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*'''Navesink or Monmouth Patent (1665)'''. This grant, from Sandy Hook to the Raritan River, was to a group from Gravesend, Long Island, and Quakers and Baptists from Rhode Island. They and other settlers from Massachusetts soon after founded Middletown and Shrewsbury. | *'''Navesink or Monmouth Patent (1665)'''. This grant, from Sandy Hook to the Raritan River, was to a group from Gravesend, Long Island, and Quakers and Baptists from Rhode Island. They and other settlers from Massachusetts soon after founded Middletown and Shrewsbury. | ||
'''English in West Jersey'''. New Englanders settled in Varkens Kill, now Salem, Gloucester, New Jersey in 1641. But the rival Dutch and Swedes destroyed the English blockhouse on Province Island (now Philadelphia airport) and sent the English there to New Amsterdam in 1643. Most of the English who settled in West Jersey died of disease or straggled back to New England around the same time. The remainder accepted Swedish rule.<ref>Johnson, Detailed Map. | '''English in West Jersey'''. New Englanders settled in Varkens Kill, now Salem, Gloucester, New Jersey in 1641. But the rival Dutch and Swedes destroyed the English blockhouse on Province Island (now Philadelphia airport) and sent the English there to New Amsterdam in 1643. Most of the English who settled in West Jersey died of disease or straggled back to New England around the same time. The remainder accepted Swedish rule.<ref>Johnson, Detailed Map.</ref>A group of English Quakers (Friends) led by John Fenwick began settling the east bank of the Delaware River at Salem in 1675. In 1677 Quakers from London and Hull, Yorkshire, settled New Beverly (now Burlington). In about 1681, Quakers from Ireland settled on Newton Creek, south of Burlington. There were at least 1,400 Quakers in West Jersey by this time. | ||
'''Scots'''. The proprietors of East Jersey actively solicited Scottish settlers. From the 1680s to 1750, many Presbyterian Lowlanders from eastern Scotland came to East Jersey, particularly to the present counties of Monmouth, Middlesex, Somerset, and Mercer. Hundreds left Scotland between 1683 and 1685 to settle New Perth at Amboy Point (now Perth Amboy), Plainfield, Freehold, and wilderness areas of the Watchung Mountains. Immigration from Scotland declined after 1690, but the Scots continued to spread west through central New Jersey, eventually reaching the Delaware Valley. | '''Scots'''. The proprietors of East Jersey actively solicited Scottish settlers. From the 1680s to 1750, many Presbyterian Lowlanders from eastern Scotland came to East Jersey, particularly to the present counties of Monmouth, Middlesex, Somerset, and Mercer. Hundreds left Scotland between 1683 and 1685 to settle New Perth at Amboy Point (now Perth Amboy), Plainfield, Freehold, and wilderness areas of the Watchung Mountains. Immigration from Scotland declined after 1690, but the Scots continued to spread west through central New Jersey, eventually reaching the Delaware Valley. | ||
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