HERE LIETH BURIED EDWARD PAIGE ONELY SON OF NICOLAS AND ANNA PAIGE BORNE AT BOSTON, IN NEW ENGLAND, FEB. 20, 1662 DIED IN LEYDEN NOV. 1 1680, N.S. |
I photographed this unusual tombstone on the floor of the
St. Pieterskirk in Leiden, The Netherlands in October when I was on the General
Society of Mayflower Descendants Historic Sites Tour. This church is of great interest to Americans
and to Mayflower Descendants because Rev. John Robinson (1576 – 1626), my 10th
great grandfather, ministered here to his flock of English Separatists. Many of these members became known as “The
Pilgrim Fathers” when they left Holland and went to Plymouth in New England on
board the Mayflower in 1620. Rev.
Robinson stayed behind to tend to his congregation and is buried under the
floor of St. Pieterskirk, along with some of the children and family members of
the Pilgrims.
In another corner of the church we found this tombstone in
the floor. Since it mentioned that
Edward Paige was born in Boston, I was intrigued and took the photograph so I
could look him up for a Tombstone Tuesday blog post. This is what I have found.
In the book Genealogical and Family History of Southern
New York and the Hudson River Valley, by Cuyler Reynolds and William
Richard Cutter, 1914, Volume 3, page 1362, “Nicholas
Paige, of Rumney Marsh [now the city of Revere, Massachusetts], colonel of the
Second Suffolk County Regiment, and commander of the artillery company (Ancient
and Honorable). He was not traceable in
this country before 1660, when he was at Boston. He married Anna Keayne (widow of Edward Lane),
daughter of Benjamine Keayne, first commander of the artillery company, 1638,
and freeman, 1639. Benjamin Keayne
married Sarah, daughter of Governor Thomas Dudley, and about 1645, returned to
England and never came back. During some
repairs which were made in 1863 upon the University Library building, standing
between the klog-steeg and the Sheepmakers-steeg, on the east side of the
Rapenburg, in the city of Leyden, Holland, six memorial stones were found,
about two feet under the wooden floor of the room on the basement floor, which
had formerly been occupied as a chapel.
The stones had probably formed a part of the original pavement of the
chapel. In position under the stones and near to them were found parts of
twelve bodies. On one of the stones was carved: “Here lieth buried Edward
Paige, onely son of Nicolas and Anna Paige, born at Boston, in New England,
February 20, 1662, died in Leyden, November 1, 1680”.”
In the New England
Historical and Genealogical Register and Antiquarian Journal, 1869, Volume
XXII, pages 266 – 269, there is an
article “Six Memorial Inscriptions of Englishmen, buried in the chapel once
occupied by the Scottish Church in Leyden, with Notes” by Rev. Henry M. Dexter,
DD., which describes the chapel in the university and the six tombstones. It doesn’t explain how the tombstone was
removed to St. Pieterskirk in Leiden.
There is another article which describes Edward Paige of
Boston’s tombstone in The Bay State
Monthly, 1889, “The Pilgrims in Leyden” by Rev. Henry M. Dexter in The Bay
State Monthly, Volume 1, pages 49 – 61.
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Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "Tombstone Tuesday ~ Edward Paige of Boston, buried in Leyden, Holland, 1680", Nutfield Genealogy, posted November 21, 2017, ( https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2017/11/tombstone-tuesday-edward-paige-of.html: accessed [access date]).
Quite interesting. I never would have expected to find a Boston-born man in Leyden either. I notice that his father-in-law was "first commander of the artillery company 1638 and freeman, 1639." Is "freeman" like "selectman" or what?
ReplyDeleteI am a volunteer tour guide in Pieterskerk and often show visitors this grave. I am working to establish if he is the earliest North American born person buried in the Netherlands.
ReplyDeleteI am a tour guide at Pieterskerk in Leiden and often show Edward's grave to visitors. I am working on trying to establish if he is the earliest North American born person buried in the Netherlands.
ReplyDelete