A generation after Jamestowne was first settled, a major settlement was made at the northern periphery of the Virginia settlement, along the Chesapeake Bay and inland to the west. In 1990, the lead coffins of St. Mary’s City’s founders, a Calvert husband and wife, were discovered beneath the Jesuit chapel there. While the Jamestowne burials continue to be studied, the seventeenth-century coffins of Chancellor Philip and Anne (Wolseley) Calvert may be visited at the Maryland Historical Society in Baltimore through this, their last weekend there (the exhibit runs through at least 6 December). The genealogical community, and especially the Society of Colonial Wars in the State of Maryland, worked with the Maryland Historical Society, Historic Saint Mary’s City, and the Smithsonian Institution to make this exhibit possible. The Calverts will finally be reinterred at Saint Mary’s City after the exhibit closes next week.
Philip Calvert
Philip Calvert was the son of George Calvert, 1st Baron Baltimore, from his second marriage. When Philip first stepped ashore near Saint Mary’s City in 1656, his older half-brother, Governor Leonard Calvert, had been dead several years and his oldest half-brother, Cecilius, 2nd Lord Baltimore, had other obligations in Great Britain. The senior representative of his family in the New World, he dutifully took up the charge of service to his father and brother’s visionary Maryland colony. Leonard Calvert resided at his manor, Pope’s Freehold, in Saint Mary’s County, and died at a later-acquired estate, Saint Peter’s, late in December 1682.
Anne (Wolseley) Calvert
Calvert’s wife Anne Wolseley, daughter of Sir Thomas Wolseley of Staffordshire, accompanied him to Maryland in 1656. The treatment of her body before it was interred has been widely remarked upon: as a Maryland State Archives staffer put it, “ [she was] buried with such tender loving care – arms folded and tied with silk ribbon, rosemary, the herb of remembrance sprinkled lovingly over her body.” She died in about 1680.
Philip and Anne (Wolseley) Calvert left no identified descendants. The presence of the third coffin, belonging to an infant, leaves some question as to whether Philip might have produced a child in his brief marriage to a second wife, Jane Sewall, daughter of Henry and Jane (Lowe) Sewall.
Several of Philip’s half-siblings, children of the 1st Lord Baltimore by his first wife, Anne (Mynne) Calvert, left descendants, including the later Lords Baltimore. While descendants continued to marry British nobles and gentry, many, too, married among the leading Catholic families of Maryland. By the twenty-first century, they can be found among the ancestors of many thousands of Americans with colonial Mid-Atlantic and Southern ancestry.
For more information, see the Smithsonian Institution—National Museum of Natural History’s interactive website on the Saint Mary’s City chapel site where the coffins were recovered.
References at NEHGS: