Thinking locally, acquiring globally: the Loockerman family of Delaware, 1630-1790

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2010
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University of Delaware
Abstract
This thesis explores ideas of gentility, family dynasty and social power through the material experience of the Loockermans, a family that would make its home in Dover, Delaware in the second quarter of the eighteenth century. The family’s prosperity in central Delaware was built on a foundation of wealth and status initiated a century earlier. The first Loockerman in America, Govert (1633-1670 or 1671), worked as the American agent for an Amsterdam trading operation. Capitalizing on the heady growth of seventeenth-century New Amsterdam, he died one of America’s wealthiest merchants. His son, Jacob (1652-1730), followed the promise of tobacco profits south to the eastern shore of the Chesapeake Bay. In the next generation, as economic conditions began to favor cereal grains over tobacco, one of Jacob’s younger sons, Nicholas Loockerman (1697-1771), left Maryland for Kent County, Delaware. There, land was readily available and the soil not yet exhausted. As the first of three generations that would call central Delaware home, Nicholas created a virtually self-sufficient plantation on the foundation of which his son, Vincent Loockerman, Sr. (1722-1785), operated a lucrative mercantile business, inhabited a substantial townhouse and acquired the finest decorative arts he could afford. His son, Vincent Loockerman, Jr. (1747-1790) returned to the rural plantation life of his grandfather, but like his father, continued to use material culture to communicate his wealth and lengthy American pedigree. The unique material choices made by each generation reflected that generation’s local social aspirations as well as the emerging colonial trading networks that linked the increasing demand of rural Dover to the expanding supply of luxury goods from across the Atlantic world.
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