During the
Glorious Revolution, when James II fled the country, Jeffreys stayed in London until the last moment, being the only high legal authority in James's abandoned kingdom to perform political duties. When
William III's troops approached London, Jeffreys tried to flee and follow the King abroad. He was captured in a public house in
Wapping, now named
The Town of Ramsgate. Reputedly he was disguised as a sailor, and was recognised by a surviving judicial victim, who claimed he could never forget Jeffreys's countenance, although his ferocious eyebrows had been shaven. Jeffreys was terrified of the public when dragged to the Lord Mayor and then to prison "for his own safety". He died of
kidney disease (probably
pyelonephritis) while in custody in the
Tower of London on 18 April 1689. He was originally buried in the
Chapel Royal of Saint Peter ad Vincula in the Tower. In 1692 his body was moved to
St Mary Aldermanbury. In his
London Journal, Leigh Hunt gives the following account of Judge Jeffreys's death and burial: Jeffreys was taken on the twelfth of September, 1688 [
sic]. He was first interred privately in the Tower; but three years afterwards, when his memory was something blown over, his friends obtained permission, by a warrant of the queen's dated September 1692, to take his remains under their own care, and he was accordingly reinterred in a vault under the communion table of St Mary, Aldermanbury, 2nd Nov. 1694. In 1810, during certain repairs, the coffin was uncovered for a time, and the public had sight of the box containing the mortal remains of the feared and hated magistrate. During
the Blitz, St Mary Aldermanbury was gutted by a
German air raid and Jeffreys's tomb was destroyed. No traces of it remain today. The ruins of the church were transported to the United States in 1966 and rebuilt to its original form in
Fulton, Missouri, as a memorial to
Winston Churchill. The site is now a landscaped garden. ==Descendants==