Share: 

Free DeBraak tours offered through Sept. 29 in Lewes

August 26, 2016

Beginning Wednesday, Aug. 31, and continuing through Sept. 29, admission is free for Lost off Lewes: The British warship DeBraak, guided tours that explore the 18th century history, artifacts and the surviving hull section of His Majesty’s Sloop DeBraak, a British warship that was escorting and protecting a convoy of merchant ships en route to the United States when it was capsized and lost off the Delaware coast May 25, 1798.

Free tours will take place at 9 a.m. on the following Wednesdays and Thursdays: Aug. 31, and Sept. 1, 7, 8, 14, 15, 21, 22, 28 and 29. Previously, admission charge for the tours, which began on June 8, had been $10 per person.

Each tour begins at the Zwaanendael Museum, located at 102 Kings Highway in Lewes, where a lecture on the ship will be presented in conjunction with the exhibit A Seaborne Citizenry: The DeBraak and Its Atlantic World.

Participants will learn about the history, crew and sinking of the DeBraak through a guided presentation and display of actual artifacts. Attendees will then be transported, via van, to the DeBraak conservation facility to see the ship’s surviving hull section.

Each tour will last approximately two hours. Individuals age 10 and up are welcome. Space is limited to 12 participants per tour. Admission for the tours is free but, due to space restrictions, reservations are recommended via the Shop Delaware website. Walk-ups are welcome but space is not guaranteed. For questions, call 302-645-1148.

Significance of DeBraak

During the late-18th and early-19th centuries, sloops of war such as DeBraak played an increasingly important role in Royal Navy campaigns. These relatively small vessels combined speed, agility, shallow draft and increased firepower, all of which made them formidable naval vessels. As the only Royal Navy sloop of war from this time period that has been recovered anywhere in the world, DeBraak serves as an invaluable historical resource for a time when Great Britain was the world’s preeminent naval power. 

The surviving section of the DeBraak’s hull and its associated artifact collection have been curated by the Division of Historical and Cultural Affairs since they were acquired by the state of Delaware in 1992. Approximately one-third of the hull survives including the keel, keelson and lower framing elements, including a large section of the starboard (right) side.

Subscribe to the CapeGazette.com Daily Newsletter