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  1. Thomson Mason

    American entrepreneur

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  1. Thomson Mason (14 August 1733 – 26 February 1785) [1] was an American lawyer, planter and jurist.

  2. Thomson Mason (4 March 1759 – 11 March 1820) was an American planter, soldier and politician who represented Fairfax County in both chambers of the Virginia General Assembly. He was one of the sons of George Mason, an American patriot, statesman, and delegate from Virginia to the U.S. Constitutional Convention.

  3. Thomson Mason, the youngest brother of George Mason IV, was a slave dealer. [1] Although it is not known whether George Mason IV bought people from this sibling, [2] Thomson paid for notices in an Annapolis paper, the Maryland Gazette, which promoted his importation of people kidnapped and shipped from Africa to the Chesapeake region.

  4. Thomson Mason (14 August 1733 – 26 February 1785) was an American lawyer, planter and jurist. A younger brother of George Mason IV, United States patriot, statesman, and delegate from Virginia to the U.S. Constitutional Convention, Thomson Mason would father Stevens Thomson Mason (who after service in the American Revolutionary War followed ...

  5. Dec 7, 2023 · A close look at an early nineteenth-century ledger kept by John Thomson Mason (1765-1824) to record the business of his Maryland plantation, “Montpelier,” reveals information about the lives of the enslaved and formerly enslaved people who lived and worked there.

  6. Thomson Mason. Thomson was born at Chopawamsic Plantation, Stafford Co., Va., on 14 August 1733. He married Mary King Barnes in 1758. He married Elizabeth Westwood on 23 November 1777. 1 Thomson died on 26 February 1785 at Chopawamsic Plantation, Stafford Co., Va., at age 51.

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  8. Feb 7, 2024 · Thomson was a prominent local statesman, planter, civil servant and justice in Fairfax County, VA. He resided at "Hollin Hall", built on land granted him by his father, 3 miles SW of Gunston Hall.

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