Industries of New Jersey. . GeorgeCarteret receiving and holding the one, and LordBerkeley receiving and selling the other to JohnFenwick, in trust for Edward Byllinge and his afterwards, a difierence arose between JohnFenwick and Edward Byllinge, and the latter beingheavily involved in debt, as it appears, presented hisinterest to his creditors, who were represented byGawen Laurie, Nicholas Lucas and William Penn, astrustees. John Fenwick, however, received a tenthof West Jersey, his tenth including the site of the cityof Salem, and a considerable tract in the is a bo


Industries of New Jersey. . GeorgeCarteret receiving and holding the one, and LordBerkeley receiving and selling the other to JohnFenwick, in trust for Edward Byllinge and his afterwards, a difierence arose between JohnFenwick and Edward Byllinge, and the latter beingheavily involved in debt, as it appears, presented hisinterest to his creditors, who were represented byGawen Laurie, Nicholas Lucas and William Penn, astrustees. John Fenwick, however, received a tenthof West Jersey, his tenth including the site of the cityof Salem, and a considerable tract in the is a boast of the citizens, especially of the landowners of New Jersey, that not a foot of its soil wastaken by fraud or force from the Indians, but every foot was honorably bought and paid for to the satisfactionof the Indian owners. This was the case with the first Dutch settlers, the Swedes, and later with the EnglishFriends (or Quakers), and it is said that s^xhse;(\VlQ^i proprietors all pursued the same honorable course. When. 36 STATE OF NEW JERSEY.


Size: 937px × 2666px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookauthoredwardsr, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookyear1882