Ambrose Page

{{Short description|American judge (1724–1791)}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=October 2023}}

Ambrose Page (1723 – December 29, 1791)Representative Men and Old Families of Rhode Island, Volume III (1908), p. 1618. was a Rhode Island state legislator and admiralty judge who declined a seat as Justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court in May 1781.[https://books.google.com/books?id=3C4tAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA208 Manual - the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations] (1891), p. 208-13.Samuel H. Allen, "Rhode Island Judiciary", in James N. Arnold, ed., The Narragansett Historical Register (1889), Volume 7, p. 61.

A native of Providence, Rhode Island, he "was a sea captain during the Seven Years' War", and served in the Rhode Island General Assembly.{{cite web|url=http://gaspee.org/PageBio.htm |title=Captain Benjamin Page (1753-1833)|work=The Gaspee Days Committee|access-date=October 17, 2023}} He was a judge of the court of admiralty from 1787 to 1790,Records of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations (1787), p. 242.At the General Assembly of the State of Rhode-Island and Providence Plantations (1789), p. 4.Frederick Bernays Wiener, "Notes on the Rhode Island Admiralty, 1727-1790", Harvard Law Review, Vol. 46, No. 1 (Nov., 1932), p. 65. prior to which he "had been judge of the Superior Court and of the Common Pleas, and member of the Council of War". He was described in the Providence Gazette as "for many Years a respectable nautical Commander from [Providence], and had sustained several Offices of public Trust, the Duties of which he discharged with Ability and Integrity".Providence Gazette (December 31, 1791).

Page married Alice Smith, with whom he had a son, Benjamin Page, who served on ships in the American Revolutionary War.

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