It would mandate a major stretch of imagination to term any Delaware landform as a mountain. There are place that could be termed hills as in "Roll the car downhill" or "they live on the hill" and among its residents surely someone bears the surname "Hill". Therefore Delaware can be said to at least have a few hills.
Kenesaw Mountain Landis, No he was the Baseball Commissioner and Judge that had to deal with the Black Sox scandal and he may or may not have ever been in Delaware. Man Mountain Mike Fletcher of pro Wrestling is a possible. But again no because he was a 70's west coat wrestler.
Perhaps a painting or a paper mache backdrop. No to obscure.
Mountain Dew. No even more obscure.
There are the Brandywine Hills, Greenhill, Westhill, the Highlands, Hilltop, and Gander Hill in Wilmington but we are seeking a real mountain so those don't count.
At last! Mt. Cuba Center in Greenville which turns out to be a botanical garden and certainly not a mountain in geographic terms.
No. Abandon the search. Circle the wagons and consider this adage: "Go West Young Man (or Gal)."
There were no mountains in the Delaware Colony. Delaware is a state that might have a few rolling hills, but the mountains of the eastern seaboard are farther south.
The Guadalupe Mountains is the primary mountain range in Texas, located in the western part of the state near the border with New Mexico. It includes the highest peak in Texas, Guadalupe Peak, which stands at 8,751 feet above sea level. This mountain range is known for its unique desert landscapes and diverse wildlife.
The Delaware River originated in the Catskill Mountains in New York. It flows for about 200 miles before emptying into the Delaware Estuary.
Delaware
Delaware river
Sandy Bray and Iron Hill
There are no mountains in Delaware, the entire state lies pretty low. Most of the state is a coastal plain and the average of the whole state is about 60 feet above sea level.
The Delaware water gap is on the border of New Jersey and Pennsylvania where the Delaware River cuts through a large ridge of the Appalachian Mountains .so the Delaware River.
New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware.
I don't know, ask your history teacher
Delaware has low elevation; no point in the state is more than 500 feet above sea level. Some low foothills of the Appalachian Mountains are located in Delaware.
The landscape of this region ranged from rich soil of coast NJ and Delaware to the wooden mountains and Valleys of NY and Pennsylvania