Footnotes to Long Island History
Insert used in the
South Haven Church Bulletin
Sunday April 15, 1962
Rev. Ezra King
by
Thomas R. Bayles
Rev. Ezra King was
pastor of the South Haven Church from 1810 to 1839. He studied
theology under Rev. Lyman Beecher, pastor of the East Hampton
Presbyterian Church, and in 1810 at the age of 26 was called to
become the pastor of the South Haven Church (also the Middle Island
Church). The South Haven parish extended from Moriches to
Patchogue, and the one at Middle Island was also a large one, all of
which “Priest King”, as he was called, covered on horseback. He
lived on his farm at Middle Island and raised a large family of
eight children. It was during his pastorate that the South Haven
Church was rebuilt in 1828. By 1839 his health failed and he
resigned as pastor and moved to Miller Place, where he built a home
and lived until his death in 1867, and was laid to rest in the
cemetery opposite the church in Middle Island. The members of his
two churches erected a monument to his memory which carries the
following inscription:
“Grateful friends
have erected this monument in memory of their beloved pastor, who
devoted the vigor of his life to the united parishes of South Haven
and Middletown. By his ardent piety, eloquent preaching and fervent
prayers, his warm affection, true friendship and courteous dignity,
he has left an enduring example to both church and the world.”