She shipped them to Georgia where the free blacks were sold into slavery and refugee slaves returned to servitude.
After Jacob's death in 1793, his widow petitioned the Delaware General Assembly for exclusive rights to operate a ferry service across the river.
[1] Cannon Hall was built about 1810, and is a two-story, five-bay, single-pile frame dwelling in the Georgian style.
[4] The Tina Fallon was constructed by Chesapeake Shipbuilding of Salisbury, Maryland at a cost of $931,000 and can carry six vehicles at a time.
The new ferry was named after Tina Fallon, a long-time Delaware state representative from Seaford.