built, according to research by Rick Bayard, a past
Democratic state chair whose lineage goes back to
colonial days, and Russ McCabe, a retired state
archivist.
John Haslet, a Revolutionary War military leader who
was killed at the Battle of Princeton in 1777, was taken
to the Old State House to lie in honor as part of
elaborate ceremonies to reinter his remains in Dover
from Philadelphia.
First Candidate
The first official candidate for 2016 was Kathy
McGuiness, a Democrat who paid her filing fee on Sept. 4
to run for lieutenant governor. In keeping with her
voter registration, which has gone from Republican to
Democrat to Republican to off-the-rolls to Independent
Party of Delaware to Democrat over the years, it should
give her ample time if she wants to get out of the race,
get in the race, get out of the race, get in the race .
. .
Chancery First
The Court of Chancery, the crown jewel of the
judicial system with its international reputation for
business law, never had an African-American judge until
Tamika Montgomery-Reeves took her oath as vice
chancellor on Nov. 25 at a private swearing-in. (A
public investiture is set for Friday.) She is also the
first Millennial to sit on Chancery and only the second
woman.
First for Musical Chambers
This first was one people could not have seen coming,
the state Senate meeting in the chamber for the state
House of Representatives. It happened on Nov. 30, when
the state senators were called to Dover for an
unanticipated special session and their own chamber was
closed for construction. It is expected to be ready when
the legislature reconvenes as ever on the second Tuesday
in January.
This was only the second time the state Senate met
outside its own chamber since the General Assembly moved
its operations from the Old State House to Legislative
Hall in 1933. Another renovation and another special
session had the state senators meeting in the old Kent
County Courthouse in 1996.
Family Court First
The Family Court became the first state court to have
more women sitting as judges than men -- nine women and
eight men -- when the state Senate voted to confirm
Natalie Haskins during the special session that was made
extra-special when it met for the first time in the
House.
How very Delawarean. Two firsts on one day.
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