Thomas Paine Greenwich Village Tablet Unveiled

The Thomas Paine Plaque in Greenwich Village at 59 Grove Street in Manhattan was attached to the 1839 Federal-style house that replaced the home where Paine died in a ceremony on the 114th anniversary of Paine's death, June 8, 1923. Image from the June 8, 1923 edition of the Buffalo Voice from Johnson County Wyoming - Library of Congress
The Thomas Paine Plaque in Greenwich Village at 59 Grove Street in Manhattan was attached to the 1839 Federal-style house that replaced the home where Paine died in a ceremony on the 114th anniversary of Paine’s death, June 8, 1923. Image from the June 8, 1923 edition of the Buffalo Voice from Johnson County Wyoming – Library of Congress

Douglas Island news (Douglas City, Alaska), January 18, 1911

THOMAS PAINE LAUDED

Tablet Is Unveiled to Patriot of Revolutionary War.

NEW YORK, June 9

Representatives of foreign governments and historical and patriotic societies attended the unveiling of a bronze tablet today to the memory of Thomas Paine, revolutionary war patriot, at the house in Greenwich Village where he once lived. Paine was lauded as “the greatest man of his age” and “the revolutionary poet whose utterances inspired our country to freedom.”

Among those who eulogized Paine were H. Gloster Armstrong, consul general of Great Britain, and Charles Barrett, French consul general.

Speakers declared that Paine was “greatly misjudged.” Joseph French Johnson, dean of New York University, said that “the indictment of Thomas Paine is that he was too honest a man to be a safe citizen.”

Scroll to Top