, Williamsburg, Virginia. Original church built 1683 on land donated by Colonel John Page. The shaft commemorating Col. Page is at right of the church door in this photograph by
Frances Benjamin Johnston. John Page was born around 1627, likely in
Bedfont,
Middlesex, the parish records for which do not survive for that period. He was a son of Francis Page, gentleman, of that parish. John Page became a merchant, and emigrated to the
Virginia colony; his sister Elizabeth (wife of
Edward Digges) and brother Matthew also emigrated to Virginia. John Page married Alice Luckin of Sandon, Essex, in roughly 1646, and Page claimed her as a headright in 1653, suggesting they were both in Virginia by the mid-1650s. She was a first cousin, once removed of the first
Luckyn baronet. He donated land and £20 for the first brick
Bruton Parish Church which was completed in 1683, and was located immediately adjacent to the site of the present larger restored structure. In 1683, he came into possession of a tract of land which originally belonged to his brother Matthew in
James City County known as Neck of Land. It is also known that he owned property at
Jamestown in New Towne section. John Page was a member of the Virginia
House of Burgesses starting in 1665. He played a pivotal role in supporting the efforts of Reverend Doctor
James Blair in the founding of the
College of William & Mary in 1693, which was located at Middle Plantation. Beginning in 1677, he is believed to have been an early advocate for moving the capitol to Middle Plantation, which eventually occurred in 1699, seven years after his death. (Middle Plantation was renamed
Williamsburg in honor of
King William III shortly thereafter). The
Royal African Company's agent in Virginia in the 1670s, the Colonel was heavily involved in the
Atlantic slave trade, not only trading and profiting on the chattel slave trade of human beings (agents received a seven-percent commission on sales), but also enslaving numerous people on his various properties as well. from the John Page house, Williamsburg, showing brick initials for Page, Alice (Page's wife) and the date of the house (1662). The J was not recovered.
Colonial Williamsburg Colonel John Page and his wife Alice Lukin Page are buried at Bruton Parish Church in
Williamsburg, Virginia. Their tombstone, originally located within the church graveyard, was later moved to the church vestibule. It reads: "Here lieth in hope of a joyfull resurrection the Body of Colonel JOHN PAGE of Bruton Parish, Esquire. One of their Majesties Council in the Dominion of Virginia. Who departed this life the 23 of January in the year of our Lord 1691/2 Aged 65" The tombstone carries the
arms of Page
impaling those of Lukin. ==Family==