Thursday, June 16, 2011

Elizabeth, NJ -- First Permanent English Settlement

"On October 28, 1664, the Indians of Staten Island sold to John Bailey, Daniel Denton and Luke Watson (the Elizabethtown Associates), a tract of land lying between the Raritan River and the Passaic River, extending westward from Newark Bay. The tract extended about 34 miles between the two rivers and about 17 miles westward from Newark Bay, comprising 500,000 acres. It included what is now the City of Elizabeth.
"Permission to purchase from the Indians was granted by Colonel Richard Nicolls who was Governor of all the territories in North America. Colonel Nicolls was Governor by virtue of appointment by the then Duke of York, who had been granted the territories in North America by King Charles the Second of England.

The deed of conveyance from the Indians was delivered on December 1, 1664 to John Baker, John Ogden, John Bailey and Luke Watson. (Denton having sold his interest to Baker and Ogden.) The four grantees took possession of the tract by building at least four houses before April 1665 and thus the settlement and development of Elizabeth began.


"Neither Governor Nicolls nor the purchasers knew that on June 24, 1664, the Duke of York had conveyed to Lord John Berkeley and Sir George Carteret the tract of land known as New Jersey. Berkeley and Carteret commissioned Philip Carteret, a relative of Sir George, as Governor of New Jersey and he arrived in August 1665 with a group of settlers and servants." From Elizabethnj.org
"Elizabethans, John Ogden, father (1609-1682) and son (1638-1702), constructed the oldest portion of their home about 1680. Both had been born in Bradley Plain, Hampshire England, came to the colonies about 1641, first to Connecticut, then to Long Island, before becoming founding settlers of Elizabeth in 1664. Their house would be developed by several subsequent owners and eventually be known as the Belcher-Ogden mansion, a beautifully proportioned example of Georgian architecture and the brick style known as Flemish bond." From Visit Historical Elizabeth New Jersey.
These early Congregationalists organized what is now First Presbyterian Church in 1664, making it the oldest English-speaking congregation in the state. (See New Jersey Churchscapes for more information on the church.) There was already at least one Dutch-speaking congregation in New Jersey -- Dutch Reformed Church of Bergen -- founded in 1660.

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