Carteret and Berkeley Proprietors: Difference between revisions

From New Jersey Wiki
Bot: B article — New Jersey.Wiki
 
Automated improvements: Flagged critical incomplete section (Philip Carteret section ends mid-sentence), identified factual nuance needed distinguishing Sir George Carteret from Philip Carteret as governor, flagged major E-E-A-T gaps including missing sections on East/West Jersey division, the 1674 Berkeley sale, the 1702 Crown surrender, and settler conflicts; suggested six additional citations from primary and secondary scholarly sources; noted article has no infobox, maps, legacy section,...
 
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
The story of New Jersey’s early colonial period is inextricably linked to the land grants and governance established by the **Carteret and Berkeley Proprietors**, individuals who shaped the political and social landscape of what would become the Garden State. These proprietors, granted vast tracts of land by the Duke of York in 1664, initiated a period of significant development and, ultimately, the formation of East Jersey and West Jersey, the two initial divisions of the colony. Their influence extended to land distribution, legal frameworks, and the encouragement of settlement, laying the foundation for New Jersey’s future growth.
```mediawiki
{{Infobox historical event
| title = Carteret and Berkeley Proprietors
| image =
| caption =
| date = 1664–1702
| location = Province of New Jersey (present-day New Jersey, United States)
| participants = Sir George Carteret, John Berkeley, 1st Baron Berkeley of Stratton
| outcome = Division into East Jersey and West Jersey; surrender of governance to Crown in 1702
}}
 
The Carteret and Berkeley Proprietors were the two original proprietors to whom James, Duke of York, granted the territory of present-day New Jersey in June 1664, following England's seizure of the region from the Dutch. Sir George Carteret and John Berkeley, 1st Baron Berkeley of Stratton, received the grant jointly and were tasked with governing and populating the colony. Their decisions regarding land distribution, governance, and settlement shaped the political and social landscape of what would become the state of New Jersey, eventually producing two distinct colonial entities, East Jersey and West Jersey, each with its own character, demographics, and legal framework. The proprietary period lasted until 1702, when governance was surrendered to the Crown. It laid the institutional and cultural foundations upon which the future state was built.


== History ==
== History ==


In 1664, King Charles II of England granted a large portion of land in North America to his brother, the Duke of York. This land encompassed present-day New Jersey, and the Duke, in turn, divided it into two proprietary colonies: East Jersey and West Jersey. The Duke granted East Jersey to Sir George Carteret, a Jersey-born naval commander and courtier, and William Penn, a Quaker. West Jersey was granted to John Berkeley, 1st Baron Berkeley of Stratton, and William Penn. This initial arrangement aimed to foster diverse settlement and governance within the region. <ref>{{cite web |title=NJ.com |url=https://www.nj.com |work=nj.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
=== The Original Grant (1664) ===
 
In 1664, King Charles II of England granted a large swath of North American territory to his brother James, Duke of York, following England's successful military campaign against the Dutch colony of New Netherland. The Duke of York later became King James II of England. Acting as a territorial lord before his accession, he subdivided portions of this territory and on June 24, 1664, granted the land between the Hudson and Delaware Rivers, encompassing present-day New Jersey, to two close associates: Sir George Carteret, a Jersey-born naval commander and royalist courtier, and John Berkeley, 1st Baron Berkeley of Stratton, a royalist military officer. The choice of these two men reflected their loyalty to the Crown during the English Civil War and their political connections to the Restoration court.<ref>{{cite book |last=Pomfret |first=John E. |title=The Province of East New Jersey, 1609–1702 |publisher=Princeton University Press |year=1962}}</ref> The grant document, known as "The Duke of York's Grant to Lord Berkeley and Sir George Carteret," defined the boundaries of the territory and conferred upon the two proprietors broad rights to govern, distribute land, and collect revenue from settlers.<ref>{{cite book |last=Thorpe |first=Francis Newton |title=The Federal and State Constitutions |publisher=Government Printing Office |year=1909 |volume=V}}</ref>
 
The territory was named New Jersey in honor of Carteret, who had served as governor of the Isle of Jersey during the Civil War and had defended it for the Crown. That connection to the island gave the new colony its name. Carteret and Berkeley initially governed the territory as a single entity, issuing the Concessions and Agreement of 1665, a document that promised religious toleration, a representative assembly, and generous land grants to settlers. This document was notable for its liberal provisions and was instrumental in attracting settlers from New England, the British Isles, and the European continent.<ref>{{cite book |last=Lurie |first=Maxine N. |last2=Mappen |first2=Marc |title=Encyclopedia of New Jersey |publisher=Rutgers University Press |year=2004}}</ref>
 
=== The Concessions and Agreement of 1665 ===


The partnership between Carteret, Penn, and Berkeley proved fraught with difficulties. Disagreements arose over governance, religious tolerance, and land distribution. Penn, a staunch Quaker, advocated for religious freedom and fair dealings with the Native American population, while Carteret and Berkeley held differing views. These conflicts led to the eventual sale of Penn’s shares in both East and West Jersey. In 1674, Penn sold his share of West Jersey to a group of Quakers led by William Byllynge, and his share of East Jersey to a group of investors including Robert Treat. This transfer marked a significant shift in the colony’s development, as the Quakers sought to establish a society based on their principles of peace and equality. <ref>{{cite web |title=State of New Jersey |url=https://www.nj.gov |work=nj.gov |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
The Concessions and Agreement of 1665 was the foundational governing charter issued by Carteret and Berkeley for the Province of New Jersey. It was a detailed and, for its era, remarkably liberal document. The Concessions guaranteed settlers the right to a representative assembly with real legislative power, freedom of conscience in religious practice, and specific procedures for acquiring land grants. Settlers were to receive land proportional to their means and the number of people they brought with them to the colony, a provision designed to encourage rapid population growth.<ref>{{cite book |last=Tanner |first=Edwin P. |title=The Province of New Jersey, 1664–1738 |publisher=Columbia University Press |year=1908}}</ref>


== Geography ==
The Concessions also established the framework for quitrents, annual fees owed by settlers to the proprietors as a condition of land tenure. This arrangement would prove deeply contentious. Many settlers, particularly those who had emigrated from New England, believed they held valid title to their land through direct purchases from local Lenape sachems and refused to recognize any obligation to the proprietors. That conflict, never fully resolved during the proprietary period, became one of the defining tensions of seventeenth-century New Jersey. Compared to the governing charters of neighboring colonies, the Concessions and Agreement was notably permissive, and it drew sustained settler interest from dissenting Protestant communities seeking a degree of religious and political self-determination they could not find elsewhere.<ref>{{cite book |last=Craven |first=Wesley Frank |title=New Jersey and the English Colonization of North America |publisher=Van Nostrand |year=1964}}</ref>
 
=== Philip Carteret as First Governor (1665) ===
 
Sir George Carteret never set foot in New Jersey. To administer the colony in person, he dispatched his young cousin, Philip Carteret, as the first governor of New Jersey in 1665. Philip Carteret arrived with a small group of colonists and established the settlement of Elizabethtown, present-day Elizabeth, which served as the colonial capital. He governed under the terms of the 1665 Concessions and Agreement, attempting to collect quitrents from settlers who frequently resisted payment, particularly those from New England who believed they had purchased their lands outright from Native American sachems. These disputes would prove a persistent source of conflict throughout the proprietary period.<ref>{{cite book |last=Pomfret |first=John E. |title=The Province of East New Jersey, 1609–1702 |publisher=Princeton University Press |year=1962}}</ref>


The division of New Jersey into East and West Jersey by the Carteret and Berkeley Proprietors directly influenced the geographical and political development of the colony. East Jersey, granted to Carteret and Penn, generally encompassed the northeastern portion of present-day New Jersey, including areas along the Atlantic coast and the New York Bay. This region benefited from its proximity to New York City and its access to maritime trade routes. The land was characterized by fertile coastal plains and navigable rivers, making it attractive to settlers engaged in agriculture and commerce.  
Philip Carteret's tenure was marked by ongoing friction with settlers, challenges to proprietary authority, and interference from the neighboring government of New York, whose governors periodically claimed jurisdiction over New Jersey. In 1672, the settlers of Elizabethtown, fed up with quitrent demands, expelled Philip Carteret from office and elected their own governor, James Carteret, an illegitimate son of Sir George who had no official standing. Philip Carteret was restored to the governorship following the resolution of the Third Anglo-Dutch War in 1674, which reaffirmed English control of the region and, with it, the proprietary claims. Not without difficulty, he returned to Elizabethtown and resumed administration, though quitrent resistance never fully subsided. Despite these difficulties, Philip Carteret remained a stabilizing presence in East Jersey for much of the late seventeenth century, creating the basic administrative structures, a governor, a council, and an elected assembly, that would characterize New Jersey governance for decades.<ref>{{cite book |last=Tanner |first=Edwin P. |title=The Province of New Jersey, 1664–1738 |publisher=Columbia University Press |year=1908}}</ref>


West Jersey, granted to Berkeley and Penn, covered the southwestern portion of the present state. Its geography was more diverse, ranging from the sandy Pine Barrens to the rolling hills of the interior. The Delaware River served as a crucial transportation artery for West Jersey, facilitating trade and settlement. The differing geographical characteristics of the two Jerseys contributed to the development of distinct regional identities and economic activities. The initial boundary line between East and West Jersey was not precisely defined, leading to disputes over land ownership and jurisdiction that persisted for many years. <ref>{{cite web |title=State of New Jersey |url=https://www.nj.gov |work=nj.gov |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
=== The Division into East and West Jersey (1674–1676) ===


== Culture ==
The unified proprietorship of Carteret and Berkeley began to fracture in 1674, when Lord Berkeley, discouraged by the persistent difficulties of colonial governance and the modest financial returns of the venture, sold his interest in the territory for £1,000 to two Quakers, John Fenwick and Edward Byllynge. This sale effectively separated the colony into two distinct zones of influence.<ref>{{cite book |last=Pomfret |first=John E. |title=The Province of West New Jersey, 1609–1702 |publisher=Princeton University Press |year=1956}}</ref> A dispute soon arose between Fenwick and Byllynge over the division of their shared purchase, and William Penn, a prominent Quaker leader and close associate of both men, was called upon to arbitrate. Penn awarded five-sixths of the share to Byllynge and one-sixth to Fenwick. Byllynge subsequently fell into financial difficulties, and his share passed to a group of Quaker trustees, with Penn among them, who managed the territory on behalf of his creditors.


The cultural landscape of early New Jersey was significantly shaped by the diverse groups attracted by the Carteret and Berkeley Proprietors and their subsequent successors. East Jersey, under Carteret’s influence, initially attracted settlers from England, the Netherlands, and other European countries. The emphasis was less on strict religious conformity, leading to a relatively diverse population. West Jersey, particularly after Penn’s share was acquired by the Quakers, became a haven for Quakers, Presbyterians, and other religious minorities seeking freedom from persecution.  
In 1676, Carteret and the Byllynge trustees negotiated the Quintipartite Deed, which formally divided New Jersey along a diagonal line running from Little Egg Harbor on the Atlantic coast to the Delaware River at a point near present-day Pennsauken. The northeastern portion became East Jersey, remaining under Carteret's proprietorship, while the southwestern portion became West Jersey, governed by the Quaker trustees and their associates.<ref>{{cite book |last=Lurie |first=Maxine N. |last2=Mappen |first2=Marc |title=Encyclopedia of New Jersey |publisher=Rutgers University Press |year=2004}}</ref> This division was imprecise in practice. Boundary disputes arising from the Quintipartite Deed persisted for decades, generating legal conflicts that were not fully resolved until the mid-eighteenth century.


This influx of different religious and ethnic groups fostered a spirit of tolerance, though not without its challenges. The Quakers’ commitment to pacifism and equality influenced the development of social and political institutions in West Jersey. The presence of Dutch settlers in East Jersey left a lasting mark on the region’s architecture, agricultural practices, and place names. The blending of these diverse cultural influences created a unique New Jersey identity characterized by religious pluralism and a pragmatic approach to governance. <ref>{{cite web |title=NJ.com |url=https://www.nj.com |work=nj.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
=== The Concessions and Agreements of West Jersey (1677) ===


== Economy ==
One of the most consequential documents produced during the proprietorship period was the West Jersey Concessions and Agreements of 1677, drafted primarily by William Penn. This document established a framework of governance for West Jersey that was remarkably progressive for its time: it guaranteed trial by jury, freedom of conscience, freedom from arbitrary imprisonment, and the right of settlers to participate in the legislative assembly. Historians have described the West Jersey Concessions as one of the earliest documents in American colonial history to enshrine civil liberties in written law, anticipating many principles later enshrined in the United States Constitution and Bill of Rights.<ref>{{cite book |last=Pomfret |first=John E. |title=The Province of West New Jersey, 1609–1702 |publisher=Princeton University Press |year=1956}}</ref> The document also outlined procedures for the purchase of land from the Native American inhabitants, reflecting the Quakers' stated commitment to fair dealings with indigenous peoples. Burlington, established in 1677 on the Delaware River, became the capital of West Jersey and a center of Quaker settlement.


The economic foundations of both East and West Jersey were rooted in agriculture, but the specific crops and industries varied based on geographical conditions and settlement patterns. In East Jersey, the fertile coastal plains supported the cultivation of wheat, corn, and other grains. The proximity to New York City facilitated trade in these agricultural products, as well as in timber and other natural resources. The development of milling industries along the rivers of East Jersey further contributed to the region’s economic growth.
=== Later Proprietary Period and Sale of East Jersey (1680–1688) ===


West Jersey’s economy was more diversified. While agriculture remained important, the region also saw the development of iron mining and manufacturing, particularly in the northern areas. The Delaware River provided access to markets in Philadelphia and other cities, fostering trade in iron products, lumber, and agricultural goods. The fur trade also played a role in the early economy of West Jersey, as settlers engaged in commerce with the Native American population. The economic activities of both Jerseys were initially hampered by land disputes and the lack of a unified government, but these challenges were gradually overcome as the colony matured. <ref>{{cite web |title=State of New Jersey |url=https://www.nj.gov |work=nj.gov |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
Sir George Carteret died in 1680, and East Jersey was put up for auction by his estate. In 1682, a consortium of twenty-four proprietors, predominantly Quakers and Scots, purchased East Jersey for £3,400. William Penn was among the initial purchasers, giving him a connection to both Jerseys simultaneously, though his primary attention during this period was directed toward the founding of Pennsylvania. The Scottish proprietors dispatched settlers to East Jersey, and a significant Scottish community developed around Perth Amboy, which replaced Elizabethtown as the provincial capital.<ref>{{cite book |last=Pomfret |first=John E. |title=The Province of East New Jersey, 1609–1702 |publisher=Princeton University Press |year=1962}}</ref> Robert Barclay, the Quaker theologian, was appointed governor of East Jersey in absentia in 1682, though he never visited the colony. Despite these administrative changes, quitrent disputes and conflicts with the New York colonial government continued to destabilize East Jersey throughout the 1680s.


== Notable Residents ==
=== Quitrent Conflicts and Settler Resistance ===


While the Carteret and Berkeley Proprietors themselves were not permanent residents of New Jersey, their actions directly influenced the lives of those who settled there. Sir George Carteret, though residing primarily in England, played a crucial role in attracting settlers and establishing the initial framework for governance in East Jersey. William Penn, despite his eventual departure from the proprietorship, left a lasting legacy through his advocacy for religious freedom and fair treatment of Native Americans.
Quitrent resistance was not a minor irritant. It was the central political crisis of the proprietary period in both Jerseys. Settlers, especially those in East Jersey who had purchased land directly from Lenape leaders before the arrival of the proprietors, saw no legitimate basis for annual payments to distant English lords. The proprietors, for their part, viewed quitrents as the financial foundation of the entire colonial enterprise, without which governance and land administration could not be sustained.<ref>{{cite book |last=Tanner |first=Edwin P. |title=The Province of New Jersey, 1664–1738 |publisher=Columbia University Press |year=1908}}</ref>


Among the early settlers drawn to New Jersey were individuals who would become prominent figures in the colony’s development. Robert Treat, who acquired Penn’s share of East Jersey, served as the first President of the Province of East Jersey and played a key role in establishing a stable government. William Byllynge, a Quaker leader who purchased Penn’s share of West Jersey, helped to establish Quaker communities and promote principles of peace and equality. These individuals, along with countless other settlers, contributed to the growth and development of New Jersey during the proprietorship period.
Tensions escalated in the 1690s. Armed riots broke out in East Jersey, and sheriffs attempting to collect rents or enforce proprietary land claims were met with organized resistance. Courts were disrupted, and proprietary officials reported to London that they had effectively lost the ability to govern. West Jersey was somewhat more stable under Quaker management, but it too faced settler disputes over land titles. The broader instability fed a growing consensus, both in the colonies and in London, that proprietary governance in New Jersey had failed and that royal intervention was necessary.<ref>{{cite book |last=Craven |first=Wesley Frank |title=New Jersey and the English Colonization of North America |publisher=Van Nostrand |year=1964}}</ref>


== Getting There ==
=== Surrender to the Crown and Royal Colony (1702) ===


Access to New Jersey during the period of the Carteret and Berkeley Proprietors was primarily by sea. The Atlantic Ocean and the Delaware River served as the main transportation routes for settlers and goods. Ships from England, the Netherlands, and other European countries regularly sailed into New York Bay and the Delaware Bay, bringing immigrants and supplies to the colony.  
By the late 1690s, both East and West Jersey had become increasingly ungovernable. Quitrent resistance, boundary disputes, and the difficulty of enforcing proprietary authority led the proprietors of both colonies to conclude that surrender of governmental powers was the most practical course. On April 17, 1702, the proprietors of East Jersey and West Jersey jointly surrendered their rights of governance to Queen Anne, and New Jersey was reunited as a single royal colony for the first time.<ref><ref>{{cite web |title=New Jersey becomes a royal colony on April 17, 1702 |url=https://www.facebook.com/groups/2308217362875929/posts/2797669100597417/ |publisher=New Jersey History (State) |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> Edward Hyde, Lord Cornbury, became the first royal governor of the unified New Jersey.<ref>{{cite web |title=Colonial New Jersey History |url=https://www.nj.gov/state/archives/colonialnj.html |publisher=New Jersey Division of Archives and Records Management |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


Land travel was difficult and limited, as roads were rudimentary and often impassable. The rivers provided a more efficient means of transportation within the colony, with boats and ferries connecting settlements along the waterways. The development of a more extensive road network would come later, as the colony grew and became more prosperous. The initial settlements were strategically located near navigable waterways to facilitate trade and communication. <ref>{{cite web |title=NJ.com |url=https://www.nj.com |work=nj.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
Importantly, the surrender of governance did not extinguish the proprietary land rights. The proprietors retained their claims to undistributed lands, and the Board of Proprietors of Eastern New Jersey, established in Perth Amboy, continued to function as a legal entity. It remains active to this day and is considered one of the oldest continuously operating corporations in the United States.<ref>{{cite book |last=Lurie |first=Maxine N. |last2=Mappen |first2=Marc |title=Encyclopedia of New Jersey |publisher=Rutgers University Press |year=2004}}</ref>


== See Also ==
== Geography ==


*  [[East Jersey]]
The division of New Jersey into East and West Jersey by the Carteret and Berkeley Proprietors directly influenced the geographical and political development of the colony. East Jersey, remaining under Carteret's proprietorship after the 1676 Quintipartite Deed, generally encompassed the northeastern portion of present-day New Jersey, including areas along the Atlantic coast and New York Bay. This region benefited from its proximity to New York City and its access to maritime trade routes. The land was characterized by fertile coastal plains and navigable rivers, making it attractive to settlers engaged in agriculture and commerce. Perth Amboy, situated on the Raritan Bay, served as the provincial capital and a significant port of entry for goods and immigrants.<ref>{{cite book |last=Pomfret |first=John E. |title=The Province of East New Jersey, 1609–1702 |publisher=Princeton University Press |year=1962}}</ref>
*  [[West Jersey]]
*  [[William Penn]]
*  [[George Carteret]]
*  [[History of New Jersey]]


{{#seo: |title=Carteret and Berkeley Proprietors — History, Facts & Guide | New Jersey.Wiki |description=Explore the history of the Carteret and Berkeley Proprietors and their impact on the founding of New Jersey. Learn about the early colonial period. |type=Article }}
West Jersey, governed by the Quaker trustees and their associates after 1674, covered the southwestern portion of present-day New Jersey. Its geography was more diverse, ranging from the sandy soils of the Pine Barrens to the rolling terrain of the interior. The Delaware River served as a crucial transportation artery for West Jersey, helping trade and settlement with the city of Philadelphia across the river. Burlington, founded in 1677 on the eastern bank of the Delaware, became the capital of West Jersey and a thriving Quaker community. The differing geographical characteristics of the two Jerseys contributed to the development of distinct regional identities and economic activities. The boundary established by the Quintipartite Deed of 1676, a diagonal line from Little Egg Harbor to the Delaware River, was imprecise in its surveying, leading to land ownership disputes and jurisdictional conflicts that persisted well into the eighteenth century.<ref>{{cite book |last=Pomfret |first=John E. |title=The Province of West New Jersey, 1609–1702 |publisher=Princeton University Press |year=1956}}</ref>
 
== Culture ==


[[Category:New Jersey History]]
The cultural landscape of early New Jersey was significantly shaped by the diverse groups attracted by the Carteret and Berkeley Proprietors and their subsequent successors. East Jersey, under Carteret's governance, initially attracted settlers from New England, particularly Puritans and Congregationalists from Connecticut, as well as settlers from England, the Netherlands, and Scotland. The Dutch presence, a legacy of the pre-English colonial period, left a lasting mark on the region's architecture, agricultural practices, and place names, particularly in the areas around Bergen County. The Scottish proprietors who purchased East Jersey in 1682 brought additional settlers, and the Perth Amboy area developed a notable Scottish character during the late seventeenth century.<ref>{{cite book |last=Lurie |first=
[[Category:Colonial New Jersey]]

Latest revision as of 03:39, 19 May 2026

```mediawiki Template:Infobox historical event

The Carteret and Berkeley Proprietors were the two original proprietors to whom James, Duke of York, granted the territory of present-day New Jersey in June 1664, following England's seizure of the region from the Dutch. Sir George Carteret and John Berkeley, 1st Baron Berkeley of Stratton, received the grant jointly and were tasked with governing and populating the colony. Their decisions regarding land distribution, governance, and settlement shaped the political and social landscape of what would become the state of New Jersey, eventually producing two distinct colonial entities, East Jersey and West Jersey, each with its own character, demographics, and legal framework. The proprietary period lasted until 1702, when governance was surrendered to the Crown. It laid the institutional and cultural foundations upon which the future state was built.

History

The Original Grant (1664)

In 1664, King Charles II of England granted a large swath of North American territory to his brother James, Duke of York, following England's successful military campaign against the Dutch colony of New Netherland. The Duke of York later became King James II of England. Acting as a territorial lord before his accession, he subdivided portions of this territory and on June 24, 1664, granted the land between the Hudson and Delaware Rivers, encompassing present-day New Jersey, to two close associates: Sir George Carteret, a Jersey-born naval commander and royalist courtier, and John Berkeley, 1st Baron Berkeley of Stratton, a royalist military officer. The choice of these two men reflected their loyalty to the Crown during the English Civil War and their political connections to the Restoration court.[1] The grant document, known as "The Duke of York's Grant to Lord Berkeley and Sir George Carteret," defined the boundaries of the territory and conferred upon the two proprietors broad rights to govern, distribute land, and collect revenue from settlers.[2]

The territory was named New Jersey in honor of Carteret, who had served as governor of the Isle of Jersey during the Civil War and had defended it for the Crown. That connection to the island gave the new colony its name. Carteret and Berkeley initially governed the territory as a single entity, issuing the Concessions and Agreement of 1665, a document that promised religious toleration, a representative assembly, and generous land grants to settlers. This document was notable for its liberal provisions and was instrumental in attracting settlers from New England, the British Isles, and the European continent.[3]

The Concessions and Agreement of 1665

The Concessions and Agreement of 1665 was the foundational governing charter issued by Carteret and Berkeley for the Province of New Jersey. It was a detailed and, for its era, remarkably liberal document. The Concessions guaranteed settlers the right to a representative assembly with real legislative power, freedom of conscience in religious practice, and specific procedures for acquiring land grants. Settlers were to receive land proportional to their means and the number of people they brought with them to the colony, a provision designed to encourage rapid population growth.[4]

The Concessions also established the framework for quitrents, annual fees owed by settlers to the proprietors as a condition of land tenure. This arrangement would prove deeply contentious. Many settlers, particularly those who had emigrated from New England, believed they held valid title to their land through direct purchases from local Lenape sachems and refused to recognize any obligation to the proprietors. That conflict, never fully resolved during the proprietary period, became one of the defining tensions of seventeenth-century New Jersey. Compared to the governing charters of neighboring colonies, the Concessions and Agreement was notably permissive, and it drew sustained settler interest from dissenting Protestant communities seeking a degree of religious and political self-determination they could not find elsewhere.[5]

Philip Carteret as First Governor (1665)

Sir George Carteret never set foot in New Jersey. To administer the colony in person, he dispatched his young cousin, Philip Carteret, as the first governor of New Jersey in 1665. Philip Carteret arrived with a small group of colonists and established the settlement of Elizabethtown, present-day Elizabeth, which served as the colonial capital. He governed under the terms of the 1665 Concessions and Agreement, attempting to collect quitrents from settlers who frequently resisted payment, particularly those from New England who believed they had purchased their lands outright from Native American sachems. These disputes would prove a persistent source of conflict throughout the proprietary period.[6]

Philip Carteret's tenure was marked by ongoing friction with settlers, challenges to proprietary authority, and interference from the neighboring government of New York, whose governors periodically claimed jurisdiction over New Jersey. In 1672, the settlers of Elizabethtown, fed up with quitrent demands, expelled Philip Carteret from office and elected their own governor, James Carteret, an illegitimate son of Sir George who had no official standing. Philip Carteret was restored to the governorship following the resolution of the Third Anglo-Dutch War in 1674, which reaffirmed English control of the region and, with it, the proprietary claims. Not without difficulty, he returned to Elizabethtown and resumed administration, though quitrent resistance never fully subsided. Despite these difficulties, Philip Carteret remained a stabilizing presence in East Jersey for much of the late seventeenth century, creating the basic administrative structures, a governor, a council, and an elected assembly, that would characterize New Jersey governance for decades.[7]

The Division into East and West Jersey (1674–1676)

The unified proprietorship of Carteret and Berkeley began to fracture in 1674, when Lord Berkeley, discouraged by the persistent difficulties of colonial governance and the modest financial returns of the venture, sold his interest in the territory for £1,000 to two Quakers, John Fenwick and Edward Byllynge. This sale effectively separated the colony into two distinct zones of influence.[8] A dispute soon arose between Fenwick and Byllynge over the division of their shared purchase, and William Penn, a prominent Quaker leader and close associate of both men, was called upon to arbitrate. Penn awarded five-sixths of the share to Byllynge and one-sixth to Fenwick. Byllynge subsequently fell into financial difficulties, and his share passed to a group of Quaker trustees, with Penn among them, who managed the territory on behalf of his creditors.

In 1676, Carteret and the Byllynge trustees negotiated the Quintipartite Deed, which formally divided New Jersey along a diagonal line running from Little Egg Harbor on the Atlantic coast to the Delaware River at a point near present-day Pennsauken. The northeastern portion became East Jersey, remaining under Carteret's proprietorship, while the southwestern portion became West Jersey, governed by the Quaker trustees and their associates.[9] This division was imprecise in practice. Boundary disputes arising from the Quintipartite Deed persisted for decades, generating legal conflicts that were not fully resolved until the mid-eighteenth century.

The Concessions and Agreements of West Jersey (1677)

One of the most consequential documents produced during the proprietorship period was the West Jersey Concessions and Agreements of 1677, drafted primarily by William Penn. This document established a framework of governance for West Jersey that was remarkably progressive for its time: it guaranteed trial by jury, freedom of conscience, freedom from arbitrary imprisonment, and the right of settlers to participate in the legislative assembly. Historians have described the West Jersey Concessions as one of the earliest documents in American colonial history to enshrine civil liberties in written law, anticipating many principles later enshrined in the United States Constitution and Bill of Rights.[10] The document also outlined procedures for the purchase of land from the Native American inhabitants, reflecting the Quakers' stated commitment to fair dealings with indigenous peoples. Burlington, established in 1677 on the Delaware River, became the capital of West Jersey and a center of Quaker settlement.

Later Proprietary Period and Sale of East Jersey (1680–1688)

Sir George Carteret died in 1680, and East Jersey was put up for auction by his estate. In 1682, a consortium of twenty-four proprietors, predominantly Quakers and Scots, purchased East Jersey for £3,400. William Penn was among the initial purchasers, giving him a connection to both Jerseys simultaneously, though his primary attention during this period was directed toward the founding of Pennsylvania. The Scottish proprietors dispatched settlers to East Jersey, and a significant Scottish community developed around Perth Amboy, which replaced Elizabethtown as the provincial capital.[11] Robert Barclay, the Quaker theologian, was appointed governor of East Jersey in absentia in 1682, though he never visited the colony. Despite these administrative changes, quitrent disputes and conflicts with the New York colonial government continued to destabilize East Jersey throughout the 1680s.

Quitrent Conflicts and Settler Resistance

Quitrent resistance was not a minor irritant. It was the central political crisis of the proprietary period in both Jerseys. Settlers, especially those in East Jersey who had purchased land directly from Lenape leaders before the arrival of the proprietors, saw no legitimate basis for annual payments to distant English lords. The proprietors, for their part, viewed quitrents as the financial foundation of the entire colonial enterprise, without which governance and land administration could not be sustained.[12]

Tensions escalated in the 1690s. Armed riots broke out in East Jersey, and sheriffs attempting to collect rents or enforce proprietary land claims were met with organized resistance. Courts were disrupted, and proprietary officials reported to London that they had effectively lost the ability to govern. West Jersey was somewhat more stable under Quaker management, but it too faced settler disputes over land titles. The broader instability fed a growing consensus, both in the colonies and in London, that proprietary governance in New Jersey had failed and that royal intervention was necessary.[13]

Surrender to the Crown and Royal Colony (1702)

By the late 1690s, both East and West Jersey had become increasingly ungovernable. Quitrent resistance, boundary disputes, and the difficulty of enforcing proprietary authority led the proprietors of both colonies to conclude that surrender of governmental powers was the most practical course. On April 17, 1702, the proprietors of East Jersey and West Jersey jointly surrendered their rights of governance to Queen Anne, and New Jersey was reunited as a single royal colony for the first time.Cite error: Closing </ref> missing for <ref> tag Edward Hyde, Lord Cornbury, became the first royal governor of the unified New Jersey.[14]

Importantly, the surrender of governance did not extinguish the proprietary land rights. The proprietors retained their claims to undistributed lands, and the Board of Proprietors of Eastern New Jersey, established in Perth Amboy, continued to function as a legal entity. It remains active to this day and is considered one of the oldest continuously operating corporations in the United States.[15]

Geography

The division of New Jersey into East and West Jersey by the Carteret and Berkeley Proprietors directly influenced the geographical and political development of the colony. East Jersey, remaining under Carteret's proprietorship after the 1676 Quintipartite Deed, generally encompassed the northeastern portion of present-day New Jersey, including areas along the Atlantic coast and New York Bay. This region benefited from its proximity to New York City and its access to maritime trade routes. The land was characterized by fertile coastal plains and navigable rivers, making it attractive to settlers engaged in agriculture and commerce. Perth Amboy, situated on the Raritan Bay, served as the provincial capital and a significant port of entry for goods and immigrants.[16]

West Jersey, governed by the Quaker trustees and their associates after 1674, covered the southwestern portion of present-day New Jersey. Its geography was more diverse, ranging from the sandy soils of the Pine Barrens to the rolling terrain of the interior. The Delaware River served as a crucial transportation artery for West Jersey, helping trade and settlement with the city of Philadelphia across the river. Burlington, founded in 1677 on the eastern bank of the Delaware, became the capital of West Jersey and a thriving Quaker community. The differing geographical characteristics of the two Jerseys contributed to the development of distinct regional identities and economic activities. The boundary established by the Quintipartite Deed of 1676, a diagonal line from Little Egg Harbor to the Delaware River, was imprecise in its surveying, leading to land ownership disputes and jurisdictional conflicts that persisted well into the eighteenth century.[17]

Culture

The cultural landscape of early New Jersey was significantly shaped by the diverse groups attracted by the Carteret and Berkeley Proprietors and their subsequent successors. East Jersey, under Carteret's governance, initially attracted settlers from New England, particularly Puritans and Congregationalists from Connecticut, as well as settlers from England, the Netherlands, and Scotland. The Dutch presence, a legacy of the pre-English colonial period, left a lasting mark on the region's architecture, agricultural practices, and place names, particularly in the areas around Bergen County. The Scottish proprietors who purchased East Jersey in 1682 brought additional settlers, and the Perth Amboy area developed a notable Scottish character during the late seventeenth century.<ref>{{cite book |last=Lurie |first=