Delaware
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://dspace.d106.bravog.com/handle/123456789/98
Welcome to the Delaware Collection
The Delaware Collection serves as a repository for academic and research materials focused on the historical, cultural, and legal aspects of Delaware. This community encompasses collections that document the state's development, legal evolution, and societal advancements, providing a valuable resource for researchers, students, and professionals.
Browse
Item Open Access 1901 Del. Laws 381 § 9(General Publisher, 1901)Authorized the town to regulate the storage of gunpowder and any other dangerous or combustible materials.Item Open Access 1901 Del. Laws 399, Of Cities and Towns, § 8.(General Publisher, 1901). . The council may also pass ordinances to . . . regulate the storage of gunpowder or any other dangerous or combustible materials . . .Item Open Access 1901 Del. Laws 403 § 9(General Publisher, 1901)Authorized the town to regulate the storage of gunpowder and any other dangerous or combustible materials.Item Open Access 1901 Del. Laws 939, § 9(General Publisher, 1901)Authorized the town to regulate the storage of gunpowder and any other dangerous or combustible materials.Item Open Access 1904 Del. Laws 399, Of Cities and Towns, AN ACT to re-incorporate the Town of Milton, § 8(General Publisher, 1904)Authorized the town to regulate the storage of gunpowder and any other dangerous or combustible materials. Note: Duke Center of Fireawms Law incorrectly labeled this as a 1901 law, possibly because 1901 laws are from Del. Laws vol. XXII part 1, whereas this is from Del. Laws. vol. XXII part 2.Item Open Access DEL. REV. STAT tit. 10, ch. 73, § 27 (1852).(General Publisher, 1852)to provide for the weighing of hay, and for the measuring, or weighing, of coal, lime, grain, or any other matter sold in the said city; to regulate the storage of gunpowder, or any other dangerously combustible matter.Item Open Access Revised Statutes: The State of Delaware, to the Year of Our Lord One Thousand Eight Hundred and Fifty-Two, Inclusive: To Which Are Added the Constitutions of the United States and of This State: The Declaration of Independence: And an Appendix; &c, &c. (Dover, DE: Samuel Kimmey, 1852), 215–216. Title Tenth—Of Corporations, Chapter 73—Of the city of Wilmington, § 27.(General Publisher, 1852)Authorized the city council to regulate the storage of gunpowder.Item Open Access W.B. Hvland, Wilmington City Code. The Ordinances of the City of Wilmington, Delaware. Also, the Original Borough Charter, the Charter of the City of Wilmington, and the Acts of the Legislature, Now in Force Relating to the City Page 688 § 1(General Publisher, 1885)Prohibited the storage of gunpowder in quantities greater than fifty pounds. Violators considered a public nuisance. Violators shall pay a fine of ten dollars, along with five dollars for each quarter cask, or quantity of twenty-five pounds kept above fifty pounds.Item Open Access W.B. Hvland, Wilmington City Code. The Ordinances of the City of Wilmington, Delaware. Also, the Original Borough Charter, the Charter of the City of Wilmington, and the Acts of the Legislature, Now in Force Relating to the City Page 689 § 2(General Publisher, 1885)Required supplying retailers to be in kegs, not more than twenty-five pounds, carefully enclosed in good bags, or by putting a sheet of canvas under and around the kegs. When transporting gunpowder the carriage shall contain no more than ten kegs as described above.