New Jersey as a colony and as a state : one of the original thirteen . n the historian says that New Netherland wascalled a province because it was invested by theirHigh Mightinesses with the arms of an earl. The officials of the Swedish settlements alongthe east bank of the Delaware used a seal, al-though little is known of the matter. To the sealof New Albion reference has already been made. The grant by James, Duke of York, to Carteretand Berkeley brought into use the arms of SirGeorge Carteret, which appears in the New Jer-sey Archives, Vol. I, page 60. This design, saysZieber, contains se
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New Jersey as a colony and as a state : one of the original thirteen . n the historian says that New Netherland wascalled a province because it was invested by theirHigh Mightinesses with the arms of an earl. The officials of the Swedish settlements alongthe east bank of the Delaware used a seal, al-though little is known of the matter. To the sealof New Albion reference has already been made. The grant by James, Duke of York, to Carteretand Berkeley brought into use the arms of SirGeorge Carteret, which appears in the New Jer-sey Archives, Vol. I, page 60. This design, saysZieber, contains several palpable errors of anheraldic character. In the New Jersey Archives, Vol. I, page 27, appears the seal of the provinceof New Jersey, containing the arms of Berkeley, in duplicate, with those of Carteret, One impres-sion is known to exist, and is now in the possessionof the New Jersey Historical Society, having beenmade in 1664. An early reference to the seal of the provinceof East Jersey is to be found upoD the 11th ofMay, 1685, when, in a confirmation of orders. -1 AI. OF NF.W SWEDKN.