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UD Athletics
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University of Delaware athletic teams have one of the most
unusual nicknames in all of college athletics. It is a name that can be traced back
more than 200 years in the history of the First State and to 1911 on campus.
On December 9, 1775, the Continental Congress resolved that a
military battalion was to be raised from the lower three counties along the Delaware
River. Thus, the Delaware regiment was born--a group composed of eight companies
representing New Castle, Kent and Sussex counties.
The second company was composed of men from Kent County and
was under the command of Capt. John Caldwell, who was an avid fan and owner of
gamecocks. The troops often amused themselves by staging cock fights with a
breed known as the Kent County Blue Hen, recognizable for its blue plumage.
The renown of these chickens spread rapidly during the
time when cock fighting was a popular form of amusement, and the
"Blue Hens' Chickens" developed quite a reputation for ferocity and fighting
success.
Capt. Caldwell's company likewise acquired a considerable
reputation for its own fighting prowess, in engagements with the
British at Long Island, White Plains, Trenton and Princeton, and soon it was
nicknamed "Caldwell's Gamecocks."
Capt. Caldwell's company was part of Col. John Haslet's first
Delaware regiment that reported for duty near the outset of the
Revolutionary War in January, 1776. In August, 1781, remnants of the regiment
were still battling at Eutaw Springs, S.C.
Although often referred to as "The Fighting Delawares," Haslet's
regiment also won the nickname, "The Blue Hens' Chickens," and that name was formally
adopted by the Delaware General Assembly in 1939 when the Blue Hen Chicken was
named the official state bird.
The University of Delaware's College of Agriculture
& Natural Resources
maintains a breeding group of the Blue Hen Chicken on the campus farm.
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