This nickname seems to have originated at the Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia on Jersey Day, August 24, 1876. Alfred M. Heston states in his 1926 work, Jersey Waggon Jaunts, that "The Garden State" was used by Abraham Browning, of Camden. "In his address Mr. Browning compared New Jersey to an immense barrel, filled with good things to eat and open at both ends, with Pennsylvanians grabbing from one end and the New Yorkers from the other. He called New Jersey the Garden State, and the name has clung to it ever since."
In later years, the explanation has evolved to reference New Jersey truck farms that provide floral and agricultural produce to cities in the area instead of an "immense barrel." These farms have catered, particularly, to the New York and Philadelphia metropolitan areas. Some support the nickname with stories of the Revolutionary War and the food provided to soldiers by the small farms of New Jersey.
The New Jersey Plan of 1787.
Yes, but there are no Major League baseball teams in New Jersey.
The New Jersey Plan
New Jersey is a US State and contains no other states or countries.
Trenton By the way, New Jersey is the state where the first baseball game was recorded in 1846!!!
No, New Jersey is named after the European Jersey. That's why it's called 'new' jersey.
Trenton, the capital city in the U.S. state of New Jersey, is located along the state's western border with Pennsylvania.
is it legal to not have grass in my yard in Edison, new jersey? is it legal to kill all the grass and just small rocks in my yard in Edison, New jeresy?
No, the New York Red Bulls are a New York team, not a New Jersey team, New Jersey doesn't even have a MLS team...
New Jersey was named for the small Channel island of Jersey.
The Iowa class battleship USS New Jersey worked the gunline with her 16 inch rifles in 1968.
New Jersey