OUR MEETING PLACE: St. Paul’s Anglican Church

The St. Paul’s Anglican church building (at the corner of Queen St. and Montreal St, Kingston) was begun in 1845 and completed in 1847. It was dedicated in memory of Reverend Robert Cartwright, curate of St. George’s parish for thirteen years before his death. The Cartwright family also has an enclosure here. As one side of the family monument reads,

Rev. Robert David Cartwright / M.A. Queen’s College Oxon 12 /
years assistant Minister of St. / George’s Parish, and to whose /
memory the adjoining Church was / erected.

The church hall, where our Branch holds its meetings, is a later addition.

St. Paul’s Cemetery – A Loyalist Burial Ground

The graveyard, also known in old documents as the Lower or Old Burial Ground, dates from long before the church, and for many years was the only burial yard in Kingston. Anglican interments in St. Paul’s yard were recorded in the registers of St. George’s, Kingston, which commence in 1791. Interments for people of other denominations may also have taken place, but the location of such burial records is unknown.

Among those buried here is Molly Brant, sister of Joseph Brant and consort of Sir William Johnson. Molly’s grave is unmarked.

Rev. John Stuart, Anglican missionary to the Loyalists who settled at Cataraqui (later Kingston) and members of his family are buried here. The Stuart Lair containing a number of family graves was recently restored, thanks to the efforts and fundraising of the Lower Burial Ground Restoration Society (LGBRS). You can learn more about the ongoing restoration and preservation at www.lowerburialground.ca.

Previous stages of the restoration work on the wall can be reviewed in the following PDF document: Lower Burial Ground. The 2009 event commemorating the restoration of the Forsythe plot can be viewed here. Sue Bazely’s talk, The Many Layers of the Lower Burial Ground, St. Paul’s Churchyard and under the Church Hall, Kingston Ontario, chronicles the recent archeological investigation of memorials under the parish hall.

When St. Paul’s church was erected in 1845, the building was built over top of a portion of the burial ground. Some stones were moved to the crypt of the church, but other graves were simply covered over. The St. Paul’s Church Hall was opened in 1873, having also been built over burials. The renovations and additions in the 1950s continued that trend.

You may obtain a full transcription of the stones in the yard and crypt from our friends at Kingston Branch, Ontario Genealogical Society – click their Publications link.