Credit:  Historic St. Mary's City
The Brick Chapel Exhibit at Historic St. Mary’s City, where the Ceremony of Return will take place on September 20, 2025. The remains of Philip Calvert, Anne Wolsley Calvert, their infant son, and more than fifty others will be reinterred here, in the very place they were originally laid to rest. 
The Brick Chapel Exhibit at Historic St. Mary’s City, where the Ceremony of Return will take place on September 20, 2025. The remains of Philip Calvert, Anne Wolsley Calvert, their infant son, and more than fifty others will be reinterred here, in the very place they were originally laid to rest. 
Credit:  Historic St. Mary’s City

ST. MARY’S CITY, Md. – Historic St. Mary’s City (HSMC) will host a Ceremony of Return on Saturday, September 20, 2025, a solemn and historic occasion marking the reinterment of human remains discovered and studied over the past several decades. Among those being laid to rest is Philip Calvert (Chancellor; fifth Governor of Maryland; and son of George Calvert, the first Lord Baltimore), Anne Wosley Calvert, and the infant son of Philip. Less is known of the fifty-six other individuals buried in and around the Brick Chapel; all were laid to rest sometime between 1634 and 1730. The remains will be returned to the exact location where they were found, in what is now the Brick Chapel Exhibit.

This free public event represents years of archaeological research, historical study, and careful collaboration between HSMC, the Smithsonian Institution, and descendant communities. The day’s program will begin at 10:00 a.m. with a formal procession from the reconstructed State House to the Brick Chapel Exhibit, led by a horse-drawn hearse. Participants will include descendants of the Calvert family, members of the Ark and Dove Society, St. Maries Cittie Militia, and historical interpreters in period dress. Visitors of the museum and guests of the ceremony are invited to participate in the procession, honoring the individuals who founded colonial Maryland. The procession will open with cannon fire from Maryland Dove, the museum’s reconstructed tall ship that represents one of the two vessels carrying settlers to Maryland in 1634. Recently returned from Washington, D.C., Maryland Dove also brought back a Maryland flag that will be carried in the ceremony, further linking the past to the present.

At the Brick Chapel Exhibit, the ceremony will feature remarks by historians, archaeologists, and other key figures, including Dr. Douglas Owsley, Curator of Biological Anthropology at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History. Following the speakers, a rite of reinterment will honor the individuals being laid to rest. The Chapel Exhibit will have limited, first-come, first-serve seating; however, a live-stream viewing tent will be available. Following the reinterment, the public is invited to join a small reception at the Margaret Brent Pavilion, where light refreshments will be served.

“This is one of the most significant events in the museum’s history,” said Dr. Travis Parno, Interim Executive Director, Historic St. Mary’s City. “The Ceremony of Return allows us to honor the individuals who played a role in Maryland’s earliest colonial history and ensure they are respectfully laid to rest once again.”

The Ceremony of Return is free and open to all who wish to witness this moment in Maryland history.

Event Details:

Date: Saturday, September 20, 2025

Time: Procession begins at 10:00 a.m. from the Historic St. Mary’s City State House

Parking for the Chapel: Historic St. Mary’s City, 18751 Hogaboom Lane, St. Mary’s City, MD

Parking near the State House: 47418 Old State House Road, St. Mary’s City, MD

Admission: Free

Note: Limited seating in the chapel; live streaming will be available in an outdoor viewing tent.

About the Lead Coffins Project

In 1990, archaeologists working at Historic St. Mary’s City uncovered three lead coffins buried beneath the chancel of the 17th-century Brick Chapel. Lead coffin burials were rare in colonial America and typically reserved for individuals of high status. Remarkably, all five known lead coffins in North America are located in St. Mary’s City—three from beneath the Brick Chapel and two from the nearby Trinity Churchyard.

The remains in the chapel coffins were identified as members of Maryland’s founding Calvert family, including Philip Calvert and his first wife, Anne Wolsley Calvert. Over the past three decades, a multi-disciplinary team—including archaeologists, historians, and scientists from the Smithsonian Institution—has studied the coffins and their contents to gain insight into early Maryland life, health, diet, and funerary practices. The project has offered an unprecedented look at Maryland’s first capital and its prominent figures.

The reinterment marks the final step in this long-term research effort, returning the individuals to their original resting place in the reconstructed Brick Chapel—one of the most important Catholic sites in English America.

ABOUT HISTORIC ST. MARY’S CITY

Historic St. Mary’s City is located on the St. Mary’s River, in a beautiful tidewater landscape of water, rolling hills, farmland, and forest. The 835-acre living history and archaeology museum is on the site of Maryland’s first capital (1634-1695). Our team is fortunate to build upon decades of cutting-edge research, with recreated structures in the historic town center, a Woodland Indian hamlet, a tall ship, and a tobacco plantation staffed by costumed or uniformed interpreters who help visitors understand the stories of Maryland’s history. Ongoing archaeological excavations continue to reveal new information about life in the past, and a new visitors center, the Maryland Heritage Interpretive Center, will come online in 2026. Since its inception, the department has identified more than 300 archaeological sites within the St. Mary’s City National Historic Landmark (NHL) and curates more than 6.5 million artifacts representing millennia of human history.

The museum is one of Southern Maryland’s leading tourism attractions and hosts an active school tour program. Its collections are a resource for professional archaeologists, scholars, and college students. The HSMCC Field School in Historical Archaeology, one of the longest running field schools in the nation, attracts students from all over the United States, as well as from other countries. The museum is overseen by the Historic St. Mary’s City Commission (HSMCC), which is an independent agency of the State of Maryland, under the Office of the Governor.

Join the Conversation

2 Comments

  1. The individuals being reinterred were no doubt buried according to the rites of the Catholic Church. Should they not be accorded the same courtesy for their reinterrment?

  2. I am a DNA match to Philip Calvert.
    Genetic distance to 12097 is 12.453.
    Genetic distance to 2099 is 14.620.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *