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  1. John Fenwick (1618—1683) was the leader of a group of Quakers who emigrated in 1675 from England to Salem, New Jersey where they established Fenwick's Colony, the first English settlement in West Jersey.

  2. 14 de abr. de 2021 · A group of clergy and churchwardens in the Free Church of England has urged their Primus, John Fenwick, to step down this month. The signatories to a letter sent in February, passed this week to Anglican Ink, have also threatened Bishop Fenwick with a complaint to the Charity Commission for England and Wales about his alleged failure ...

    • Julian Mann
  3. founding of Salem. In Salem. …was established in 1675 by John Fenwick, an English Quaker. The Friends (Quakers) Burial Ground in Salem has the Salem Oak—a tree 80 feet (25 metres) high that is said to be more than 500 years old—under which Fenwick signed a treaty with the Delaware Indians.

  4. Lord Berkeley, in the year 1675, for the sum of one thousand pounds, sold his half of the province of New Jersey to John Fenwick, in trust for Edward Byllinge, and his assigns.

  5. Salem was founded by Quaker John Fenwick in October 1665; the first English settlement established in West Jersey following the English defeat of the Dutch in 1664 and the first Quaker colony in North America, predating Philadelphia by seven years.

  6. An historical account of the first settlement of Salem, in West Jersey, by John Fenwick, esq., ... Also available in digital form. Contributor: Johnson, Robert G. (Robert Gibbon)

  7. 28 de sept. de 2023 · John Fenwick (1618 – 1683) was the leader of a group of Quakers that emigrated in 1675 from England to Salem, New Jersey where they established Fenwick's Colony, the first English settlement in West Jersey.